Ayotzinapa vive! A month with Mexico's student protesters
The missing students were attacked by municipal policemen from Iguala on Sept. 26, after they had commandeered three buses in a protest. Investigators believe that policemen turned the students over to a drug-trafficking gang that had ties to Iguala’s mayor.
RELATED: See exclusive video of missing Ayotzinapa students before their disappearance
Gang members who have been arrested in connection with the case have told investigators that the students were executed and dumped in clandestine graves, which have yet to be found. Relatives of the students believe that their kids could still be alive, held somewhere in the mountains of Guerrero State.
Over the past month, the student protests at Aytozinapa have spread to other universities throughout Mexico and attracted the solidarity of activists around the world. Protesters in Mexico have staged marches, boycotted classes, burned public buildings, blocked highways, sacked supermarkets, and taken over tollbooths in their bid to pressure the Mexican government to find the missing students.
MORE: Artists paint portraits of missing Ayotzinapa students