THE STUDENTS WERE ABDUCTED FROM AYOTZINAPA IN THE STATE OF GUERRERO, IN
COLLUSION BETWEEN POLICE AND CARTELS
~ Mateo Sgambati ~
Thousands marched in Mexico City yesterday to mark 10 years since the infamous
night in Iguala, Guerrero, where 43 students disappeared. Just days before the
end of the current Mexican government’s term, the mothers and fathers of the
disappeared students have reiterated that their struggle is unwavering, and
their demand remains the same: the return of the 43 students from the Escuela
Normal Rural de Ayotzinapa (Ayotzinapa Rural Teacher’s College).
From the so-called of the inept government of Enrique Peña Nieto to the
“progressive” administration of Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO), far from
resolving the events, there have been, at different times, falsification of
evidence, obstruction of judicial proceedings, omission of evidence pointing to
a state crime, and fabricated conclusions based on discredited witnesses, all of
which only contribute to the impunity in a country with over one hundred
thousand disappeared people.
AMLO’s government has operated hand-in-hand with the military from its
inception. From a podium in Palacio Nacional, the president addresses citizens
and the media, setting the tone for public debates. This platform has allowed
him to expose the lack of ideological foundation in the rightmost faction of the
country — a group increasingly battered and desperate over its political
decline.
However, this platform has also served as a conduit for the harassment of human
rights organisations and members of the civil society who tirelessly seek
justice in a country where it is easier to find a mass grave. Not only has there
been no progress on human rights issues, but military institutions now control a
good chunk of the public life, the same institutions that repeatedly violate the
human rights of migrants and indigenous peoples.
Ten years ago, state personnel killed and disappeared young students in Iguala,
in a night that sparked a decade of cover-ups spanning now two federal
governments. At the start of AMLO’s administration in 2018, the Comisión para la
Verdad y Acceso a la Justicia del Caso Ayotzinapa (Truth and Access to Justice
Commission for the Ayotzinapa Case, CoVAJ) was established, under the mandate of
then-Undersecretary of the Interior, Alejandro Encinas.
Not only did the commission fail to clarify anything, but the federal government
has acted in clear collusion with the military, covering up and obstructing all
investigations. Arrest warrants for military personnel are issued and revoked,
institutions to investigate the case are created and dissolved, meetings with
the families of the disappeared are postponed. The military has yet to hand over
800 documents related to the forced disappearance of the students.
The post Mexico: Ten years on, families of missing students have not forgotten
appeared first on Freedom News.