Will Ayotzinapa Case Become Mexico's Political Firestorm or Will It Be Forgotten? Elizabeth - Global Voices | |
go to original October 19, 2014 |
Candles burn for the 46 students who have vanished in Guerrero, México, October 8, 2014. (Enrique Perez Huerta/Demotix)
What lies ahead for Mexico, where the discovery of mass graves in Iguala and dozens of missing school students in Ayotzinapa has led to protests and a tense national debate about law and order? The future is uncertain, but Internet users are busy now discussing what to expect tomorrow. Some say these tragedies will be forgotten with time, while others believe they might serve as catalysts for social change.
Ishtar Cardona, who participated in a march on October 8, shared these reflections on Facebook:
Some of the things I've seen make me afraid that the end result of the Ayotzinapa incident will be the same as what we saw after ABC [Day Care Center fire in Hermosillo, Sonora]: after the protests, silence…
I felt resentful because no one mentioned a plan of action during the rally that followed Wednesday's demonstration, and no one laid out any kind of mutual agreement about the next steps to be taken or specific demands to be made, which should have included the following points:
a) A call for the resignation of Governor Angel Aguirre (the apathy of national politics will allow him to evade responsibility for issues that are clearly his fault).
b) A call for judicial authorities in Guerrero to explain the circumstances that led to the students’ disappearances, and a call for the immediate apprehension of all city officials who participated in the incident (in addition to the city's mayor and his public secretary, staff, and public prosecutors).
c) A call for political parties’ national leaderships to sign, with citizen oversight, a commitment to transparency and professionalism in the election of their candidates to positions of public representation.We needed the chance to shout out our rage and to surround and protect the missing students’ family members, but what will happen now? Are we going to leave the solution to a tragedy that has already happened (and could very well happen again) in the hands of the same people who didn't do their jobs in the first place? [...]
Around the time of the mass protests, Mexico's federal government suddenly announced it had captured the well-known drug trafficker Vicente Carrillo Fuentes, aka “The Viceroy”. Independent news medium Revolución Tres Punto Cero wrote soon thereafter:
The creation of smokescreens will no longer work; the captures of “the Viceroy” and the brother-in-law of the mayor of Iguala have not been successful in quieting the smoldering popular unrest that is becoming evident in the demonstrations and marches that are taking place throughout the country and marking what happened with the 43 students in Ayotzinapa as a catalytic event. This case has unified citizens in a way not seen in many years as they sense a growing dissatisfaction with their government and its political parties [...]
Some Twitter users have noticed suspicious activity online that they attribute to pro-government bots. The accounts in question echo the state's concerns that social unrest surrounding the Iguala case might threaten foreign investments in Mexico.
y esta maquinaria quien la echo a funcionar ? #Iguala [en] #AyotzinapaSomosTodos [en] #Ayotzinapa [en] quién paga a estos #bots [en] pic.twitter.com/gsKnwj4KM9
— Leonidas (@masterwarex) October 11, 2014
So who put this machinery in motion? Who is paying for this?
The tragedies in Mexico have changed the political landscape, as well. Faith in Guerrero's governor and elusive mayor of Iguala has slipped, and their political party faces grim prospects in the next elections.
El #PRD esperaba triunfo en las próximas elecciones… el #PRD esta acabado #AyotzinapaSomosTodos [en] #guerrerorojo
— HemeAqui (@PoliticStalker) October 11, 2014
The #PRD was expecting a victory in the next elections…but the #PRD is finished.
Others have turned their disappointment on President Enrique Peña Nieto:
#Ayotzinapa no topa en el olvido, en dar vueltas a una realidad dolorosa. @EPN pasará a la historia como el presidente que no supo serlo.
— RickyBersosa (@Rbersosa) October 11, 2014
#Ayotzinapa is not stumbling into oblivion, it is not just spinning in its painful reality. @EPN [Enrique Peña Nieto] will pass into history as the president who couldn't do his job.
So far, the government has spoken out against violence and has promised to bring justice. There are now accusations, however, that the state's investigations have become “chaotic and hostile“, and that the authorities leading the inquest have obstructed the work of international experts. In fact, Mexican officials have contradicted each other quite glaringly on several occasions.
From the official Twitter account of the governor of Guerrero:
Algunos de los cuerpos encontrados, de acuerdo con los avances que se tienen con los peritajes, no corresponden a los jóvenes de #Ayotzinapa
— Ángel Aguirre Rivero (@AngelAguirreGro) October 11, 2014
Some of the bodies discovered, according to expert reports, are not those of the students from #Ayotzinapa.
#OJO PGR desmiente a @AngelAguirreGro: ‘no se puede confirmar identidad de cuerpos', dice #Ayotzinapa http://t.co/REuZeMXa3W
— Vértigo Político (@VertigoPolitico) October 11, 2014
#OJO PGR [Mexico's Attorney General] contradicts @AngelAguirreGro: ‘the identities of the bodies cannot be confirmed,’ says #Ayotzinapa
Family members cherish the hope that their loved ones will return. In the meantime, however, they're left waiting for official confirmation about whether any of the tortured remains now being identified match the students kidnapped by narcotics police. If the mass grave turns out to contain the missing students, Mexico will find out if the tension now in the air is enough to cause a large-scale political firestorm.
Translated by Jeff Gotfredson
See the original at Global Voices
We invite you to add your charity or supporting organizations' news stories and coming events to PVAngels so we can share them with the world. Do it now!
From activities like hiking, swimming, bike riding and yoga, to restaurants offering healthy menus, Vallarta-Nayarit is the ideal place to continue - or start - your healthy lifestyle routine.