The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Mexico federal agents implicated in students’ disappeara­nce

-

MEXICO CITY: Two Mexican federal police officers possibly participat­ed in the disappeara­nce of 43 students, the National Human Rights Commission said Thursday, implicatin­g national agents in the 2014 case for the first time.

The announceme­nt adds a new twist to a probe that has come under fire from internatio­nal human rights groups and independen­t investigat­ors.

Jose Larrieta Carrasco, a commission official investigat­ing the case, said the authoritie­s should now look into a “new route in the disappeara­nce” of the students.

The attorney general’s office said it would ‘deepen’ this ‘line of investigat­ion’ following the commission’s announceme­nt.

A federal police statement said the allegation­s were not new and that all officers present in the region that night gave statements, but that ‘for the moment’ no wrongdoing was found against any agents.

Prosecutor­s have already charged municipal police officers in connection with the mass abduction in the southern city of Iguala on September 26-27, 2014.

But the government­al rights commission said it found an eyewitness who saw two federal agents near Iguala’s courthouse, where municipal officers had stopped a bus with 15 to 20 students on board. The commission also said another local police department, from the town of Huitzuco, had a previously unknown role in the disappeara­nce.

The bus was one of five that around 100 students had seized that night to use for a future protest. Iguala police officers opened fire on the buses before the students disappeare­d.

The commission said the police fired on the tires of the bus that stopped near the courthouse, prompting the students to toss rocks at the police.

The officers bundled the students into several patrol vehicles, including three from Huitzuco.

When the federal officers arrived, they asked what was going on.

An Igu ala officer said the students would be sent to Huitzuco, where ‘the boss’ — possibly a drug cartel member — would “decide what to do with them,” the commission said.

The federal officers responded, “Ah, ok, that’s good,” and allowed the local police to take the students away.

Huitzuco would be a new location in the twisting saga, as authoritie­s have maintained that suspects told investigat­ors that the students were killed in the nearby town of Cocula.

The commission said there was enough evidence to “presume the participat­ion of members of the Huitzuco municipal police and two federal police officers” in the disappeara­nce, adding that it has the name of one of the two federal agents, which it gave to prosecutor­s. — AFP

 ??  ?? President of the National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) Luis Raul Gonzalez Perez (right) and a member of CNDH Jose Larrieta Carrasco attend a news conference about an investigat­ion process in the case of the 43 missing students from Ayotzinapa College...
President of the National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) Luis Raul Gonzalez Perez (right) and a member of CNDH Jose Larrieta Carrasco attend a news conference about an investigat­ion process in the case of the 43 missing students from Ayotzinapa College...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia