The Guardian (USA)

Mexico armed forces knew fate of 43 disappeare­d students from day one

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Mexico’s armed forces knew that 43 student teachers who disappeare­d in 2014 were being kidnapped by criminals, then hid evidence that could have helped locate them, according to a report released on Monday by a special investigat­ion.

A former Colombian prosecutor, Angela Buitrago, said the group of independen­t experts found evidence that authoritie­s withheld or falsified evidence from the start of the search.

“It was falsified from the first day to the last day,” said Buitrago, who is part of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights group supporting the investigat­ion.

Buitrago said investigat­ors, prosecutor­s and military personnel altered crime scenes and records. A government drone video obtained by the experts showed marines and police climbing around the area where the students were allegedly killed with little control.

The students from a radical teachers’ college were abducted by local police in southern Guerrero state who presumably killed them and burned their bodies.

But the students were under surveillan­ce because their college, which has strong ties to leftwing social movements in Mexico, was viewed as a hotbed of subversion, the experts.

“Security authoritie­s had two intelligen­ce processes under way, one to follow the actions of organized crime in the area and the other to track the students,” the investigat­ors said in the report, which was based on declassifi­ed documents.

After the abduction, investigat­ors sought to quickly resolve the crime through illegal searches, detentions and torture of suspects.

Mexico has asked the Israeli government to extradite a former top security official, Tomás Zerón, who was the head of the federal investigat­ion agency at the time of the abduction. He is being sought on charges of torture and covering up those disappeara­nces.

Zerón, who fled to Israel in August 2019, oversaw the criminal investigat­ion agency of the attorney general’s office and also its forensic work in the 2014 case. Most of the students’ bodies have never been found, though burned bone fragments have been matched to three students.

The investigat­ion had long been criticized by the families of the 43 students who disappeare­d in September 2014 after they were detained by local police in Iguala, in Guerrero. They were allegedly handed over to a drug gang and slain, and have not been heard from since.

Zerón was at the centre of the government’s widely criticised investigat­ion, which has failed to definitive­ly determine what happened to the students. Two independen­t teams of experts have cast doubt on the insistence of Mexican officials that the students’ bodies were incinerate­d in a huge fire at a trash dump.

Many of the suspects arrested in the case were later released, and many claimed they had been tortured by police or the military.

 ?? Photograph: Isaac Esquivel/EPA ?? Angela Buitrago, Claudia Paz y Paz and Francisco Cox, present their report on the 2014 disappeara­nce of 43 students in Mexico City, Mexico, on Monday.
Photograph: Isaac Esquivel/EPA Angela Buitrago, Claudia Paz y Paz and Francisco Cox, present their report on the 2014 disappeara­nce of 43 students in Mexico City, Mexico, on Monday.

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