1 | Miguel 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. |
2 | The 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. |
3 | UPOEG leader Bruno Placido confirmed the death and said Jimenez had received threats related to his search efforts. |
4 | Jimenez began organizing searches for 43 teachers' college students who went missing after they were detained by police last September in Guerrero state. |
5 | Prosecutors 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. |
6 | But the searches Jimenez led into the mountains surrounding the city turned up clandestine graves filled with other bodies. |
7 | Placido said the death threats may have come from Guerreros Unidos and Jimenez had returned to his hometown of Xaltianguis in Guerrero to be safer. |
8 | Jimenez was found dead on the outskirts of Xaltianguis, and relatives buried him there Sunday. |
9 | Jimenez 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. |
10 | While 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. |
12 | In 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. |
13 | Most of the bodies remain unidentified. |
14 | Jimenez 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. |
15 | In 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. |
17 | Still 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. |