Latin America: Abducted students in Mexico: Commander accused

Latin America: Abducted students in Mexico: Commander accused

In 2014, corrupt police officers in Mexico abducted dozens of students and handed them over to a crime syndicate. What happened after that is unclear – but years later, more and more details are coming to light.

In the case of the 43 students recently pronounced dead in Mexico, a senior military officer has been directly blamed. The then commander of the 27th Infantry Battalion in the state of Guerrero ordered the killing of six of the young men in 2014, said Interior Ministry Secretary Alejandro Encinas. The victims were said to have been held in a warehouse for up to four days after the kidnapping and then killed.

Encinas heads the truth commission, which recently issued a report on the case. In it, the military was made jointly responsible for the disappearance of the young men. Encinas spoke of a “state crime”. Jesús Murillo Karam, then Attorney General, has since been arrested. He is said to have manipulated the investigation, among other things, suspects were apparently tortured. So far, 83 arrest warrants have been issued, including 20 against military personnel.

Corrupt police officers kidnapped the students from the Ayotzinapa teacher training college in the southern city of Iguala on the night of September 27, 2014 and handed them over to the Guerreros Unidos criminal syndicate. The background to the crime has not yet been fully elucidated. According to the report of the Truth Commission, all were probably killed. So far, however, only bone fragments from three of the young men have been found and identified.

Source: Stern

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