Activist in search for missing students killed in Mexico

1Miguel Angel Jimenez, a political activist who played a prominent early role in the search for 43 students and other missing people in southern Mexico, was slain over the weekend, an associate said Monday.
2The bullet-ridden body of Jimenez, a member of the Union of Towns and Organizations, or UPOEG for its initials in Spanish, was found in a car near a town where he had helped found a community police program.
3UPOEG leader Bruno Placido confirmed the death and said Jimenez had received threats related to his search efforts.
4Jimenez began organizing searches for 43 teachers' college students who went missing after they were detained by police last September in Guerrero state.
5Prosecutors say corrupt local police in the city of Iguala turned the students over to members of a drug cartel, the Guerreros Unidos, who killed the students and incinerated their bodies.
6But the searches Jimenez led into the mountains surrounding the city turned up clandestine graves filled with other bodies.
7Placido said the death threats may have come from Guerreros Unidos and Jimenez had returned to his hometown of Xaltianguis in Guerrero to be safer.
8Jimenez was found dead on the outskirts of Xaltianguis, and relatives buried him there Sunday.
9Jimenez played a key role in expanding the search effort to include hundreds of other Iguala residents whose relatives disappeared during the cartel's reign of kidnappings and killings.
10While he gradually relinquished leadership of the search efforts after November, he continued to supply information and said he had new leads.
11"He was always looking for somebody to help," said Xitlali Miranda, one of the activists in the Iguala searches.
12In July, Mexico's attorney general's office confirmed that at least 60 clandestine graves with 129 bodies have been found so far on the outskirts of Iguala.
13Most of the bodies remain unidentified.
14Jimenez also organized community police efforts to fight kidnappings, killings and extortion by criminal gangs, and drives to document vote fraud in June's midterm elections.
15In an April interview with Kara Andrade, a doctoral student at American University, Jimenez said he had received death threats from "people who are involved in things and whose interests I have impacted."
16"They've chased me, in my town (Xaltianguis) they've tailed and followed me from place to place," Jimenez said.
17Still he kept up his activism in Guerrero, a state plagued by drug trafficking and cultivation, gang battles, extortion, illegal logging and land disputes.
18"I don't do this because of me or the abuses we live now. I do this for the next generation and for my children," Jimenez said.