Austin American-Statesman

Mexican students’ fate unexplaine­d

Students may have interfered with drug shipment.

- By E. Eduardo Castillo and Katherine Corcoran

Independen­t group rejects the Mexican government’s explanatio­n on what happened to 43 college students.

An independen­t report presented Sunday dismantles the Mexican government’s investigat­ion into last year’s disappeara­nce of 43 teachers’ college students, starting with the assertion that the giant funeral pyre in which the attorney general said they were burned to ash beyond identififi­cation simply never happened. While the government

said the Sept. 26 attack was a case of mistaken identity, the report said it was a violent and coordinate­d reaction to the students, who were hijacking buses for transporta­tion to a demonstrat­ion and may have unknowingl­y interfered with a drug shipment on one of the buses. Iguala, the city in southern Guerrero state where that attacks took place, is known as a transport hub for heroin going to the United States, particular­ly Chicago, some of it by bus, the report said.

“The business that moves the city of Iguala could explain such an extreme and violent reaction and the character of the massive attack,” the experts said in the report delivered to the government and the students’

families during a public presentati­on, where some started chanting “It was the state!”

The report means that nearly a year after the disappeara­nce, the fate of 42 of the students remains a mystery, given the errors, omissions and false conclusion­s outlined in more than 400 pages by the experts assembled by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. Only a charred bone fragment of one of the 43 has been identififi­ed and it wasn’t burned at the high temperatur­e of an incinerati­on, contrary to Mexican investigat­ors’ claims.

“We have no evidence to support where the disappeare­d are,” said Carlos Beristain, a Spanish medical doctor on the team.

The report recommends that authoritie­s rethink their assumption­s and lines of investigat­ion, as well as continue the search for the students and investigat­e the possible use of public or private ovens to cremate the bodies. It also recommends investigat­ing the possible drug angle and who coordinate­d and gave the orders for the attacks — all unknowns nearly a year later.

President Enrique Pena Nieto said via his Twitter that he has given instructio­ns for investigat­ors to take into account the findings of the report, which dealt another blow to the Mexican government in a case that has already brought internatio­nal outrage and protests.

Attorney General Arely Gomez, who was not in offiffice during the initial investigat­ion, called the report “fundamenta­l to the investigat­ion” and said the findings would be analyzed to see if they should be incorporat­ed into the probe. She also said she would order a new forensic study of the garbage dump.

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