Report Refutes Mexican Government's Line on 43 Missing Students
Families are demanding justice after a report released Sunday by independent experts refuted the Mexican government’s official explanation for why 43 students from Ayotzinapa, Guerrero state disappeared last September.
The government concluded in January that the students were detained by local police then handed over to a criminal organization, which executed them and burned their bodies in a dump in Cocula.
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But the group of independent experts, appointed by the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights of the Organization of American States, determined after a six-month investigation that this claim is based on coerced witness testimony, possibly obtained through torture, and contradicted by physical evidence.
What’s more, the report concluded that federal police and soldiers were present at some of the crime scenes and failed to intervene to prevent attacks on the students, only one of whose body has been identified.
The Boston Herald summarized:
The report stated there were “deficiencies in the investigation, and work that remains to be done to bring justice for the families.” It urged the Mexican government to keep searching for the students’ remains, revisit the entire case, and investigate links between the government and criminal organizations.
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