Parents of Mexico 43 missing students begin hunger strike

A students carries a photos of missing students of the Ayotzinapa rural teachers college pinned on his shirt, during a protest by the parents and classmates of the 43 missing students when they erected a monument in their memory to mark the seventh month of their disappearance in Mexico City, Sunday, April 26, 2015. Students, family members and friends erected the monument with the number 43 painted in red in the middle of one of Mexico City’s busiest thoroughfares. Federal investigators said the students died at the hands of organized crime with the aid of corrupt local authorities. AP

A students carries a photos of missing students of the Ayotzinapa rural teachers college pinned on his shirt, during a protest by the parents and classmates of the 43 missing students when they erected a monument in their memory to mark the seventh month of their disappearance in Mexico City, Sunday, April 26, 2015. Students, family members and friends erected the monument with the number 43 painted in red in the middle of one of Mexico City’s busiest thoroughfares. Federal investigators said the students died at the hands of organized crime with the aid of corrupt local authorities. AP

MEXICO CITY, Mexico—Parents of 43 Mexican students who disappeared last year began a 43-hour hunger strike on Wednesday, a day before meeting with President Enrique Pena Nieto ahead of the case’s anniversary.

The families of the young men gathered under a white tarp in front of Mexico City’s cathedral at the historic Zocalo square and declared the start of their protest at 7:00 p.m. (0000 GMT).

The parents held signs with the pictures and names of their sons, and sat down as a doctor examined them to make sure they could take part in the nearly two-day fast.

“For 43 hours, we will only drink water and will be fasting when we meet with the president,” Nardo Flores, whose son Bernardo is among the missing, told AFP.

READ: Remains of 1 more of missing 43 Mexico students identified

It will only be the second meeting between the parents and Pena Nieto since last year’s tragedy, which turned into the biggest crisis of his administration and caused his approval rating to dip.

The Mexican leader and the families will come face-to-face at 1:00 p.m. in a museum at the city’s vast Chapultepec park.

Vidulfo Rosales, the parents’ attorney, said they will call on Pena Nieto to order a new investigation and for authorities to present the 43 young men alive.

The students, from a rural teacher college in the southern state of Guerrero, disappeared after they were attacked by local police in the city of Iguala.

READ: Mexico arrests cartel figure in disappearance of 43 students

Prosecutors say police then delivered the young men—who had gone to Iguala to hijack buses to travel to a protest elsewhere—to the Guerreros Unidos drug gang, which killed them and incinerated their bodies.

But the official investigation was questioned by independent experts from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, who said there was no evidence that the students were burned in a funeral pyre at a garbage dump.

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