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Mexican President Peña Nieto meets with families of 43 missing students

Relatives of the 43 missing students from a rural teachers college in Mexico attend a press conference in Mexico City.

Relatives of the 43 missing students from a rural teachers college in Mexico attend a press conference in Mexico City.

(Yuri Cortez / AFP/Getty Images)
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President Enrique Peña Nieto on Thursday told the families of 43 students who disappeared a year ago in southern Mexico that he would create a new special prosecutor for cases involving the country’s thousands of missing people.

Eduardo Sanchez, the president’s spokesman, told reporters after the closed-door meeting that the families had presented eight demands and that Peña Nieto had instructed his Cabinet to analyze each and get back to them.

More than 25,000 people have disappeared in Mexico between 2007 and July 31, 2015, according to the government.

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The 43 students have been missing since Sept. 26, 2014, when they were abducted in the city of Iguala. They came under fire from local police and were detained and abducted after they tried to leave the city on local buses they had commandeered.

Among the families’ demands are a new internationally supervised investigation of the disappearances and an investigation of those responsible for the initial inquiry, which the families believe was intended to mislead them.

Sanchez said after the meeting that there was not a clear timeframe for when the demands would be answered, but that it would be done promptly.

“Again and again we ask ourselves how could we trust again in an institution that tricked us,” the families wrote in the letter delivered to the president.

Sanchez said Peña Nieto told the families, “We’re on the same side. You and I are looking for the same thing.”

After the meeting, Mario Gonzalez, whose son is among the missing students, pointed out that what the government once held up as a “historic truth” about the disappearances, it now calls a hypothesis.

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“What guarantee do we have that this new investigation won’t be more theater?” Gonzalez said, surrounded by other parents in Mexico City’s central plaza. “We’re not going to give up; we’re going to continue searching.”

The federal government has said police officers from Iguala and the nearby town of Cocula illegally detained the students and turned them over to the local drug gang Guerreros Unidos, which then allegedly killed them and incinerated their remains. The families have never accepted that version.

The government has said that it has identified two of the students from the burned remains recovered from a river in Cocula.

A team of international experts sent by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, which spent six months reviewing the government’s investigation, found a number of shortcomings and points of concern. Specifically, it concluded that the bodies of 43 students could not have been burned at the garbage dump in Cocula as the government maintained.

Atty. Gen. Arely Gomez earlier said that portion of the government’s investigation would be reviewed with assistance from top international experts.

Sanchez confirmed Thursday that international experts would be involved in a third investigation of the alleged incineration site.

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