One of the investigations carried out by the Attorney General’s Office (FGR) for the Ayotzinapa case is whether the 43 normalistas from Ayotzinapa were cremated in various parts of Guerrero, such as the Barranca de la Carnicería, in Cocula.
Last June, the FGR reported that in this place, the skeletal remains of Jhosivani Guerrero, a normalista who disappeared in 2014, were found.
In a press conference from this place, Omar Gómez, head of the Special Investigation and Litigation Unit for the Ayotzinapa case, explained that according to sources and investigations, the students “could have been burned in different places.
Read: They identify the remains of Jhosivani Guerrero, a normalista from Ayotzinapa
“We are talking about one or more spaces where controlled burns could have been carried out, which are called incinerators,” he explained.
“What we are doing is deepening the investigation towards that side, to see what the results are that we have. Almost 7 years have passed since these spaces were possibly used, what findings can we expect, possibly none, in any case it is a line that we keep open to continue pushing it ”, he added.
Asked about the “historical truth” constructed by the government of Enrique Peña Nieto and which pointed to the incineration of the normalistas in a garbage dump in Cocula, Omar Gómez said that this case was based on inquiries and statements obtained illegally.
“Much of what was done to want to support her was obtained illicitly. Testimonies of people were obtained by torture, they were illegally deprived of liberty. What they did was reconstruct a preliminary investigation armed with illegal procedural pieces, “argued the prosecutor, accompanied by Alejandro Encinas, undersecretary of Human Rights of the Ministry of the Interior.
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