Mexico’s Official Lie
Mexico’s Official Lie
“Mexico´s government
is suffering a deep crisis of credibility, the people in Mexico believe no more
in their “representatives”, while the president warns the world in the UN about
the dangers of populism, we should warn him of the dangers of lack of self-criticism
and transparency.”
Erreh Svaia
By: Jorge Ramos
Taken From: Fusion.net
After 43
Mexican college students from Ayotzinapa went missing a year ago, President
Enrique Peña Nieto’s administration started telling an official lie about their
disappearance. Today, that lie has been exposed.
On Sept.
26, 2014, the students, who all attended a rural teachers’ college, got on five
buses and headed to Iguala. Shortly afterward, they went missing and were
presumed dead. Months later, following what was characterized as an extensive
investigation, the Attorney General’s office announced that it had obtained 39
confessions, conducted 487 inspections, recorded 386 testimonies and initiated
legal action against 99 people who were allegedly involved in the students’
deaths.
Last
January, the Attorney General at the time, Jesús Murillo Karam, announced at a
press conference that the bodies of the students had been incinerated in a
landfill in Cocula, and their ashes dumped in a nearby river. “There is no
doubt that the students were captured, murdered, incinerated and dumped in the
San Juan River,” Murillo Karam claimed, noting that thousands of bone fragments
were recovered. “That’s the historical truth.”
Unfortunately,
this “truth” has proven to be a rigged, incomplete version of events that the
Mexican government has peddled to the world.
According
to five experts appointed by the Inter-American Commission for Human Rights,
the Mexican government’s official report contains many mistakes. In fact, José
Torero, one of those five experts, told me recently that the Mexican
government’s version is “pure speculation.” Torero, who is from Peru and is the
head of the civil engineering department at Australia’s University of Queensland,
said that “in substance, there is no material evidence.”
For
instance, Torero said, the remains of the 43 students could not have been
incinerated at the Cocula landfill, as the government asserted. “Had there been
a fire of that scale, there would be generalized damage to the surrounding
vegetation and the rest of the garbage, and there was no such damage,” he told
me. “Besides, the bones found in the Cocula landfill were incinerated to a
degree that requires an external fire. According to witness testimony, there
was no possibility for a fire of that scale.”
The
Inter-American Commission for Human Rights also concluded that the assertion by
Murillo Karam that there was “not a single evidence, not even one, of the
army’s involvement” in the students’ disappearances is also false.
According
to José Miguel Vivanco, director of Human Rights Watch’s Americas division,
officials from the Mexican army actually knew from the beginning what was
happening. Vivanco contends that army and federal police officials “were
thoroughly informed of what was happening in real time,” through a central
communications system for the security forces. Vivanco also told me in an
interview that, “federal police intercepted the fifth bus, with a group of
students who managed to escape and save their lives. That fifth bus later
disappeared, and there are no traces of its whereabouts in the investigation.”
So two
primary conclusions from the Mexican government’s report—that the students’
remains were incinerated and that the army and federal police had nothing to do
with their disappearance—appear to be false and components of an official lie.
Why did
Peña Nieto’s administration invent these stories? Perhaps they wanted to get
rid of this problem once and for all; the tragedy stymied Peña Nieto’s efforts
at cultivating a positive image around the world. Or maybe the administration
simply wanted to place the blame for the students’ disappearance on violent
drug cartels in Mexico in order to hide the government’s incompetence when it
comes to dealing with crime.
Nevertheless,
more than a year has passed, and we still don’t know what happened to these 43
young men. And while the parents and friends of the missing students try to
face life without their loved ones, their government is still not interested in
finding out what actually happened to them. Fabricating an official lie seems
like yet another cruel and inhumane act perpetrated against the families of the
missing students.



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