Posted by DD Republished from My San Antonio
By E. Eduardo Castillo, Associated Press
MEXICO
CITY (AP) — A Mexican civilian court has freed the last three soldiers
accused of homicide in a 2014 incident in which at least a dozen
suspects were allegedly executed after they surrendered.
The
federal Attorney General's Office emailed a news release shortly after
11 p.m. Friday saying the court absolved all three of charges of
homicide, cover-up and alteration of evidence for lack of proof.
Santiago Aguirre, deputy director of the nonprofit Miguel Agustin Pro Juarez Center for Human Rights,
which is representing a woman who survived the incident but whose
daughter was killed, said authorities cannot appeal the ruling but
families of the victims may still do so.
If
there is no appeal, the decision could signal an end to a case that
rights groups see as emblematic of abuses by some agents in the Mexican
security forces.
"This
confirms what we had been warning, in the sense that one of the most
serious recent cases of human rights violations was on the way to going
unpunished," Aguirre said.
The
Mexican army reported in June 2014 that 22 presumed criminals had died
in a clash with troops at a warehouse in the town of Tlatlaya west of
Mexico City. It said only one soldier was wounded.
But questions emerged when The Associated Press
found that evidence at the site didn't match the army's account of a
clash with drug suspects. There was little sign of a protracted gun
battle. Instead, the walls of the warehouse showed a repeated pattern of
one or two closely placed bullet holes surrounded by spattered blood,
giving the appearance that some of those killed had been standing
against a wall and shot at about chest level.
The government's Human Rights Commission
investigated and determined that at least 12 and as many as 15 people
had been executed at the warehouse. It also said there were attempts by
civilian and military authorities to cover up what happened.
Prosecutors, however, concluded that only eight were killed after
surrendering.
Three
women who survived came forward to say that agents of the Mexico State
prosecutor's office had tortured them to support the army's version, and
state officials later charged several police officers with torture.
Juan Velazquez,
an attorney who advised the families of the soldiers who were charged,
insisted there was no massacre and said it was all an effort to
discredit the military. "That whole story of the execution of Tlatlaya
was an invention," he said.
Aguirre said the woman his center is working with, Clara Gomez, was "very upset" in the wake of the ruling.
"She
fears she may suffer reprisals from the army or from the very soldiers
who were on trial," he said. Gomez is under round-the-clock protection
by bodyguards as part of cautionary recommendations by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.
Aguirre
added that Gomez's daughter was not among the eight victims who
prosecutors determined were killed after surrendering, and Gomez
therefore does not have the right to appeal. His organization has not
been able to contact relatives of those executed to see if they intend
to seek an appeal.
Seven
soldiers were initially charged in both military and civilian courts. A
civilian judge soon threw out charges against four of the soldiers, and
the new ruling clears the other three.
In
October, a military court acquitted six of the seven soldiers charged
with breach of discipline in the case, though the ruling was not made
public until March, when it was obtained by a human rights organization.
One soldier was convicted of disobeying orders and received a one-year
sentence. He has been released.
The
government said it began investigating days after the event, but
officials gave differing versions following the initial army account of a
one-sided shootout.
A
government commission for aiding victims of crime announced last year
that it would give about $3.3 million to relatives of the suspects slain
at the warehouse under a Mexican law requiring compensation for victims
of human rights violations. At least one family had received the
compensation.
Jose Miguel Vivanco, director of the Americas division at Human Rights Watch,
likened the Tlatlaya case to that of 43 students from a teachers'
college known as Ayotzinapa who disappeared at the hands of police a few
months later in 2014.
"Given
the well-documented evidence that soldiers executed civilians in
Tlatlaya, the fact that no one is being held accountable for these
crimes points to the same kind of gross incompetence or even cover-up by
authorities that has been revealed in the Ayotzinapa case."
Yupp, lack of proof that's Mexico alright!
ReplyDeleteWhat else is new in mexico?? Pinche gobierno son una mierda!!
ReplyDeleteAnd Mireles sits in jail?
ReplyDeleteUnbelievable!! The evidence was right there on the wall! The blood spattered holes and the obvious placement of the weapons next to the bodies! The judge needs better glasses I guess. Corruption in Mexico knows no bounds!
ReplyDeleteMn
The judiciary power, is supposed to be independent of the executive, same as the legislative, but they are a bunch of cowards, their only interest is make to money, bending over needs only to know how far... --selling out cheap, is the unvaluable variable, whatever el señor presidente considers...it will be 'ok'
ReplyDeleteMilitary justice has been put in the hands of civilian courts, because military judges do not want to be part of the murders, disappearances and the cover-ups "tiatro" for the government...
ReplyDelete--el "general" Salvador Cienfuegos es ministro de la defensa porque está muy viejo y nunca va a vivir suficiente para ir a corte por crimenes contra la humanidad...
--chingue su madre el honor militar del "general" y el pueblo mexicano, hay que servir al gobierno...
Well done army, don't let a single one of this scum alive. Primero le juegan al vergas los sicarios con sus "pecheritas" sus "granaditas", manchandose con el pueblo y cuando los matan, hay van los de los derechos humanos que "pobrecitos" que solo son " victimas de la siciedad".. Antes de abogar por esta escoria me gustaria que se rifaran la vida protegiendo a las verdaderas victimas.
ReplyDelete