Κυριακή 9 Νοεμβρίου 2014

Protesters set fire to Mexican palace as anger over missing students grows


mexico city
Demonstrators set fire to a door of the national palace in Mexico City, on 8 November 2014 as anger grows over the government’s handling of the apparent killing of 43 students. Photograph: Sasheka Gutierrez/EPA
A group of protesters set fire to the wooden door of Mexican president Enrique Pena Nieto’s ceremonial palace in Mexico City’s historic city centre late on Saturday, denouncing the apparent massacre of 43 trainee teachers.
The group, carrying torches, broke away from what had been a mostly peaceful protest demanding justice for the students, who were abducted six weeks ago and apparently murdered and incinerated by corrupt police in league with drug gang members.
Police put out the flames and enforced fencing designed to keep the protesters away from the National Palace, which was built for Hernan Cortes after the Spanish conquest and now houses Mexico’s finance ministry.
mexico protests
Demostrators march in Mexico city with the pictures of the 43 missing students on 8 November 2014. Photograph: Omar Torres/AFP/Getty Images
Pena Nieto lives in a presidential residence across town, and was not in the palace at the time.
Tens of thousands of people in recent weeks have taken to the streets of Mexico City and those of the southwestern state of Guerrero where the students were abducted to decry the government’s handling of the case in recent weeks.
There were more protests outside the Guerrero state government headquarters on Saturday as classmates of the missing students set fire to vehicles.
The unrest has been fuelled by comments made by the attorney general Jesus Murillo at a press conference on Friday to announce that the charred remains of bodies believed to be those of the students had been found.
mexico slogan
A large message on the ground at Mexico City’s main Zocalo Square on Saturday saying: ‘All politicians must go.’ Photograph: Antonio Nava/AFP/Getty Images
After speaking to the media for a hour he said “ya me canse”, an expression in Spanish meaning “I’ve had enough” or “I’m tired”, and walked away. Mexicans have seized on the comments on social media and are using the remarks as a rallying cry, saying they have had “enough of fear”.
The case is the toughest challenge yet to face Pena Nieto, who took office two years ago vowing to restore order in Mexico, where about 100,000 people have died in violence linked to organized crime since 2007.
At least two people were injured in Saturday night’s protest, local television reported. Riot police cleared the square before midnight and an ambulance was assisting the injured people.

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