bob10
21st March 2021, 06:09 PM
Washington, D.C., March 18, 2021 – Ten years ago, the Mexican municipality of Allende was the site of one of the worst human rights atrocities ever seen in the country: a three-day wave of violence in which the criminal group known as Los Zetas kidnapped, murdered, and later burned the bodies of an estimated 300 people, incinerating the remains into piles of ashes, bits of teeth, and tiny bone fragments.
The National Security Archive marks this grim anniversary by publishing an extensive evidentiary history of the Allende massacre focusing on key documents and testimony from a 4,000-page dossier of investigative records that prosecutors in the state of Coahuila only began to compile almost three years after the fact.
The Allende Massacre in Mexico: A Decade of Impunity | National Security Archive (gwu.edu) (https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/briefing-book/mexico/2021-03-18/allende-massacre-decade-impunity?eType=EmailBlastContent&eId=0055fa8e-b589-4c4a-8d18-220ba1148f41)
The National Security Archive marks this grim anniversary by publishing an extensive evidentiary history of the Allende massacre focusing on key documents and testimony from a 4,000-page dossier of investigative records that prosecutors in the state of Coahuila only began to compile almost three years after the fact.
The Allende Massacre in Mexico: A Decade of Impunity | National Security Archive (gwu.edu) (https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/briefing-book/mexico/2021-03-18/allende-massacre-decade-impunity?eType=EmailBlastContent&eId=0055fa8e-b589-4c4a-8d18-220ba1148f41)