Search for 43 Students Yields 129 Other Bodies in Mexico: What We Know

Mexico's attorney general said 129 bodies were discovered after 43 went missing.

Former Mexican Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam said in October that Mayor Jose Luis Abarca ordered the police to detain the students who were going to protest a speech by his wife Maria de los Angeles Pineda. Students from Raul Isidro Burgos Ayotzinapa Normal School, about an hour away from Iguala, have a history of protesting, though it's not clear what they were specifically planning to protest, Fusion reported.

The police confrontation led to six confirmed deaths, the AP reported.

The 43 missing students attended Ayotzinapa teacher's college. Since their disappearance, protesters at massive gatherings have called on the government to find the missing students, accusing authorities of failing to seek justice. Protests have been held in Mexico on the 26th of each month since the disappearance.

Here's what we know about these 129 bodies:

1. 60 hidden graves

2. Identities of the bodies

Only 16 of the 129 remains have been identified as of July 13, according to a freedom of information request from the AP, but names have not been released to the public.

3. Both women and men

The remains of the 129 people including 92 men and 20 women, and the remaining bodies were undetermined. the AP reported.

4. When they were found

The 129 bodies were discovered between October and May, the attorney general's office said.

5. More bodies could be discovered

The AP's freedom of information request covered only instances in which Mexico's mass grave specialists became involved, so the count could be higher. More than 20,000 people are listed as missing across Mexico, the AP reported. The government has not responded to the information released by the attorney general's office.