The Mexican bishops’ conference has issued a statement of solidarity with the families of 43 missing trainee teachers, who refuse to accept the authorities’ explanations for their disappearance and continue calling for their relatives to be brought back alive.
“Adding our voice to theirs and to all of society, we say, ‘Enough with so much corruption, impunity and violence,'” the bishops said in a statement.
“Respectfully and energetically, we ask the authorities to take the investigation to its final consequences so that it’s known with certainty what has happened with the disappeared and the intellectual authors are punished with the full weight of the law. At the same time, we demand the enforcing of the rule of law to put an end to all forms of violence, illicit activities, corruption, impunity and the complicity of some authorities with organised crime.”
Meanwhile, Cardinal Norberto Rivera Carrera of Mexico City has offered prayers during Mass for the trainee teachers, who authorities allege were captured by corrupt police, killed by organised crime and had their bodies burned.
Protesters have taken to the streets condemning the apparent collusion between criminals and the political class in parts of the country. The protests and outrage are among the strongest in recent years and reflect anger at the way Mexico is being run.
Many have adopted the slogan, “I’ve had enough,” echoing a comment by Mexico’s Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam after a November 7 news conference that has been interpreted by many as insensitive.
“It was the straw that broke the camel’s back,” said Jesuit Father Conrado Zepeda, who celebrated Mass last week at the Jesuit-run Ibero-American University for students and four family members of the missing.
“It has to do with the young, students, the poor, people unable to defend themselves being attacked in this way. This is why civil society has revolted.”
Authorities arrested Jose Luis Abarca, mayor of Iguala, and his wife, Maria de los Angeles Pineda, in Mexico City on November 4, alleging they ordered the attack on the students. The couple claimed the students were coming to protest a community event planned by Pineda.
Classmates said the students went to Iguala, 120 miles south of Mexico City, to collect funds for a future trip to the capital, but had their borrowed buses shot at by police — who detained 43 of the teacher trainees and handed them over to members of the Guerreros Unidos gang.
Murillo spelled out the details on November 7, saying three gang members confessed to burning the bodies in a garbage dump. Six bags of ashes and bones have been discovered at the site.
Families of the missing students refuse to believe the government and said they only will accept evidence presented by Argentine forensic experts working on the case.
Father Victor Manuel Aguilar, spokesman for the Diocese of Chilpancingo-Chilapa, where the students’ school is located, said the mistrust comes from an unhappy history of human rights abuses in Guerrero state, which is south of Mexico City and full of impoverished, indigenous communities that have been exploited and pushed to the society’s margins for centuries.
“Justice is often delayed … if it arrives at all,” he said.
The case has caused outrage and a political crisis for President Enrique Pena Nieto, who had stopped speaking on security matters in an attempt to improve the image of Mexico as an investment destination.
“There has never been a rebuke like now,” Father Aguilar said.
Protests have continued, especially in Guerrero, where students and their supporters have burned government buildings, blocked highways and marched through the tourist zone of Acapulco. Father Aguilar sees the protests continuing as long as the students’ whereabouts remains uncertain.
“We all want the student to appear alive. But it they don’t appear, I think that this discontent could become radicalised,” Father Aguilar said. “There are people willing to do whatever it takes to make their demands known.”
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