Mexico corruption: State mayor, wife issued warrants over kidnapped students
The mayor of the Mexican town where 43 students disappeared last month is a “possible mastermind” of the abduction, along with his wife, believes the attorney general.
As arrest warrants were being issued for Mayor Jose Luis Abarca
and Maria de los Angeles Pineda on Wednesday, the town of Iguala
continued to erupt in protest over the September 26
disappearance, which they believe was orchestrated by corrupt
police and a fierce drug cartel operating in the state of
Guerrero.
The kidnapped students have not been seen since.
The highest-ranking couple in the entire state is now seen by
authorities to be directly complicit in the abduction by
targeting the students during a political event for increased
rights. The same goes for Police Chief Felipe Flores Velasquez;
local law enforcement has long been believed to be in the
gangsters’ pockets.
"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 September 26," Attorney General Jesus
Murillo said.
The problem is, following the September incident the mayor
requested leave from his post, and neither he nor his wife have
been seen since.
Murillo informed reporters that, according to information
provided by the arrested leader of a fierce local gang – the
Guerreros Unidos - Pineda comes from a family of prominent drug
traffickers and was actually the Iguala government boss of the
drug cartel.
Gang chief Sidronio Casarrubias told police that the mayor and
his wife were complicit. Their aim had been to keep the students
at bay, which wasn’t difficult to do, given alleged police
involvement with the gang.
The initial September incident saw the student teachers from a
local college clash with police during a protest, which led to at
least six deaths. A number were also arrested and believed to
have been handed over to the Guerreros Unidos – the drug cartel,
which allegedly mistook them for a rival gang.
The protests and the ensuing chaos (which spread to other cities)
have sent waves through the country, already struggling with some
of the highest kidnapping and murder rates in the world.
On October 22, thousands marched in the capital Mexico City in
solidarity with the missing students.
On October 14, hundreds of residents in the Guerrero city of Chilpancingo smashed up the state capital building in a furious protest over the continued lack of information about the students’ disappearance.
According to local authorities, the crowds included hundreds of students and teachers from the Ayotzinapa teachers’ college, who blockaded the building and used sticks, rocks and Molotov cocktails to attack the building.
READ MORE Furious students burn Mexican govt. building in protest over police corruption
The police are continuing their investigation of the nine mass
graves where 30 bodies had earlier been found. None of them
belonged to any of the 43 kidnapped students.
Crime continues to be rampant in Latin America’s second economy.
It could seriously shake President Enrique Pena Nieto’s attempts
to present Mexico as a country recovering from high crime rates.
It was worse during his predecessor Felipe Calderon’s time, when
drug violence in the period from 2007 onwards saw 100,000 dead.
According to Reuters speaking to the government in a different
state – Tamaulipas, security forces there have killed 19
suspected criminals on Tuesday alone.