The relatives of the 43 students who disappeared from Ayotzinapa in 2014 expressed their disappointment towards President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO), after a failed attempt to deliver a letter to them informally.
In a meeting that took place on Wednesday night, officials from the Ministry of the Interior tried to deliver the document, which included the report of the Special Commission for Truth and Access to Justice in the Ayotzinapa case (Covaj-A).
However, the parents of the students refused to receive it, arguing that this gesture was an attempt to simulate results in a case that has marked the political agenda of the country.
Isidor Vicario, the spokesman for the Center for the Defense of Human Rights of the Tlachinollan Mountain, commented: “He is trying to kick, and the parents take that badly, it is a lack of seriousness.”
Ayotzinapa Relatives Continue Fight for Justice
Meliton Ortega, father of one of the missing, stressed that the absence of the head of Covaj, Felix Medina, who replaced Alejandro Encinas, has worsened the situation. “What the parents have said is that under the administration of Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the investigations have ended here,” added Vicario.
In his morning press conference, Lopez Obrador read the letter, which exonerated the Army and accused the complaints about the lack of information as part of an international conspiracy. “Who benefits from having a weakened Army?” the president questioned, generating more discontent among the relatives.
The parents of the 43 students continue their fight for justice and will commemorate the tenth anniversary of the disappearance with a march and a rally. “For us, that is a lack of respect for the fathers and mothers of the 43,” Vicario concluded.
Source: Sipse