Mexico
says mayor, wife were behind student-teacher disappearances
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[October 23, 2014]
By Gabriel Stargardter
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - A Mexican mayor
and his wife were "probable masterminds" behind the disappearance of 43
student-teachers last month in the restive southwest, the country's
attorney general said on Wednesday.
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The students went missing on Sept. 26 from Iguala in the
southwestern state of Guerrero, after they clashed with police. The
incident sent shockwaves across Mexico and undermined President
Enrique Pena Nieto's claims that Mexico is getting safer under his
watch.
So far, federal authorities have arrested 52 people in connection
with the incident, including dozens of police who have links to a
gang called Guerreros Unidos, or "United Warriors." The gang's
leader, Sidronio Casarrubias, was caught last week.
Thousands marched in Iguala on Wednesday to protest the
disappearance of the teachers in training. After the march, masked
men set fire to the municipal offices with Molotov cocktails and
smashed the windows.
In Mexico City, Attorney General Jesus Murillo said Casarrubias had
told prosecutors that Iguala Mayor Jose Luis Abarca and his wife,
Maria de los Angeles Pineda, had ordered two local police forces to
stop the students from disrupting a political event that day.
"We have issued warrants for the arrest of Iguala Mayor Jose Luis
Abarca, his wife Mrs Pineda Villa and police chief Felipe Flores
Velazquez, as probable masterminds of the events that occurred in
Iguala on Sept. 26," Murillo said at a press conference.
During the September incident, police shot and killed one student
and detained the others before turning them over to Guerreros Unidos
gang members, Murillo added. He said the gang then mistook the
students for members of rival criminal group "Los Rojos," or "The
Reds."
He also said that according to Casarrubias' information, Pineda, who
the government says comes from a family of high-ranking drug
traffickers, was Guerreros Unidos' top boss within the Iguala
government.
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Authorities continue to investigate nine mass graves in the area
where they have already found 30 bodies. Initial examinations showed
none of the bodies belonged to the students.
The case has overshadowed Pena Nieto's bid to restore order in
Mexico and shift the focus away from endemic gang violence and onto
economic growth in Latin America's No. 2 economy. Drug violence
exploded during the rule of his predecessor, Felipe Calderon, and
has claimed about 100,000 lives since 2007.
Security forces killed 19 suspected criminals in the state of
Tamaulipas on Tuesday alone, the state government said on Wednesday.
(Writing by Alexandra Alper; Editing by Gabriel Stargardter and
Simon Gardner and David Gregorio)
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