Eight Mexican soldiers accused in case of missing students

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Relatives of some of the 43 missing students of the Ayotzinapa Teacher Training College demonstrate outside the Attorney General's Office in Mexico City on Sept 25, 2020, on the eve of the sixth anniversary of their disappearance. - (Photo by PEDRO PARDO / AFP)

MEXICO CITY, Mexico - A Mexican judge on Monday ordered the further detainment of eight military personnel taken into custody last week in an investigation into the high-profile, unresolved disappearance of 43 students in 2014.

Interior Ministry Undersecretary for Human Rights Alejandro Encinas said the men have been charged "for the crime of forced disappearance."

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The students, from the Ayotzinapa Rural Normal School, disappeared between the night of September 26 and the early morning of September 27, 2014, when they were traveling via bus to participate in demonstrations in Mexico City.

The government's official version of events says that cartel members killed the students and incinerated their remains. But exactly what happened to them has been hotly disputed.

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The eight soldiers were arrested last week after the Mexican Attorney General's Office reactivated 16 arrest warrants against members of the Army that had been issued in September 2022 but were later annulled.

An independent commission investigating the 2014 disappearance, the Interdisciplinary Group of Independent Experts (GIEI) accused the armed forces of deliberately withholding information about the case earlier this year.

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The commission's mandate expires July 31.

So far only the remains of three victims have been identified. - AFP

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