Ayotzinapa Vive: Families Demand
Truth, Justice and an End to the Drug War
By Daniel Robelo
September
27, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- September 26 marks one
year since the forcible disappearance of 43
student-teachers from the Escuela Normal Rural (rural
teachers’ college) Raúl Isidro Burgos de Ayotzinapa, and
the murder of six community members. The normalistas’
case has come to symbolize all of Mexico’s disappeared,
the corruption of Mexico’s political institutions, and
the carnage wrought by the war on drugs.
From the beginning, no one believed the
official story: that the students were abducted by a
drug cartel and incinerated at a nearby trash dump under
orders from the local mayor. Now, a new
independent expert report commissioned by the
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights proves that
story was engineered to mask the fact that local, state
and federal security forces were responsible.
The report found that the attacks were sustained and
coordinated among multiple agencies, including federal
police and military intelligence. The report’s findings
confirm an earlier UC Berkeley investigation showing
that the Army and federal police knew about the attacks
in real time but did nothing…or worse. The report also
concluded that it was scientifically impossible for the
students to have been burned at the trash dump,
confirming the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team’s
earlier skepticism of the Mexican authorities.
The report contained another
bombshell: a possible motive, fueled by drug
prohibition. The students may have unknowingly
interfered with a heroin shipment likely destined for
Chicago when they peacefully commandeered buses to
attend a demonstration.
The people of Guerrero have not rested
since the students’ disappearance. In their search,
dozens of mass graves have been uncovered – none of
which held the students’ remains.
In November, when then-Attorney
General Jesús Murillo Karam was questioned about the
dubious official story, he responded dismissively that
“I’m tired” (ya me cansé). His words outraged the
nation. Under the hashtag “ya me cansé”, Mexican society
rose up in dignified rage. The whole country was tired.
Of the violence, corruption, impunity, and fear. Of the
countless innocents disappeared, murdered, tortured,
raped, displaced.
Ayotzinapa showed that the state and
the cartels are virtually indistinguishable. What waning
legitimacy President Enrique Peña Nieto enjoyed at home
quickly evaporated, while abroad the image he had been
successfully selling – of an investment-friendly,
peaceful Mexico – was obliterated. The curtain was
pulled aside and the world saw a Mexico devastated by
the drug war. The case sparked a national mass
mobilization that nearly brought the government of Peña
Nieto to its knees. Last fall, protesters across the
country demanded the president’s resignation and even
set the National Palace ablaze.
This spark caught fire in the U.S.,
too – inspiring Latinos to stand up and say, “We’re
tired too.” A national day of action was held under the
banner
#USTired2, with marches and vigils in 43 U.S. cities
– one for each of the abducted normalistas. The campaign
called for the cessation of U.S. military aid to Mexico
used to sustain the drug war, which since 2007 has
resulted in well over 100,000 murdered, 25,000
disappeared and one million displaced.
The students’ families have taken
their fight to other countries, leading
caravans across the
United States. They also traveled to South America
and Europe, sharing their stories, calling on the world
to join their struggle and continuing to pressure the
Mexican state from within and without.
Their community continues to be
attacked, threatened and criminalized. For example, in
August,
Miguel Ángel Jiménez, an activist in Guerrero who
uncovered several mass graves in the process of
searching for the 43, was found murdered.
One year later, the students’ families
are still in struggle, never ceasing to demand their
sons’ safe return, to push for the truth, to bring the
perpetrators to justice, and to end the drug war.
Massive demonstrations are planned to mark the
anniversary in Mexico, where the movement to end the
drug war and bring justice to its victims keeps growing.
We stand with Ayotzinapa. We honor the
courage and resilience of the students’ families and
community, and we join them in demanding justice.
Daniel Robelo
is the research coordinator for the Drug Policy Alliance.
Copyright 2015 Drug Policy Alliance