2015-10-12 09:30:00

Mexico releases official documents on 43 missing students


(Vatican Radio)  Mexico's Attorney General has given access to 85 volumes of official data, relating to the disappearance of 43 students and teachers, who were handed over to gangsters by Mexican Municipal Police, following a protest rally in the southern city of Iguala last year.

Listen to James Blears' report:

Mexican Attorney General, Arely Gomez, made the information available, providing an online link to the website, via her Twitter account. The collated information exceeds 54,000 pages.

Mexico's National Transparancy Institute initiated this by demanding access to everything concerning the case. Pressure for full disclosure increased, during the recent visit to Mexico by the United Nations High Commissioner on Human Rights.

The famlies of the missing insist they'll only accept the conclusions of a comprehensive internationally-led investigation. 

The government's official version of events has already been directly contradicted by the Inter American Commission on Human Rights.

It did a six month independent investigation of the case, which continues to cause horror, revulsion and ourtrage.

Mexican Law and Order has arrested more than a hundred people.








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