Mexico City (AFP) - Authorities sought to finally solve the five-week-old disappearance of 43 students that has outraged Mexico after catching a fugitive ex-mayor and wife team suspected of ordering police to attack them.

After a month on the run, Jose Luis Abarca, the former mayor of the southern city of Iguala, and Maria de los Angeles Pineda were captured by federal police early Tuesday in Mexico City's populous working-class district of Iztapalapa.

Officials voiced hope the arrests would yield new clues about the whereabouts of the students in a disappearance that has drawn international condemnation, sparked national protests and shaken President Enrique Pena Nieto's administration.

"I hope that this arrest will contribute in a decisive manner... to the investigation undertaken by the attorney general's office," said Pena Nieto, who last week met parents angry at the pace of the probe.

The couple had been hiding in a modest concrete house with a metal door, far from their opulent life in Iguala, where Abarca owned jewelry stores and his wife allegedly ran local operations for the Guerreros Unidos drug gang.

Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam said Abarca and his wife were captured "without a single shot fired" at 2:30 am in one of three homes that were put under secret surveillance following intelligence work.

"I hope we can give you bigger and deeper information in the coming days," he told a news conference.

Abarca was wearing a dark suit during his arrest while Pineda had shiny earings and a white shawl, as if they were allowed to dress up before being hauled away, according to pictures released by prosecutors.

Police also detained a woman identified as Noemi Berumen Rodriguez in another part of Iztapalapa over accusations that she helped them hide.

The suspects were taken before federal prosecutors. Relatives of victims later entered the attorney general's office while some 30 people protested outside.

Authorities say the students vanished on September 26 after municipal police shot at their buses in Iguala, 200 kilometers (125 miles) south of Mexico City, and then handed the 43 to the Guerreros Unidos.

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Six people died in the night of violence. In one gangland-style killing, a dead student was found with his facial skin peeled off and eyes gouged out.

The teacher-college students remain missing despite a vast search operation by troops, drones and boats in the state of Guerrero, where a dozen mass graves containing 38 unidentified bodies have been discovered.





- 'Imperial couple' -





A new protest was planned Wednesday in Mexico City over the mass disappearance, which has overshadowed Pena Nieto's attempts to steer Mexico's national narrative away from the drug war and toward economic reforms that have drawn international praise.

Authorities have now detained 59 people, including 22 Iguala police officers, 14 members of the municipal force in the neighboring town of Cocula and the leader of the Guerreros Unidos.

Guerrero's interim governor, Rogelio Ortega, whose predecessor Angel Aguirre resigned over the case, told the Televisa network that the couple's capture could result in "substantial leads" in the search for the students.

Manuel Martinez, a spokesman for the families of the missing, told AFP that investigators must make Abarca speak because he "knows where they are."

Abarca, his wife and the city's police chief fled Iguala a few days after the September 26 police attack. The Guerrero state legislature impeached him weeks later.

Authorities say Abarca ordered the officers to confront the students over fears they would derail a speech by his wife, who headed the local child protection agency.

Students from the radical left-wing college near the Guerrero capital Chilpancingo said they went to Iguala to raise funds but acknowledged they had seized buses to transport themselves.

Dubbed the "imperial couple," the mayor and his wife have since been linked to the Guerreros Unidos. Abarca's family says he is innocent.

Elected in 2012, Abarca remained in power despite accusations by members of his own leftist Democratic Revolution Party that he murdered a farm activist last year.

Prosecutors have said they never had enough evidence to charge him for the murder, which Abarca denied.





