Our three-part After Ayotzinapa series dug into the kidnapping of 43 students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers’ College in Mexico, and examined the Mexican government’s flawed investigation. If you’ve followed the case and listened to the series, you’ll know that the students’ families demanded that a group of international experts intervene.
Since 2014, the Grupo Interdisciplinario de Expertas y Expertos Independientes (GIEI) and their ongoing investigation have put pressure on the Mexican government to find answers, preventing officials from closing the case.
This week in Mexico City, the GIEI presented its latest evidence and findings. It says:
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The Mexican government knew since day one that the students were kidnapped and killed by criminals, and hid evidence that could help find them.
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The theory that the students had been killed and burned at a garbage dump is a complete fabrication, and officials from the highest levels of the government and military were involved in fabricating evidence at the dump.
During its presentation, the GIEI showed drone footage of the garbage dump being secured by the military days before an independent forensic team would arrive. The footage showed dozens of members of the military and government officials at the site for hours in the days leading up to Oct. 29, 2014, when the first piece of remains was found.
You could hear a pin drop in the room as the footage played, said the National Security Archive’s Kate Doyle, lead reporter in the After Ayotzinapa series.
Dig Deeper:
🎧 Our podcast series in English, After Ayotzinapa, and in Spanish, Después de Ayotzinapa, a collaboration with Adonde Media.
🎧 New findings show Mexican government tampered with missing students case [Reveal’s Anayansi Díaz-Cortes, lead reporter in the After Ayotzinapa series, on The World]
📄 Ayotzinapa Investigations [National Security Archive]
📄 Mexico armed forces knew fate of 43 disappeared students from day one [The Guardian]
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