Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Mexican Expats Demand Justice For Slain And Missing Students

Mexicans around the globe are mobilizing to put pressure on the Mexican government to find the 43 students from Guerrero who have been missing since September 26. Activists blame the government for what they call its complicity with drug violence.



Protesters gathered in New York's Union Square on Sunday to demand justice for the 43 missing students in Mexico.


David Noriega / BuzzFeed News


Galvanized by the kidnapping and murder of dozens of students in the Mexican state of Guerrero two months ago, Mexicans abroad are mobilizing to hold the Mexican government accountable. Through open letters, protest gatherings, and social media, Mexican students across the globe are demanding that the missing students be returned, and that any public officials complicit in the killings — by commission or omission — be prosecuted or resign.


The protesters hold the Mexican government responsible for the failure to find the 43 students that remain missing, and for creating the deep-rooted culture of corruption and violence that allowed for the killings and kidnappings to happen. The local police in Iguala, Mexico, along with the city's mayor and his wife, have been directly implicated, along with regional drug cartels, in the crimes.


On Sunday, some 150 protesters gathered at a makeshift Day of the Dead altar in Union Square in New York City, created to commemorate the students as well as the hundreds of thousands who have died in the eight years since Mexico launched a full-scale military assault against drug cartels, which in many parts of Mexico wield more power than the government.


A normally lighthearted holiday, the protesters' distorted commemoration of Día de Muertos turned into a somber display of political anger.


"We can no longer have this festive relationship with death, this light-hearted relationship," said Humberto Beck, a Mexican Ph.D. candidate at Princeton University who helped organize the protest. "That communion between the living and the dead, the basis of the ritual, is no longer possible. The disappeared are people between life and death. We cannot celebrate them if we don't know that they're dead."


The protesters chanted: "Gobierno farsante que matas estudiantes" — "Corrupt government that kills students."


For the protesters, Mexico has become a country where the search for the missing only adds to the vast quantities of the dead, and where corruption is such that murderous drug cartels and the government — be it the armed forces, local police, or elected officials — are often inextricable. This is what Mexican novelist and journalist Juan Villoro, writing about the missing students for the Spanish newspaper El País, described as "a country where politics increasingly becomes a funeral rite."



A Day of the Dead altar at Sunday's protest in New York City.


David Noriega / BuzzFeed News




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