5 Oct 2014

Iguala, Guerro, Mexico: Charred Remains Of 20 People Found In Mass Grave: *UPDATED

*A mass grave was found near the town over the weekend full of charred human remains

Mexico's federal forces have taken over security in a southern city where 43 students disappeared.

The army disarmed the entire municipal police force after gang-linked officers shot at the aspiring teachers.

Monte Alejandro Rubido Garcia, the national security commissioner, said the Iguala police officers will be sent to another town to undergo evaluations.

The students went missing after they clashed with police in Iguala in the volatile, gang-ridden state of Guerrero on 26 September.

A mass grave was found near the town over the weekend, full of charred human remains.

Authorities say it will take at least two weeks to get the results of DNA tests to identify the corpses.

Witnesses say several students, who are from a teacher training college known as a hotbed of radical protests, were whisked away in police vehicles, after officers shot at buses the youngsters had commandeered to return home.

Mexican President Enrique Pea Nieto vowed today to hunt down those responsible for the massacre.

Guerrero's attorney general, Inaky Blanco, said yesterday that 28 bodies have been found at the site so far, and it is "probable" that some of the missing 43 students are among the remains found in the graves.

He said the motive of the killings was unclear.
-----------
*Missing students are believed to be among charred corpses found in mass graves in southwest Mexico and local security officials are suspected of conspiring with gang members to kill them, authorities have said.
www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-29501835 
Several investigators said they feared the victims included some of a group of dozens of students who went missing after they clashed with police in Iguala in the volatile state of Guerrero on the night of 26 September.          

Speaking on condition of anonymity, local officials said that at least 34 bodies had been buried at the site.

Guerrero state Attorney General Inaky Blanco said 28 bodies had been recovered so far, some complete and some in pieces.

He said "it is probable" that some of the missing students are among the remains found in the graves.
The prosecutor added that two gang hitmen have admitted killing 17 of the 43 missing students with the help of security officials.

While federal investigators, police and the army continued to pull human remains out of the plot of broken land on the outskirts of the city of Iguala, families of missing students demanded information on the whereabouts of their loved ones.

At the college east of the state capital of Chilpancingo, where the students are from, there was anger and despair over their fate and anxious relatives blamed President Enrique Pena Nieto for what had happened.

"Things are going from bad to worse," said a woman who identified herself as Anayeli, whose 20-year-old brother was among the missing.

"Supposedly Pena Nieto isn't involved, but this is happening right under his nose. He's involved in all of this."

As dogs wandered about a rough dirt track petering out into the sierra, security officials said they believed the victims had been driven to the end of the track, walked up the hillside, executed and buried in six graves.

Mr Blanco told reporters that bodies were set on fire after being heaped on top of branches which were likely doused with gasoline or diesel.

He said that 29 suspects have been identified so far, 26 of whom have been arrested, including Felipe Flores, the head of security for Iguala.

Mr Blanco said local police had been infiltrated by a criminal gang known as the Guerreros Unidos, and that Mr Flores had conspired with a gang leader to order the killings.

He added that Francisco Salgado, Mr Flores's deputy, also ordered the police to detain the students and has gone missing.

Police are suspected of abducting some of the students, a local security official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

"You really can't call them police," the state security official said.

Suspected gang members had told investigators that police had handed over the students to the people who killed them, who belonged to the gang, he added.

The suspected gang members had also helped the authorities identify the site, he said.
However, the state government said it could be days beforethe identities of the dead are known.

Soldiers and police had cordoned off the dirt track where it ended not far from the graves, which lay about a 40-minute walk across rocky terrain inaccessible by vehicle.

The fugitive mayor of Iguala, Jose Luis Abarca, is also being investigated for possible involvement in the crimes, Mr Blanco said.

22 police officers have been arrested in connection with the 26 September violence, which claimed the lives of at least six people and left 25 injured.

The graves have created a major headache for Mr Pena Nieto, who took office two years ago pledging to end a wave of gang-related violence that has killed around 100,000 people since the start of 2007.

Though homicides have fallen on his watch, other crimes have increased, including extortion and kidnapping.

Over the past few days, Mr Pena Nieto's record on law and order has taken a number of blows, including the killing of a federal congressman and news that soldiers are believed to have summarily executed a group of suspected gang members earlier this year.

Information leading to the discovery of the graves had in part come from the interrogation of local police arrested after the clashes in Iguala, the security official said.

Guerrero state, home to Iguala and the resort of Acapulco, has been one of the most lawless in the country for years.

--------------------
Authorities have found mass graves with the charred remains of up to 20 people in the restive southern Mexican state of Guerrero.
More Missing Students In Mexico images 

It comes as police searched the area for nearly four dozen missing students. 
The identities of the dead were not immediately clear, officials said.
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/bodies-found-near-mexico-town-where-43-students-223705324.html
The remains were found in six fresh graves on a hillside on the outskirts of the town of Iguala, a local official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Guerrero Attorney General Inaky Blanco told reporters in Iguala that the remains would be sent to Mexico's forensic service to determine whether or not the corpses were those of the missing students.

He declined to say how many graves or corpses had been found.
"In the next few hours we will determine the cause of death and the number of bodies," a spokesman for the state attorney general's office said.

Iguala is almost 200km south of Mexico City in the increasingly violent state of Guerrero, the site of clashes involving students, police and armed men last week.

At least six people were killed in a spate of incidents.
Guerrero Governor Angel Aguirre said earlier this week that photos showed police had taken some of the students away.

Several hundred students protested last night in front of Aguirre's residence in the state capital of Chilpancingo, expressing anger that some of their classmates may be among the bodies found in the graves.

A car was overturned and several petrol bombs were hurled at the residence perimeter, where security outposts were lightly damaged.

A police official said there was video footage of eight to ten students being put into police trucks earlier in the week.

Twenty-two police officers were arrested in Guerrero, accused of killing two students during the clashes last week.

Mr Aguirre said yesterday that a total of 30 individuals have now been detained in connection with the incidents.

Local government officials criticised police for showing an excessive use of force with the students in Guerrero, where gangs have evolved from a fragmented drug cartel and are fighting turf wars.

Thirteen of an original group of 57 missing people re-emerged this week. Some had hidden, others had gone home. Dozens are still unaccounted for.

RELATED ARTICLES: Links.

www.irishtimes.com/news/world/violence-returns-to-birthplace-of-mexican-drug-war-1.1790143

www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-29493797  & www.citizen.co.za
& www.timeslive.co.za
---------

No comments:

Post a Comment