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The panel was appointed by the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights, part of the Organization of American States. It gave a different story of the disappearance of the 43 Mexican students than that presented by the government. Drug gangs and local government collaborated in kidnapping of the students with impunity, and raises questions about the rule of law in Mexico.
Grouped Articles
Experts Reject Official Account of How 43 Mexican Students Were Killed
New York Times 09/06/2015
Mexico’s States Gained Power and Money; Then Came Corruption
WSJ 03/13/2017
The involvement of police and city officials in the violence against students protesting cuts in school spending with the murder of 43 students shocks Mexico in 2014.
Grouped Articles
In Case of Missing Students, Hillside Mass Graves Point to a Death March
New York Times 10/08/2014
Mexico’s Deadly Narco-Politics
New York Times 10/09/2014
Wall Street Journal 11/14/2014
Rage and Sorrow Flow as Student in Mexico Is Declared Dead
New York Times 12/07/2014
As Drug Kingpins Fall in Mexico, Cartels Fracture and Violence Surges
New York Times 08/12/2015
Experts Reject Official Account of How 43 Mexican Students Were Killed
New York Times 09/06/2015
The gruesome incident awakens Mexicans and the government of Pena Nieto to the dangers of organized crime in smaller cities and towns with city officials and police becoming part of the drug gang network. The failure to protect young students protesting spending cuts.
Grouped Articles
In Case of Missing Students, Hillside Mass Graves Point to a Death March
New York Times 10/08/2014
Mexico’s Deadly Narco-Politics
New York Times 10/09/2014
Wall Street Journal 11/14/2014
Rage and Sorrow Flow as Student in Mexico Is Declared Dead
New York Times 12/07/2014
Mexico’s Midterm Elections Likely to Reflect President’s Woes
Wall Street Journal 06/06/2015
Mexico Prison Break by ‘El Chapo’ Is a Blow to President Peña Nieto
New York Times 07/13/2015
A PRI party mayor has 43 students abducted by municipal police and turned over to drug gangs. The students are missing and said to be murdered. This has caused outrage throughout Mexico leading to violent demonstrations in Nov. 2014. It has weakened the administration of president Pena Nieto and created serious questions about the rule of law in Mexico, and the way Mexico is run by its elected officials- the collusion of elected officals and drug gangs.
Grouped Articles
Wall Street Journal 11/14/2014
Rage and Sorrow Flow as Student in Mexico Is Declared Dead
New York Times 12/07/2014
Mexico Prison Break by ‘El Chapo’ Is a Blow to President Peña Nieto
New York Times 07/13/2015
As Drug Kingpins Fall in Mexico, Cartels Fracture and Violence Surges
New York Times 08/12/2015
Experts Reject Official Account of How 43 Mexican Students Were Killed
New York Times 09/06/2015
Mexico Stubbornly Resists Accountability
New York Times 01/04/2016
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