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Mexico’s president opens archives on dirty war period

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Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said Friday that he will open up national archives showing how intelligence agencies targeted activists and opposition groups during the country's "dirty war."

"They will be opened up so that citizens can have access to them, above all investigators. It is a part of our program to strength our national historic memory," said the president, commonly known as AMLO.

The documents belong to the National Center for Investigation and Security (CISEN) and are housed in the Lecumberri national archive, a former prison in the capital where numerous opposition figures, including members of the 1968 student movement, were once incarcerated.

Soldiers on patrol in Mexico City in October 1968  three days after the army killed hundreds of prot...
Soldiers on patrol in Mexico City in October 1968, three days after the army killed hundreds of protesters in an event known as the Tlatelolco Massacre just ahead of the Summer Olympics in the Mexican capital
-, EPU/AFP/File

They will be open to the public starting from Monday, Lopez Obrador said.

One of the first things the Mexican leader said after he took office on December 1 was to announce that CISEN would be disbanded, while keeping intact the National Intelligence Center.

The 65-year-old leftist leader said that Mexico, which for decades was governed by the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, had a "dark period" which saw the persecution of social activists and opposition figures, mostly from the 1960s to the 1980s, an era historians refer to a the "dirty war."

Students marched in October 2014 to commemorate the Tlatelolco massacre  a 1968 event in which Mexic...
Students marched in October 2014 to commemorate the Tlatelolco massacre, a 1968 event in which Mexican security forces officially acknowledged killing only 44 protesters
RONALDO SCHEMIDT, AFP/File

"We lived for decades under an authoritarian regime which limited freedoms and persecuted those who struggled for social change," he said.

"In the name of the state, I apologize," Lopez Obrador added.

He said that those who believed they had suffered from the activities of government spy agencies would be able to claim compensation under the law.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said Friday that he will open up national archives showing how intelligence agencies targeted activists and opposition groups during the country’s “dirty war.”

“They will be opened up so that citizens can have access to them, above all investigators. It is a part of our program to strength our national historic memory,” said the president, commonly known as AMLO.

The documents belong to the National Center for Investigation and Security (CISEN) and are housed in the Lecumberri national archive, a former prison in the capital where numerous opposition figures, including members of the 1968 student movement, were once incarcerated.

Soldiers on patrol in Mexico City in October 1968  three days after the army killed hundreds of prot...

Soldiers on patrol in Mexico City in October 1968, three days after the army killed hundreds of protesters in an event known as the Tlatelolco Massacre just ahead of the Summer Olympics in the Mexican capital
-, EPU/AFP/File

They will be open to the public starting from Monday, Lopez Obrador said.

One of the first things the Mexican leader said after he took office on December 1 was to announce that CISEN would be disbanded, while keeping intact the National Intelligence Center.

The 65-year-old leftist leader said that Mexico, which for decades was governed by the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, had a “dark period” which saw the persecution of social activists and opposition figures, mostly from the 1960s to the 1980s, an era historians refer to a the “dirty war.”

Students marched in October 2014 to commemorate the Tlatelolco massacre  a 1968 event in which Mexic...

Students marched in October 2014 to commemorate the Tlatelolco massacre, a 1968 event in which Mexican security forces officially acknowledged killing only 44 protesters
RONALDO SCHEMIDT, AFP/File

“We lived for decades under an authoritarian regime which limited freedoms and persecuted those who struggled for social change,” he said.

“In the name of the state, I apologize,” Lopez Obrador added.

He said that those who believed they had suffered from the activities of government spy agencies would be able to claim compensation under the law.

AFP
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