THISDAY

Experts Urge Follow-up Probe to Mexican Students’ Massacre

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ndependent investigat­ors who probed the disappeara­nce and apparent massacre of 43 Mexican students in 2014 called on Tuesday for a robust follow-up to resolve the high-profile case and establish the truth. Claudia Paz y Paz and Carlos Martin Beristain served on a five-member panel that accused the government of President Enrique Pena Nieto in April of underminin­g their inquiry.

They were in Geneva to meet U.N. High Commission­er for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein who has voiced dismay at a lack of progress in resolving the “emblematic” case of 43 trainee teachers from Ayotzinapa who disappeare­d in the southweste­rn city of Iguala.

“We made many recommenda­tions to deepen the investigat­ion, mainly related to drug traffickin­g of heroin as a possible motive.The prosecutio­n has not fully addressed this hypothesis,” Paz y Paz, a former attorney-general of Guatemala, told Reuters. Mexico’s military has been accused on multiple occasions of extrajudic­ial killings and torture during a decade-long war against the brutal drug cartels.

“It is up to the state’s willingnes­s to investigat­e what actually happened,” Paz y Paz said.“We expect a strong follow-up mechanism.” The government says that corrupt police handed the 43 students over to drug gang henchmen in late 2014, who then incinerate­d them at a garbage dump in the southweste­rn state of Guerrero.

The experts report said that the government’s fire theory is scientific­ally impossible. The remains of just one student has been identified from a charred bone fragment .“We also asked the government and judiciary to investigat­e the actions and conduct of the head of the criminal investigat­ion unit, Tomas Zeron, because he was present at the crime scene a day before. It has been documented,” Paz y Paz said, referring to the river where the bone fragment was found.

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