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The parents of the 43 teaches in trained from Ayotzinapa, who disappeared in September 2014, began their second day of investigations in the municipality of Iguala, where their children were abducted by the local police and drug traffickers.
They are investigating in the population areas surrounding Iguala, while 17 support brigades are handing out flyers and interviewing the locals.
The brigades are composed by activists who have supported the demands for the return of the youngsters alive and well, supported by other students from the "Raúl Isidro Burgos" Teachers School of Ayotzinapa and members of the National Popular Assembly organization.
The brigades are working in three areas close to the three areas where the students were abducted on September 26, 2014.
In some areas, the locals have displayed an openly negative reaction to them.
The group also placed posters in front pf the Mayor's palace in Iguala, with texts like: "Are you going to remain an spectator or fight for a better country," "Help us find them," and "If you know something about the disappearance of the 43, call the Tlachinollán Center for Human Rights of the Mountain ...".
Melitón Ortega, spokesperson for the relatives of the students, said that they are looking for information from the locals because all the inquiries made by the Office of the Attorney General have been insufficient to determine the whereabouts of their children.