The Vice-Minister for Human Rights of the Interior Ministry, Roberto Campa, said that the meeting between President Enrique Peña Nieto and the parents of the 43 missing Ayotzinapa students was complex and that to "leave them everybody satisfied is very difficult".

"Nobody could have expected an easy meeting, but it seems to me that it was a very respectful meeting in terms of the relationship between the relatives and the President, and of the President and the relatives, and that all the rules that we agreed were fully respected," expressed Campa.

In an interview with Ciro Gómez Leyva on Radio Formula, Campa said that the President responded to the positions of each one of the student's relatives.

"As a result of their requests and the points made by the Group of Independent Experts, the government determined specific commitments that will help us to have further progress in this complex matter, which is about to be a year old," he said.

He said that the group of parents requested a special unit to take care of the issue, and they also raised the question about the dispute in regard the incineration of the students' bodies in a garbage dump.

"The commitment made is the integration of a special group of the highest level as proposed by the investigations of Dr. José Torero who would join this group so that there would be no doubt of what is wanted, which is to know the truth," expressed Ciprián.

Campa expressed that President Peña Nieto emphasized the need of individual searches, without discarding any evidence of remains in different areas, and added that the Group of Independent Experts (GIEI) of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) will remain in the country for six more months.

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