Thousands of protesters gathered in Mexico City on Tuesday, angered by the government's handling of an investigation into 43 students who apparently were massacred in 2014 and the government's alleged treatment of international experts who have cast doubt on the official account.
MEXICO CITY: Thousands of protesters gathered in Mexico City
on Tuesday, angered by the government's handling of an investigation
into 43 students who apparently were massacred in 2014 and the
government's alleged treatment of international experts who have cast
doubt on the official account.
The case of the 43 trainee teachers, who were abducted in September
2014 in the violent southwestern state of Guerrero, has tarnished the
reputation of President Enrique Pena Nieto and highlighted the scale of
human rights abuses in Mexico.
The parents and relatives of the abducted students led what
appeared to be more than 2,000 protesters along the main thoroughfare of
the Mexican capital, Paseo de la Reforma, carrying small torches along
with large black and white photographs of the missing students.
Blanca Luz, the mother of one of the 43, said she wants to
meet with Pena Nieto to discuss the investigation, a request frequently
echoed by the parents.
"My heart can't take anymore," she said, standing near the
main building of Mexico's attorney general's office. "I want my son back
by my side."
The government has repeatedly said the students were
abducted by corrupt police in the town of Iguala on the night of Sept.
26, 2014, who handed them over to a drug gang. The cartel then burned
the students in a nearby dump, a government investigation concluded.
But an international panel of experts, commissioned by the
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), has published a
series of reports casting serious doubt on that account.
In its final report published on Sunday the panel said the
government had undermined its probe and accused it of stonewalling
efforts to uncover the truth.
The panel, known as the Interdisciplinary Group of
Independent Experts (IGIE), said it had been repeatedly blocked in
efforts to obtain evidence from Mexican authorities and said the
attorney general's office did not let its members re-interview detainees
accused of the crime.
Prosecutors did not pursue investigative angles that the experts suggested, the panel added.Speaking in Geneva on Tuesday, United Nations human rights spokesman Rupert Colville expressed concern about the experts' claims and urged Mexican authorities to explore the lines of enquiry they suggested.
"The main concern at present is that with the
departure of the IGIE, there's unfinished business," he said. "There's
clearly much more to be done and the final resolution of the case
doesn't appear to be that close."
At a press briefing on Monday, U.S. Department of State
spokesman John Kirby commended the experts for their work on the
investigation and said he hoped the government would incorporate their
suggestions into its investigation.
"We call for the completion of a full and transparent
investigation of the students' disappearances and the prosecution of all
those responsible," he said.
(Additional reporting by Gabriel Stargardter in Mexico City
and Stephanie Ulmer-Nebehay in Geneva; Writing by Gabriel Stargardter;
Editing by Leslie Adler)
- Reuters
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