MEXICO CITY, Sept 27 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Exactly five years after 43 students disappeared without a trace in Mexico, the government said it will
re-investigate the case as a crime by “agents of the state,” offering a reward
for new information.
The night of Sept 26, 2014, a group of students in Guerrero state on
their way to a protest were detained by corrupt police who handed them over to a drug cartel.
Forty-three of them vanished.
Five years later, Mexico is still haunted by the case, which drew
international condemnation and stained the government of ex-president Enrique Pena Nieto.
On Thursday thousands of people, mainly students, took part in a
demonstration led by the parents of the missing youths, shouting “justice!”
as they marched towards Mexico City’s central square, the Zocalo.
Approximately a hundred people wearing hoods who remained at the rear of the crowd broke shop windows and tried to set a restaurant on fire, which other protesters extinguished.
The investigation into the disappearance has been marred by allegations of
official incompetence and even corruption. Misconduct — especially the use
of torture to extract supposed confessions — has resulted in the release of
77 detainees, including the main suspect earlier this month.
President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has launched a truth commission,
and the new prosecutor general has announced plans to re-investigate “almost from scratch.”
Deputy Human Rights Minister Alejandro Encinas said the case would now be investigated as a crime “committed by agents of the Mexican state,” a phrase Pena Nieto once said he “categorically” rejected.
Lopez Obrador said investigators would have a “great advantage” this time
around: under his government, “there is no impunity.”
“That’s important, because when it’s a crime by the state, it’s very
difficult to get at the truth,” the leftist leader told a news conference,
wearing a T-shirt stamped with the number 43 and the words “I am for the
truth.”
The government announced it would offer a reward of about $75,000 for new leads in the case, and $500,000 for information on the whereabouts of
Alejandro Tenescalco, the local police supervisor at the time and a chief
suspect.
No one will remain above the law, said Omar Gomez, special prosecutor for
the case. He said his team would question former top prosecutor Jesus Murillo Karam next week, and even Pena Nieto “if necessary.”
The student activists had hijacked five buses that night to drive
themselves to a protest in Mexico City.
Local police opened fire on the buses, killing six people. Then they
rounded up the remaining students and handed them over to Guerreros Unidos, which apparently had the police on its payroll.
Under Pena Nieto, the federal prosecutor’s office concluded the cartel
mistook the students for members of a rival gang, executed them at a garbage dump and burned their bodies.
However, a team of independent investigators from the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights found that was impossible, based on forensic
analysis of the supposed crime scene.
The government did not renew the experts’ mandate.
Investigators began chasing a fresh lead this week: they are excavating at
a different garbage dump nearby, in the town of Tepecoacuilco, where
witnesses reportedly say some of the men were executed. — NNN-AGENCIES