Jan 29, 2015 12:18 AM EST
Mexico Students Deaths: 43 Missing Mexico Students Deaths Confirmed, Result Still Questioned By Victim’s Family & Students in Mexico

Mexico students deaths are confirmed. This was the statement that was released by Mexico's attorney general after examining all the evidences by the forensic experts and confessions of the real perpetrators. Mexico students deaths signal rampage and political instability that threatens the nation more.

Mexico succumb to mourning as the news broke last night. The head of the criminal investigations on the Mexico students deaths detailed the happening in the conference. He stated the students were abducted, brought to trash dump, murdered, set to blaze, sacked before they were thrown in San Juan river, NPR noted.

In September, 43 Mexican Education students went to Iguala to protest for insufficient funding for their school as reported by Food World News. Since then, the students didn't return. After forming investigations, there had been report on the deaths of the missing Mexican students that was unconfirmed that time.

It was too early in November to confirm the Mexico students deaths but the investigative reports revealed a close probability of their deaths after members of the Guerreros Unidos cartel confessed to the brutal killing of the students.

Aside from the Guerreros Unidos cartel involvement, Iguala Mayor jose Luis Abarca and his wife, Maria de los Angeles Pineda were also arrested as the "mastermind" as claimed by the perpetrators. Last night, the case of the Mexico students deaths was declared close.

As mentioned by CNN, Tomás Zerón de Lucio, the head of Mexico's Criminal Investigations Agency reported that the case of the Mexican students was a mistaken identity. The Guerreros Unidos cartel allegedly identified the students as their rival gang in Iguala that led to their brutal end.

There were 99 suspects arrested in the case of the 43 Mexican students. Both Iguala Mayor Abarca and his wife were charged of murder as the accused mastermind for the Mexico students deaths. The high profile case focused on hundreds of evidences including confessions, testimonies, and actual evidences.

 Since Sept. 2014 when the 43 Mexican students disappeared, political unrest was seen in the nation that called for series of protests on the roads. Mexicans fear for their lives, and learn to distrust the political heads that threaten Mexico's security as a nation.

The case of the Mexico students deaths led to final conclusion when hitman Felipe "The brush" or also known as "The Stubborn Salgado," who leads killing of the Guerreros Unidos Drug Gang confessed to giving orders to kill and burn the students on Sept. 26, according to Fusion.

At the height of declaration of Mexico's Criminal Investigation Agency and the Attorney General's Office on the Mexico students deaths, parents and families of the missing students cannot accept the announcement due to lack of forensic evidences.

 Austria's Innsbruck University failed to come up with conclusive DNA results to identify the student's remains. This happening stirred up more doubts questioning what really transpired and where really the Mexicans students are. The university is performing a second DNA test known as massively parallel sequencing.

Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto however tweeted that the Mexico students deaths force them to change. He posted, the shared pain inspired them to work towards a Mexico of freedom and peace.

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