Alejandro Encinas accused the Judiciary of suppressing the truth about the disappearance of 43 normal students who cannot be identified.
The Undersecretary of Human Rights in Segob stated that in the investigations of the case he faced harassment from the judges, who used different criteria to distort the investigations and release those allegedly responsible.
Before presenting the second report of the Truth Commission for the Ayotzinapa Case, which he oversees, he announced that he was informed of a suspension granted by the CDMX court to Tomás Zerón.
The appeal prevented Encinas from referring to the former head of the Criminal Investigation Agency as a “torturer” or from implicating him in establishing the so-called historical truth.
The report concluded that the 43 students were handed over by the Guerrero police to Guerreros Unidos, a criminal group responsible for depriving them of their lives and disappearing them, with the support or removal of local police and federal agents. , which constitutes a state crime. .
“They forbid me to tell the truth”
Alejandro Encinas, Undersecretary of Human Rights in Segob, complained about a protection in favor of Tomás Zerón to avoid being called a “torturer.”
The Undersecretary of Human Rights of the Ministry of the Interior (Segob), Alejandro Encinas Rodríguez, blamed the Judiciary for preventing him from telling the truth about the disappearance of 43 normal students from the Isidro Burgos Rural Normal School, nine years old passed.
As a prelude to the presentation of the Second Report of the Truth Commission for the Case of Ayotzinapa (CoVAJ), which he presides over, Encinas announced the acceptance of an order from the Seventh District Court in administrative matters of Mexico City, in favor of the former president of the Criminal Investigation Agency, Tomás Zerón de Lucio, to stop the accusation of being a “torturer” or creating the so-called Historical Truth.
“…where I was forbidden to tell the truth. “This is a paradoxical issue in the life of our country, the president of the Truth Commission was ordered not to tell the truth.”
He confirmed that CoVAJ is facing harassment from the Judiciary, whose judges use different criteria to distort the investigations and release those allegedly responsible.
Nine years after the events that took place between September 26 and 27, 2014, Encinas acknowledged that the investigation into the disappearance of the normalistas could last for years, despite the fact that the CoVAJ will end its work in mid- half of next year.
“We will explain the mechanism for the continuation of the case of Ayotzinapa, the FGR and the search agencies in the face of the change of government,” he said.
Delivered by the authorities
CoVAJ concluded in the second investigation report that 43 students were handed over by the Guerrero police to the Guerreros Unidos criminal organization, which killed them and disappeared with the support or removal of local police and federal agents, which became a state crime . .
Encinas explained that a total of 434 relevant actors were identified, 70 were detained and released by the judges, 132 remain in prison, including the former lawyer Jesús Murillo Karam, the former head of the Special Unit in Crimes against Kidnapping of the PGR, two Army generals, 71 policemen and 41 members of Guerreros Unidos.
The 51 arrest warrants are about to be completed and the three extradition requests are still valid, for Tomás Zerón who is in Israel and who the undersecretary called “the unmentionable”, added Abraham “N” and Ulises “N”, both in the United States.