Today marks one year since the Mexican government kidnapped the 43 Ayotzinapa students.
WE ASK THE WORLD TO KEEP AN EYE ON US TODAY. On September 26, 2014, 43 students from the Raúl Isidro Burgos Rural Teachers College of Ayotzinapa went missing in Iguala, Guerrero, Mexico. According to official reports, they had travelled to Iguala that day to hold a protest for what they considered discriminatory hiring and funding practices by the government. During the journey the local police intercepted them and a confrontation ensued. Details of what happened during and after the clash remain unclear, but the official investigation concluded that once the students were in custody, they were handed over to the Guerreros Unidos crime syndicate and presumably killed.
Mexican authorities believe that Iguala mayor José Luis Abarca Velázquez and his wife María de los Ángeles Pineda Villa were the probable masterminds of the abduction. Both of them became fugitives after the incident along with the town’s police chief Felipe Flores Velásquez. The couple was arrested about a month later in Mexico City. The mass kidnapping of the students quickly snowballed into the biggest political and public security scandal Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto had faced in his administration. It led to massive protests all across Mexico, particularly in the state of Guerrero and Mexico City, and condemnations at a global scale.
A mass grave, initially believed to contain the charred bodies of 28 of the students, was discovered near Iguala on October 5, 2014. They had been tortured and, according to reports, burned alive, three gang members confessed to loading them on to trucks, murdering them at a landfill, burning their bodies and dumping their remains in a river. “The detainees pointed out that in this area they took the lives of the survivors and then they put them under the rubbish dump where they burnt the bodies.”They took shifts so that the fire lasted hours, using diesel, petrol, tires, plastic.” Subsequent reports raised the estimate of the number of found bodies to 34. On October 14, police announced that forensic tests had shown that none of the 28 bodies from the first mass grave corresponded to the missing students, but the same day four additional graves, with an unknown number of bodies, were discovered.
Many protesters in Mexico City carried handmade banners with the words Ya me cansé (“I’ve Had Enough” or “I’m Tired”), in reference to a comment made by Mexico’s attorney general, Jesús Murillo, at the end of the press conference on Friday. The phrase has been turned on its head to express public exhaustion with both the violence that has taken hold in many parts of Mexico, where organised criminal activity is protected by corrupt authorities, as well as the federal government’s failure to act against it, which many believe underpins the events in Iguala. Protesters also chanted: “It was the state”, in an effort to push home the message that the federal authorities have yet to accept the depth of the institutional crisis exposed by the apparent massacre.
Please
don’t believe when they say that the 43 missing students of Ayotzinapa were brutally murdered. The government has not presented any physical proofs. The parents of the missing boys have not accepted the government’s explanation, arguing that it is merely a strategy to shut them down. They demand the truth, the Mexican state is a criminal state, and it will do anything to shake this case off.
We demand that the truth about Mexico has to be told, our media is partial to our corrupt government, but we have social media and we have our streets, we will march, we will protest, we will not remain silent.
These 43 students are not the first ones and we know they won’t be the last ones. We are tired of a repressor, murderer and corrupt government that kills its own people. DON’T LEAVE US ALONE. WE COULD CHANGE. WE COULD SAVE LIVES, WE NEED EACH OTHER.
PLEASE SHARE OUR INFORMATION, OUR VIDEOS, OUR PLIGHT.
"WE WERE SEARCHING FOR 43 BUT WE FOUND HUNDRED, THOUSANDS, WITHOUT A FACE, WITHOUT AN IDENTITY."
#AccionGlobalporAyotzinapa #JusticeForAyotzinapa #YaMeCanse
THIS IS URGENT, PLEASE SPREAD THIS. Jalisco, November 26th
Elements of the Fuerza Única, Jalisco, detained students of the Escuela Normal Rural de Atequiza as they headed towards the town of La Barca, Jalisco. Right now they are surrounded by nine patrols and they’re demanding them to get off the bus.
"This is getting bad, they already drew their weapons and there is an element that is very aggressive. One of the students asked them if they were like the cops of Iguala, who disappear students, and the police responded, ‘Yes, we are like that’, and that is a direct threat,” says one of the students through his phone.
The normalista, who requested anonymity, said they were going from Atequiza to La Barca to pick up some comrades who had participated in a demonstration with farmers (a protest to put pressure on the goverment for the recent events regarding Ayotzinapa, and the way they neglect resources to their rural schools), but before reaching Ocotlán, a van blocked their way in the highroad.
"They stopped us, got us off the truck and a police started pushing us, threatening us, all while swearing at us. We asked him why they were detaining us if we did nothing illegal." He further added that they have them surrounded while pointing at them with guns and flashlights.
During the call you can hear how the police elements yell at students and try to take their phones to prevent being recorded.
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A friend of mine told me they already took 8 girls with them, and that there’s already a bunch of riot elements surrounding the school AND the manifestants of La Barca.
It is worth mentioning that the students of Atequiza belong to the same Student Federation as the missing students from Ayotzinapa. Also, the Fuerza Única Police are elements that just love hiding their badges and getting involved in corruption cases.
This is real, and this is happening right now. The goverment is going after every single rural school and won’t stop until they shut them down, like they’ve been doing since the last century. Around the 30’s, there were 36 Escuelas Rurales Normales, nowadays, there’s only 16.