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Protesters grab Mexico town halls over missing students

A student paints faces on the pavement in front of the Attorney General's Office on October 15, 2014 in Mexico City, during a protest supporting the 43 students missing in Iguala, Guerrero State/AFP

A student paints faces on the pavement in front of the Attorney General’s Office on October 15, 2014 in Mexico City, during a protest supporting the 43 students missing in Iguala, Guerrero State/AFP

IGUALA, October 17-  Protesters occupied three town halls in southern Mexico on Thursday to demand the safe return of 43 students who disappeared after gang linked police attacked them last month.

Students and teachers had threatened to enter all 81 municipalities in Guerrero state in the latest protest over a case that has caused national and international outrage.

But they only managed to seize the municipal buildings of three towns so far, the government said.

“We don’t have the capacity to seize all 81 municipalities in one day, so the plan is to do it progressively,” said CETEG teachers union spokesman Jose Angel Baron.

In the town of Huamuxtitlan, population 15,000, Mayor Johnny Saucedo told AFP by telephone that some 200 teachers had entered his building.

“We are respectful of the protest,” Saucedo said.

Protesters have also held the municipal headquarters of Chilpancingo, Guerrero’s capital, since Monday.

Guerrero’s CETEG teachers union and students plan to march in the resort city of Acapulco on Friday.

In Iguala, the town where the 43 students were last seen on September 26, municipal workers removed photocopiers and confidential documents as they evacuated city hall in anticipation of the protesters.

The city’s mayor, Jose Luis Abarca, and his wife skipped town after the students disappeared and they are now wanted for questioning over the incident.

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Authorities say Iguala’s police force shot at buses carrying the students and handed them over to officers in the neighboring town of Cocula, who then delivered them to the Guerreros Unidos drug gang.

Six people died, 25 were wounded and 43 students went missing that night. Authorities have since arrested 26 police officers from Iguala and 14 from Cocula.

The students, who are from a teacher training college in central Guerrero known for radical protests, had seized the buses to return home after holding a fundraiser in Iguala.

The discovery of mass graves around Iguala has raised concerns about their fate. DNA tests showed they were not among 28 bodies found in one location, but remains from other pits are being analyzed.

 

– Mayor’s sister defends him –

 

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