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Mexico leader travels amid unrest over massacre

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Mexico's president has left on a six-day trip to China and Australia amid angry protests over the suspected massacre of 43 college students by a gang allied with corrupt police.

Angry protesters tried to break into Mexico City's National Palace late Saturday, while others torched several trucks in the southern state of Guerrero, where the students vanished in September.

Thousands of people marched in the capital over a case that has repulsed the nation and triggered the biggest crisis of President Enrique Pena Nieto's administration.

The protests came a day after authorities said suspected Guerreros Unidos gang hitmen confessed to receiving the students from local police, killing them, incinerating their bodies and dumping them in a river in Guerrero.

Demonstrators set fire to the door of the main entrance of the Mexican National Palace in Mexico Cit...
Demonstrators set fire to the door of the main entrance of the Mexican National Palace in Mexico City on November 8, 2014
Omar Torres, AFP

Authorities said they are still waiting for DNA results to confirm the identities of the remains.

But the apparent mass murder has shattered Pena Nieto's attempts to move Mexico's narrative away from years of drug violence and toward the economic reforms that have earned him international praise.

- President defends trip -

Despite the unrest, Pena Nieto left for China to attend an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit before a two-day state visit in the country, with which he has sought closer ties.

He will then travel to Brisbane, Australia, for a G20 summit before returning Saturday.

View of a message on the ground at Mexico City's Main Square (Zocalo) saying
View of a message on the ground at Mexico City's Main Square (Zocalo) saying "All politicians Must Go" during a demonstration on November 8, 2014
Antonio Nava, AFP

Pena Nieto used a layover in Alaska to defend the trip, telling reporters it would be "irresponsible" for him to miss summits that are important for Mexico.

A new controversy emerged during his travels, as the news website Aristegui Noticias reported that his wife had bought a luxurious home owned by a Mexican firm linked to a Chinese-led consortium that had won a bullet train contract.

Pena Nieto abruptly canceled the contract Thursday after the opposition questioned the transparency of the bidding process, in which the Chinese-Mexican group led by China Railway Construction Corp. was the only bidder.

Pena Nieto's office said in a statement that his wife, former soap opera star Angelica Rivera, had purchased the home on her own. Aristegui Noticias valued the property at $7 million.

Amnesty International has charged that the trip "shows the lack of interest in confronting the grave human rights situation in Mexico."

"It's a joke. It shows his lack of moral courage, playing with the feelings and dignity of 43 students," said Juan Gonzalez, a student from their Ayotzinapa teacher-training college in Guerrero.

Gang-linked police shot at busloads of students in the Guerrero city of Iguala on September 26, in a night of violence that left six people dead.

View of burning vehicles during a protest demanding for justice in the case of the 43 missing studen...
View of burning vehicles during a protest demanding for justice in the case of the 43 missing students, outside the State Government headquarters in Chilpancingo, Guerrero State, on November 8, 2014
Ronaldo Schemidt, AFP/File

The police then handed the 43 abducted students to the Guerreros Unidos.

Prosecutors say the city's mayor, worried that the students would interrupt a speech by his wife, had ordered the police to confront them. They are among 74 people, including police and gangsters, detained in the investigation.

The suspected mass murder would rank among the worst massacres in a drug war that has killed more than 80,000 people and left 22,000 others missing since 2006.

The students had traveled to Iguala to raise funds but hijacked four buses to return home, a common practice among the young men known for their radical leftwing politics.

Parents of the students, who deeply distrust the government, refuse to believe the authorities until they get DNA results from independent Argentine forensic experts.

- Pena Nieto slams protests -

Anger over the suspected massacre boiled over Saturday, with hundreds of students in Guerrero's capital Chilpancingo torching several trucks and throwing firebombs at the state headquarters.

In Mexico City, a small group of 20 struck the door of the 16th century National Palace with metal barricades and briefly set it on fire with firebombs.

Police reclaimed control of the door and detained 14 people.

Pena Nieto, who uses the palace for ceremonies and lives in another official residence elsewhere in the mega-city, said it was "unacceptable for someone to use this tragedy to justify violence."

Mexico’s president has left on a six-day trip to China and Australia amid angry protests over the suspected massacre of 43 college students by a gang allied with corrupt police.

Angry protesters tried to break into Mexico City’s National Palace late Saturday, while others torched several trucks in the southern state of Guerrero, where the students vanished in September.

Thousands of people marched in the capital over a case that has repulsed the nation and triggered the biggest crisis of President Enrique Pena Nieto’s administration.

The protests came a day after authorities said suspected Guerreros Unidos gang hitmen confessed to receiving the students from local police, killing them, incinerating their bodies and dumping them in a river in Guerrero.

Demonstrators set fire to the door of the main entrance of the Mexican National Palace in Mexico Cit...

Demonstrators set fire to the door of the main entrance of the Mexican National Palace in Mexico City on November 8, 2014
Omar Torres, AFP

Authorities said they are still waiting for DNA results to confirm the identities of the remains.

But the apparent mass murder has shattered Pena Nieto’s attempts to move Mexico’s narrative away from years of drug violence and toward the economic reforms that have earned him international praise.

– President defends trip –

Despite the unrest, Pena Nieto left for China to attend an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit before a two-day state visit in the country, with which he has sought closer ties.

He will then travel to Brisbane, Australia, for a G20 summit before returning Saturday.

View of a message on the ground at Mexico City's Main Square (Zocalo) saying

View of a message on the ground at Mexico City's Main Square (Zocalo) saying “All politicians Must Go” during a demonstration on November 8, 2014
Antonio Nava, AFP

Pena Nieto used a layover in Alaska to defend the trip, telling reporters it would be “irresponsible” for him to miss summits that are important for Mexico.

A new controversy emerged during his travels, as the news website Aristegui Noticias reported that his wife had bought a luxurious home owned by a Mexican firm linked to a Chinese-led consortium that had won a bullet train contract.

Pena Nieto abruptly canceled the contract Thursday after the opposition questioned the transparency of the bidding process, in which the Chinese-Mexican group led by China Railway Construction Corp. was the only bidder.

Pena Nieto’s office said in a statement that his wife, former soap opera star Angelica Rivera, had purchased the home on her own. Aristegui Noticias valued the property at $7 million.

Amnesty International has charged that the trip “shows the lack of interest in confronting the grave human rights situation in Mexico.”

“It’s a joke. It shows his lack of moral courage, playing with the feelings and dignity of 43 students,” said Juan Gonzalez, a student from their Ayotzinapa teacher-training college in Guerrero.

Gang-linked police shot at busloads of students in the Guerrero city of Iguala on September 26, in a night of violence that left six people dead.

View of burning vehicles during a protest demanding for justice in the case of the 43 missing studen...

View of burning vehicles during a protest demanding for justice in the case of the 43 missing students, outside the State Government headquarters in Chilpancingo, Guerrero State, on November 8, 2014
Ronaldo Schemidt, AFP/File

The police then handed the 43 abducted students to the Guerreros Unidos.

Prosecutors say the city’s mayor, worried that the students would interrupt a speech by his wife, had ordered the police to confront them. They are among 74 people, including police and gangsters, detained in the investigation.

The suspected mass murder would rank among the worst massacres in a drug war that has killed more than 80,000 people and left 22,000 others missing since 2006.

The students had traveled to Iguala to raise funds but hijacked four buses to return home, a common practice among the young men known for their radical leftwing politics.

Parents of the students, who deeply distrust the government, refuse to believe the authorities until they get DNA results from independent Argentine forensic experts.

– Pena Nieto slams protests –

Anger over the suspected massacre boiled over Saturday, with hundreds of students in Guerrero’s capital Chilpancingo torching several trucks and throwing firebombs at the state headquarters.

In Mexico City, a small group of 20 struck the door of the 16th century National Palace with metal barricades and briefly set it on fire with firebombs.

Police reclaimed control of the door and detained 14 people.

Pena Nieto, who uses the palace for ceremonies and lives in another official residence elsewhere in the mega-city, said it was “unacceptable for someone to use this tragedy to justify violence.”

AFP
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