Mexican authorities insisted today that at least a "great number" of 43 students who disappeared last year were incinerated in a garbage dump, even though independent investigators rejected that account.
Tomas Zeron, the director of investigations at the attorney general's office, told Enfoque Noticias radio that forensic experts and the testimony of suspects backed the government's original conclusion.
But he separately told Imagen Radio program: "We are sure that what happened was that there was a big fire. A large group of students was burned there, without being able to confirm that it was all 43, but it was a large group of students."
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Attorney General Arely Gomez said on yesterday that her office would take the commission's report into account and she ordered a new forensic investigations at the dump site.
Zeron said the new forensic investigation would "attempt to reach a unanimous decision about what happened there and validate our (conclusion)."
The commission cited an international fire expert who concluded that it would take 60 hours and nearly 60 tonnes of wood, tires and diesel to cremate 43 bodies.
Citing the testimony of gang suspects, the attorney general's office had declared last year that the students had been incinerated in a huge funeral pyre that lasted 14 hours.