The case of the missing 43 students from Mexico، who had been strongly believed to be deceased، burned and charred remains disposed to a river، has taken another drastic turn as Argentine forensics experts have raised questioned over Mexico’s investigation.
The non-profit forensic organization claims of discrepancies in the evidence attached to the case and stated the evidence were not supporting the Mexican government’s conclusion of youths burned to ashes.
The Argentine Forensic Anthropologists team، hired by the victim’s parents as an independent detective party said on Saturday via an issue that the evidence presented in the case had various discrepancies. They had strongly stated the government presented biased analyses of scientific evidence to support their conclusion that the victims were burned to ashes in Cocula in southern Guerrero state and the remains disposed off to a nearby river to cover up the evidence.
As of now only one student has been confirmed to have been identified from the charred remains. Following this، the team ” “would like to reiterate that it doesn’t exclude the possibility that some of the students met the fate described by the attorney general” adding “But in our opinion there is no scientific evidence to support that in the Cocula garbage dump.”
Meanwhile Attorney General of Mexico، Jesus Murillo Karam stated on 27th January that after 39 confessions، 386 declarations، 487 forensic tests، 16 raids and two reconstructions، the authorities have concluded the students were arrested by the muncipal police in the city of Iguala، after which they were allegedly handed over to Guerreros Unidos cartel، who had them killed and burned afterwards.
Case of the 43 missing students takes a new turn as forensic team questions government analyses
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