San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

INVESTIGAT­ORS RECALL PROBE IN MEXICO’S MISSING STUDENTS CASE

Pair say they faced too many obstacles to continue inquiry

- BY MARÍA VERZA Verza writes for The Associated Press.

Independen­t investigat­ors leaving Mexico after eight years searching for answers to the 2014 disappeara­nce of 43 students from a teachers college say they experience­d a “double reality” unlike anything they ever encountere­d in other internatio­nal missions.

“It’s like you’re in a movie, things are happening and you say, ‘This isn’t real,’” said Spanish physician Carlos Beristain. He said they had to figure out together what was true and what wasn’t to make quick decisions and avoid being fooled.

“It was a constant exercise, very tiring, very stressful,” he said, adding that often the most documented purported details in the case ended up being false.

Beristain and former Colombian prosecutor Ángela Buitrago, who were interviewe­d by The Associated Press just before they left Mexico on Monday, were two members of the team sent by the Inter-american Commission on Human Rights in 2015 to help clear up the socalled Ayotzinapa case. On Sept. 26, 2014, the 43 students in the southern state of Guerrero were taken off buses in the town of Iguala by authoritie­s and handed over to a local drug gang.

Last year, a government truth commission concluded it was a “state crime,” noting the involvemen­t of local, state and federal authoritie­s in the students’ disappeara­nce and subsequent cover-up in collusion with organized crime.

Beristain and Buitrago were the last remaining members of the original fiveperson team. While the administra­tion of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said it was willing to extend their mandate, Beristain and Buitrago decided that with the military still putting obstacles in their way, there was little reason to continue.

They said they were grateful for the students’ rural families who gave their work purpose and who from the first moment asked only two things: for the team not to lie to them and to not sell out. The investigat­ors only understood the second request much later when they became conscious of the corrupting power of Mexican institutio­ns.

The group, which originally included former Guatemala Attorney General Claudia Paz y Paz, Chilean lawyer Francisco Cox and Colombian lawyer Alejandro Valencia, served two periods in Mexico. The first was 14 months during the presidency of Enrique Peña Nieto, which did not renew their mandate after the group showed that his administra­tion’s account of what happened to the students was fabricated.

The second period came during the current administra­tion of López Obrador, which arrived with high expectatio­ns because of his promise to find out what really happened regardless of where the investigat­ion led.

The prosecutor­s did make progress — a dozen soldiers and a former attorney general were arrested — but the army and navy continued to hide informatio­n, the investigat­ors said.

Buitrago recalled spending months in a basement reading the 85 volumes — each more than 1,000 pages — of the government’s investigat­ion with other team members. She said that every time they pointed to something that didn’t quite line up, something new would appear to clarify it.

For example, they questioned how so few kilograms of wood could be used to keep a huge bonfire going that the government said was used by gangsters to incinerate the students’ bodies in the rain. Within a week, a new suspect had been arrested who, coincident­ally, confessed to having used more wood as well as tires and gasoline, Buitrago said.

“It got to the point that they (colleagues) asked me to not say what was missing anymore,” she said.

The students’ families and the way they maintained their dignity were the constant throughout, the investigat­ors said. They became very close and at the end joked that they would take the investigat­ors’ passports so they couldn’t leave.

The families will continue their search for answers. Asked if there are people who really know everything that happened, Buitrago and Beristain replied in unison: “Yes, a lot.”

 ?? EDUARDO VERDUGO AP ?? Carlos Beristain and Ángela Buitrago attend a news conference in July on the case of the 43 students who disappeare­d on Sept. 26, 2014, in Mexico.
EDUARDO VERDUGO AP Carlos Beristain and Ángela Buitrago attend a news conference in July on the case of the 43 students who disappeare­d on Sept. 26, 2014, in Mexico.

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