Though this was perhaps Mexico's most spectacular prison escape since the previous one by Mr... READ MORE›
That included a new subway line in Mexico City, which has been plagued by problems, prompting quips that the project should be handed over to Mr... READ MORE›
The authorities have said the mayor prompted the abduction by ordering the police to round up the students before they could disrupt a speech his politically aspiring wife was giving... READ MORE›
Guerrero state prosecutor Inaky Blanco said forensic scientists were trying to identify the victims... READ MORE›
The families from Guerrero State arrived in Mexico City after touring the country... READ MORE›
I suppose that Mexican society is the same, Murillo Karam said during the hour-long press conference in Mexico City... READ MORE›
Relatives hold a cardboard effigy of Salgado on 4 June in Mexico City, during her hunger strike... READ MORE›
Related Stories Suspected gang members have confessed to killing more than 40 students missing for six weeks, Mexican Attorney General Jesus Murillo has said... READ MORE›
It is one year on from the kidnap and disappearance of 43 students in the Mexican state of Guerrero... READ MORE›
State security spokesman Roberto Alvarez Heredia said in a statement that two of the seven killed were municipal police officers and one a state police officer... READ MORE›
A protester takes part in a march in Mexico City last year, calling for justice for 43 missing students... READ MORE›
International business times uk mexico's 43 missing students iguala mayor jose luis abarca arrested in mexico city 1 hr ago... READ MORE›
Other people used it to vent their frustrations, protesting Enough, I'm tired of living in a narco-state or Enough, I'm tired of corrupt politicians ... READ MORE›
At least 74 people have been arrested, including the mayor of Iguala and his wife, who were found on Tuesday in Mexico City... READ MORE›
Growing anger The protesters allege that the police rounded up the missing students before handing them over to a local drug gang called Guerreros Unidos... READ MORE›
Before, organized crime supported politicians to help them into power... READ MORE›
Related Stories Mexican federal police have taken control of 12 towns in Guerrero state, where 43 students disappeared after clashing with the municipal police... READ MORE›
Eleven partly burned, headless bodies have been found by the side of a road in Mexico as the countrys president launches his new anti-crime push... READ MORE›
Chilpancingo is the capital of Guerrero, which is a state known for its drug-related gang violence... READ MORE›
The search for 43 missing college students in the southern state of Guerrero has turned up at least 60 clandestine graves and 129 bodies over the last 10 m... READ MORE›
Experts on Latin America said the 15 percent reduction was a sign the Obama administration was taking human rights seriously... READ MORE›
Internationally the president won praise for pushing through controversial economic reforms that convinced many he was leading Mexico to modernisation... READ MORE›
On Monday, relatives of the students led a huge march in Mexico City demanding government action and concrete proof of what had happened... READ MORE›
While the march was smaller than past demonstrations the case has helped publicize the thousands who have gone missing since Mexico's drug war started in 2006... READ MORE›
Guerrero state prosecutor Miguel Angel Godinez said the bodies were between six months and two years old... READ MORE›
26 after confrontations with police in the Guerrero state city of Iguala that killed three students and three bystanders... READ MORE›
The city of Temixco, in Morelos state, is located about 100 kilometres south of Mexico City... READ MORE›
Tens of thousands marched in Mexico City and dozens of other states on Wednesday to condemn the attacks and show solidarity with the students... READ MORE›
Corrections An earlier version of this story said 112 of the bodies discovered during a search for missing students in Mexico were male... READ MORE›
The increased security talk comes as Mexico confronts low prices for oil - the country's principal export and critical for funding social spending... READ MORE›
Daily Digital News provides public access to an archive of historical news articles from many popular news sources. Daily Digital News provides keyword searchable summaries, and links, to news articles that were originally publically accessible, and all news articles presented on dailydigitalnews.com were initially freely available to the general public. Daily Digital News does not claim any copyright ownership of the aggregated content of this website. Aggregated news content presented on dailydigitalnews.com may be subject to copyright, and the use made here is consistent with the principles of limited use for research and education. Daily Digital News takes advantage of unique web-crawling technologies and algorithms. This includes the use of services provided by Alchemy API (by IBM Watson) as well as other open source technologies. Daily Digital News operates this website on a not for profit basis. No income, revenue, remuneration, or profit of any kind has been made as a result of providing this website to the public. Use of this website is at the user's own discretion. Daily Digital News exercises no control over the use made of this website and accepts no liability to users or resources in relation to the contents of, or use of, or otherwise in connection with this website. Full Terms & Conditions