Gulf News

Mexican government denies role in protester’s death

TEACHERS WERE DEMANDING BETTER PAY AND JUSTICE FOR 43 MISSING STUDENTS

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Mexican federal police rejected accusation­s by a teacher’s union on Wednesday that a 65-year-old protester died after being beaten by officers during a demonstrat­ion in Acapulco.

Some 5,000 protesters demanding better pay and justice in the case of 43 missing trainee teachers had been blocking access to the Pacific resort city’s airport for six hours on Tuesday when 800 federal police intervened. Federal authoritie­s say the officers broke up the protest after a bus used by the protesters drove into the police line, injuring seven officers, and then hit reverse toward demonstrat­ors.

The teachers’ CETEG union denied involvemen­t in the bus attack.

At least 15 protesters were injured in the melee, officials said.

‘Beaten by officers’

Manuel Rosas, a CETEG spokesman, said retired teacher Claudio Castillo, who had health problems, was beaten by police officers before he died.

While Castillo was getting medical attention, “a group of federal police removed the paramedics and continued to hit him,” Rosas said, citing witnesses.

A Guerrero state civil protection official said separately that Castillo died of head trauma in an ambulance.

But Monte Alejandro Rubido, the national security commission­er, said that an autopsy showed that Castillo had injuries to his thorax and abdomen, and punctured lungs.

The medical report concluded that Castillo died due to “deep trauma to the thorax. It is believed that the injuries were due to crushing,” he said, adding that there was no head injury.

“The informatio­n indicates that the death was not the result of the clash between protesters and federal police. The death is very possibly due to another event,” Rubido said.

He said the cause of death is under investigat­ion.

Authoritie­s detained 106 people and released all but eight of them. Charges are pending.

Federal police chief Enrique Galindo said officers prevented the protesters from heading to an internatio­nal tennis open hosted by Acapulco.

Angry at the retired teacher’s death, protesters marched Wednesday in Chilpancin­go, capital of Guerrero, where Acapulco is located.

Mexican authoritie­s have battled accusation­s of brutality in the past year.

Guerrero has been the scene of frequent protests over the disappeara­nce of the 43 college students, who are presumed dead.

Authoritie­s believe the young men were abducted by corrupt police in the city of Iguala in September and delivered to a drug gang, which slaughtere­d the group.

Germany’s federal commission­er for human rights policy, Christoph Straesser, was visiting the missing students’ college in Ayotzinapa, near Chilpancin­go.

 ?? Reuters ?? Street clashes Federal policemen detain a member of a teachers’ union after demonstrat­ors blocked the main access to the airport in Acapulco, Mexico.
Reuters Street clashes Federal policemen detain a member of a teachers’ union after demonstrat­ors blocked the main access to the airport in Acapulco, Mexico.

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