Mexican
officials have ordered the arrest of a town mayor, his wife and a local police
chief. The prosecutor claims the three were the masterminds behind an attack
that left six students dead - with dozens more missing.
Deutsche Welle, 23 Oct 2014
Mexico's
Attorney General Jesus Murillo on Wednesday said information from a gang leader
had led to the arrest warrants being issued over the students' deaths and
disappearances.
"We
have issued warrants for the arrest of Iguala Mayor Jose Luis Abarca, his wife
Mrs Pineda Villa and police chief Felipe Flores Velazquez," Murillo told a
press conference. All three of those named were currently fugitives.
The
attorney general claimed the three were: "the individuals who likely
organized the events that took place in Iguala." Authorities claim police
abducted the students and handed them over to a gang.
The case
sparked national uproar, with protests in Mexico City as well as Chilpancingo,
the capital of Guerrero state where the disappearances took place.
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| The investigation of a mass grave site near Iguala yielded no link with the students |
In addition
to the six students that were found dead, another 43 - from the same rural
teaching college, known for radical activities - appear to have been abducted
near Iguala on September 26.
Authorities
sent federal police into Iguala and have arrested more than 50 people in
connection with the incident, including the leader of the Guerreros Unidos
gang, Sidronio Casarrubias.
Murillo
said Casarrubias had told prosecutors that the mayor and his wife, Maria de los
Angeles Pineda, had ordered two local police forces to stop the students.
Family drug
links
Abarca was
said to have given "police the order to confront" students, who were
known for frequent protests.
Mexican
media, citing intelligence sources, say that Abarca's wife - the sister of at
least three known drug traffickers - had been afraid the students would
interrupt a speech she was due to give that night.
Authorities
say that corrupt police officers were among those who shot at buses the
students had commandeered. It is believed that Iguala police handed the
surviving students over to police in the neighboring town of Cocula, who in
turn delivered them to the Guerreros Unidos gang.
Searchers
are still combing the region around Iguala by land and air, but there has so
far been no trace of the missing students.
On
Wednesday, a group of frustrated protesters set fire to the Iguala city hall
building over the unsolved disappearances. Thousands had marched in a
demonstration staged in the town earlier, the latest in a series of protests.



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