2014年11月29日星期六

Yahoo! News: Education News

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: Education News


Drivers stuck for weeks at Mexico teachers college

Posted: 29 Nov 2014 08:12 AM PST

In this Nov. 10, 2014 photo, a bus leaves the Raul Isidro Burgos Rural Normal School of Ayotzinapa, where the 43 missing students attended, in the town of Tixtla de Guerrero, Mexico. While world attention has turned to the students of the rural teachers college in southern Mexico, almost no one has noticed the 30 or so bus drivers who say they are being forced to live as captives in order to act as chauffeurs for the activists who commandeered their vehicles. The men, some who've been at the school more than a month, say they cannot abandon the field because the bus companies hold them financially responsible for the vehicles worth tens of thousands of dollars. And with authorities unwilling to inflame tensions over the disappearance and presumed massacre of 43 students from the school, no one is coming to their rescue. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)TIXTLA, Mexico (AP) — The men are holed up with their buses on the college's soccer field, sleeping in the compartments that once held passenger luggage and hanging the clothes they've hand-washed from the windshields.


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