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Posts Tagged ‘massacre

Mexican “dirty war” President to be tried

1:01 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Justice|mexico · Comments Off

4 Dec 2006

Luis_echeverria.jpgEarlier this year we told you about new evidence proving that the Mexican government under presidents Díaz Ordaz and Echeverría ordered the mass murder of thousands of dissidents during the country’s “dirty war” period in the 1960s and early 1970s. At that time, it was uncertain whether the state would be able to prosecute the aging Echeverría due to statutes of limitations. Now, in a final victory for Vicente Fox‘s outgoing administration (wow, he did one thing right), prosecuters have been cleared to arrest and try the 84-year old ex-president:

From the start, Ignacio Carrillo Prieto, the special prosecutor appointed to look into the dirty war, has pursued genocide charges under Mexican law in an effort to hold military and government officials responsible for the student massacre in 1968 and another in 1971. Some critics have said that to try to apply the genocide law to students as a group is a far-fetched legal approach that is bound to fail.

That criticism seemed to have been borne out last year when a lower court judge threw out the genocide charges against Mr. Echeverría, ruling that Mexico’s 30-year statute of limitations for mass murder had run out and that students could not be defined as a unified group under the genocide law.

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1968.jpgAs October 2 passed this year, I considered writing a bit about the 1968 attack in Mexico City, about the incredible 1989 movie Rojo Amanecer, and the saying “2 de Octubre, no se olvide”. But I didn’t.

So when the news story about the upcoming film, Tlatelolco: Mexico 68, came across my desk this week, I knew that I should give it a little coverage.

First, a little background, quoted from the ABC News article:

Remembered as the Tlatelolco massacre, the 1968 attack remains shrouded in mystery. The [October 2] student protest in Mexico City ended in slaughter just days before Mexico hosted the 1968 Olympic Games. Witnesses said troops shot dead hundreds of protesters, while officials say communist agitators fired first, provoking a shootout that killed about 30.

The government has basically never ‘fessed up to the crime, and it’s possible that as time goes on, all that were involved are getting older, and the truth may die with them. Since the attack, Mexico has the famous saying, “2 de Octubre, No Se Olvide”, “October 2, Never Forgotten”.

An incredible Mexican movie was made in 1989 about these attacks, all scenes shot basically inside an apartment that looks out onto the square where the massacres occur, and how it affected the family that lived there. This movie, Rojo Amanecer, supposedly will be out on video this December.

And now, bringing more attention to the topic, American and Mexican filmmakers have teamed up to bring us Tlatelolco: Mexico 68, which will take a different spin on the day, by having an American journalist cover the 1968 Mexico Olympics get caught up in the massacre.

Starring John Leguizamo and Ryan Phillippe, the film should be out next year.

Rojo Amanecer; Tlatelolco: Mexico 68

ABC News Via / Hispanic Tips

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