<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=192888919167017&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Friday,  April 19 , 2024

Linkedin Pinterest
News / Nation & World

Unrest brewing in Mexico

Return of guerrillas feared as anger grips nation over missing students

The Columbian
Published: October 24, 2014, 12:00am
2 Photos
Thousands of protesters take to the main highway leading past Iguala, Mexico, on Wednesday.
Thousands of protesters take to the main highway leading past Iguala, Mexico, on Wednesday. The protest was for the return of 43 students who went missing nearly a month ago. Photo Gallery

IGUALA, Mexico — In what some critics believe is a political miscalculation, President Enrique Pena Nieto’s government has mustered only tepid action to resolve the case of 43 missing student teachers who disappeared nearly a month ago, hoping the scandal will blow over.

Instead, the Pena Nieto government now confronts a bruising series of public demonstrations and the specter of a rise in violent radicalism in the Pacific Coast state of Guerrero.

Tens of thousands of people clogged the streets of central Mexico City Wednesday night in a candlelight vigil for the missing students, and marches unfolded in at least 30 cities. Four once-moribund armed groups in Guerrero have all issued statements condemning what they call “state terrorism,” with one group calling for “all forms of struggle, violent and peaceful.”

As the days pass, patience is wearing thin among activists seeking the return of the missing students, who were attacked by municipal police in this city on Sept. 26. The clashes left six dead. Police rounded up 43 others and turned them over to a regional crime group that received orders from the mayor’s wife, authorities say.

“The government is trying to buy time to erase all the evidence,” said Crisoforo Garcia Rodriguez, a leader of the Union of People and Organizations in the State of Guerrero, a group that has mobilized hundreds of activists to this city of 130,000 residents in the search for the disappeared.

While Pena Nieto has spoken of the case rarely, and his Cabinet has offered little information until this week, Garcia’s group has scoured the hills around Iguala, finding numerous mass graves with the help of concerned citizens and shining a light on the nexus between politicians and criminals.

“A total of 17 clandestine mass graves have been found,” Garcia said. “There are more. There are hundreds of clandestine grave sites out there.”

In the initial weeks after the disappearance of the students, all of whom attended a rural teachers college in the state, the Pena Nieto government sought to cast responsibility for the incident on Guerrero State Gov. Angel Aguirre Rivero, a former legislator of the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party, known as the PRI, who switched parties in 2010 and won election as governor on the ticket of the leftist Party of the Democratic Revolution.

Stay informed on what is happening in Clark County, WA and beyond for only
$9.99/mo

“They miscalculated,” said Juan Angulo Osorio, editor of El Sur, a newspaper that circulates in Acapulco, Guerrero’s best known city, and Chilpancingo, its capital, referring to leaders of the PRI. “They wanted all the responsibility to fall on Aguirre. But they didn’t count on the international reaction that puts the blame on Pena Nieto.”

As PRI leaders seek to quarantine the political contagion from the Iguala disappearances, cynicism over seemingly lackluster government attempts to hunt for the missing students has deepened.

“The chain of complicities and cover-ups, both political and police-military, goes from the municipal level to the federal level,” a onetime guerrilla group, the Insurgent Revolutionary People’s Army, said in a statement Oct. 17.

Other onetime insurgencies that have condemned the disappearances include the Popular Revolutionary Army (active in the latter part of the 1990s), the Revolutionary Armed Forces-Liberation of the People, and a fourth group, the People’s Militia of Guerrero.

None of the armed groups is believed to have significant membership, weaponry or logistical capability, but that may not always be the case as frustration levels grow. The Rev. Francisco Javier Tejeda, parish priest of Iguala’s cathedral, said anger over rampant corruption in the state is already high. The case of the missing students “will bring a lot of consequences,” he said.

Several respected security analysts shared a concern about intensifying upheaval in Guerrero, adding that the Pena Nieto government had been caught off-guard by how anger over the disappearances has spread.

“It seems that what happened in Iguala crossed an invisible line and turned into a national commotion and an international jolt,” said Ernesto Lopez Portillo Vargas, head of the Institute for Security and Democracy, a think tank in Mexico City.

“This structure of impunity is sparking all this discontent,” he added.

Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam sought Wednesday to focus all blame for the student disappearances on former Iguala Mayor Jose Luis Abarca; his wife, Maria de los Angeles Pineda, who hoped to succeed him in the mayor’s job; and city security chief Felipe Flores. All have arrest warrants pending and are fugitives, he added.

Murillo Karam said the head of the Warriors United regional crime gang, Sidronio Casarrubias, who was arrested Oct. 16, told prosecutors that the mayor’s wife is the sister of two gangsters and was the city government link for Warriors United.

He said that on the night of Sept. 26, Casarrubias received a call from an underling known as “El Gil,” who misidentified the students as members of a rival gang, Los Rojos. Once municipal police from Iguala and another nearby town, Cocula, rounded up the students, El Gil used a cattle truck to take them west of Iguala to an area where nine mass graves were found, Murillo Karam said.

Mexico has the capability to do expert DNA testing itself, but Murillo Karam said the government is awaiting the results of DNA tests conducted by the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team to determine if bodies found in the mass graves belong to any of the missing students.

Loading...