Mexican teachers set up tent city to protest disappearance of 43 students
CHILPANCINGO, Mexico —- Hundreds of teachers have set up a tent city in the main square of this state capital in southern Mexico, and say they will not leave until the government finds 43 college students who disappeared three weeks ago, after they were reportedly abducted by local police linked to a drug gang.
The protest, which began on Monday, reflects the outrage many Mexicans feel toward politicians and law enforcement officials, whom they hold responsible for one the darkest crimes in Mexico’s recent history. The crowd shows few signs of dissipating.
“I don’t just think I will stay here, I am driven to stay here, as are all of my colleagues,” said Pastor Mojica, one of the teachers. “We all feel the necessity to stay here because of the outrage we feel — it’s not something to think about it, it’s something that you feel and are compelled to do.”
The students, from the Ayotzinapa rural teacher’s college in the state of Guerrero, haven’t been seen since Sept. 26, when they were attacked by police in the city of Iguala after they hijacked three buses during a protest.
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Three students were killed in the attack, and investigators suspect that the missing students were rounded up by police and handed over to a local drug cartel, who then executed them and buried them in clandestine graves. While several possible grave sites have been identified, DNA tests showed that one site didn’t contain the students’ bodies, and authorities have yet to announce the DNA results for the bodies found at two other grave sites nearby.
At the Zócalo, a historical square in the heart of Chilpancingo, teachers sleep under nylon tents and cook whatever food is available to them in portable gas stoves. Showers are hard to come by, but the protesters have occupied city hall and use the bathrooms there.
Despite such inconveniences, members of the camp say they’ve set no date of return.
“These crimes don’t just affect the cities,” said an elementary school teacher from Santa Cruz Copanatoyac, a municipality deep in Guerrero’s eastern mountains. “Sometimes people disappear in our area or die because they are involved in organized crime, but [the missing students] were just kids who wanted to better themselves,” said the teacher, who asked that his name not be published for fear of reprisals.