Mexico police face probe over deadly protest

Mexico police face probe over deadly protest

June 22, 2016
Protesters from the National Coordination of Education Workers (CNTE) teachers’ union hold candles and torches during a march following clashes in southern Mexico over the weekend between police and members of CNTE, in Mexico City, Mexico, on Monday. — Reuters
Protesters from the National Coordination of Education Workers (CNTE) teachers’ union hold candles and torches during a march following clashes in southern Mexico over the weekend between police and members of CNTE, in Mexico City, Mexico, on Monday. — Reuters

OAXACA, Mexico — The Mexican authorities investigated Monday whether police were responsible for any deaths in weekend violence that killed 10 people amid protests by teachers opposed to the government’s education reform.

The investigation came as thousands of people led by the radical CNTE teachers union marched in the capital of the southern state of Oaxaca to denounce Sunday’s deaths as a “massacre.”

The unrest followed months of protests by teachers who reject President Enrique Pena Nieto’s landmark reform, which requires educators to undergo performance evaluations.

Eight people died in Asuncion Nochixtlan, where police said they were ambushed by an unidentified armed group after officers removed barricades set up by teachers.

Two other people, including a journalist, were killed in another town by unknown gunmen.

Pena Nieto said he “lamented” the deaths and that the attorney general’s office would help state prosecutors investigate the violence “and punish those responsible.”

The agency overseeing the federal police said its internal affairs department would also investigate the clashes in Asuncion Nochixtlan.
Interior Minister Miguel Osorio Chong said Sunday’s violence was “grave” and that the investigation would determine whether the “use of weapons the state and federal police was adequate or not” in Asuncion Nochixtlan.

Police officers were initially deployed without weapons to remove a week-long road blockade in Asuncion Nochixtlan, federal police chief Enrique Galindo said.

But armed police were sent after officers were “ambushed” by 2,000 unidentified “radicals,” some of whom were armed, he added. None of the gunmen were teachers, he said.

Seven civilians died of bullet wounds in Asuncion Nochixtlan and another person was killed by an explosive, Oaxaca chief prosecutor Joaquin Carrillo said. Officials had earlier reported six deaths.

“Lines of investigation are being built,” Carillo told a news conference, adding that “nothing will be ruled out.”

Officers will give statements to prosecutors as part of the investigation to determine “who started or didn’t start (firing),” Galindo said.

At least 55 officers were injured, including eight who had gunshot wounds. Others were burned, lost fingers to firework blasts or were hit with machetes.

Some 53 civilians were injured in the clashes and more than 20 people were arrested.

Juan Garcia, a leader of the CNTE union in the Oaxaca region, reported that 22 other people were missing.

The violence was perpetrated by “infiltrators,” he said, adding that the police “fired without mercy” in response.

The union called for an investigation by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and Cue’s resignation.

The unrest comes a decade after protests by the CNTE and other local civil organizations were marked by violence that killed around 20 people,
including US cameraman Brad Will. A truth commission recently concluded that security forces committed torture and forced disappearances.

The other two deaths on Sunday occurred in Juchitan, where unknown gunmen fatally shot a photojournalist and another man after the photographer took pictures of looting amid protests.

Governor Gabino Cue said the reporter may have been killed out of “revenge” for posting pictures on social media.

Pena Nieto’s education reform, which requires teachers to undergo performance evaluations, has faced protests in Oaxaca and the southern states of Michoacan, Guerrero and Chiapas for months.

The CNTE is also protesting last weekend’s arrest of its leader in Oaxaca, Ruben Nunez, who faces money laundering charges, and his deputy, Francisco Villalobos, accused of stealing textbooks.

The government says the reform seeks to improve the quality of education, but the union sees it as an attempt to fire teachers and privatize the system.


June 22, 2016
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