Pubdate: Sat, 26 Feb 2011 Source: El Paso Times (TX) Copyright: 2011 El Paso Times Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/townhall/ci_14227323 Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829 Author: Daniel Borunda RELATIVES OF SLAIN ACTIVIST FOUND DEAD IN MEXICO Mexican authorities on Friday found the bodies of three relatives of an anti-violence activist killed last year in the village of Guadalupe in the Juarez valley. The deaths are the latest in killings eliminating members of the family of slain human-rights activist Josefina Reyes Salazar. The bodies were of a sister and brother and sister-in-law of Reyes Salazar, who was shot in January 2010 after hunger strikes and protests against the violence and disappearances in Juarez. Carlos Gonzalez, spokesman for the Chihuahua state prosecutor's office, said the bodies of Maria Magdalena Reyes Salazar, Elias Reyes Salazar and his wife, Luisa Ornelas, were found with messages alluding to organized crime. The three were kidnapped Feb. 7 in the Valley of Juarez and had been missing despite searches by 60 state investigators, a helicopter, search dogs and agents on horseback. The bodies were found near Guadalupe, across the border from Tornillo. Murders, disappearances and the burning of homes have become common in the valley east of Juarez. The area is a key smuggling corridor and a battleground in the narco war. The grim discovery came a week after Juarez residents had a protest to bring attention to recent attacks against activists. There have been other protests. Marisela and Olga Reyes-Salazar, sisters of Josefina and Ruben Reyes, were among more than 700 people at the binational Peace and Justice Without Borders rally on Jan. 29 that took place on both sides of the border in Sunland Park-Anapra. "They were my brother and sister," Marisela Reyes-Salazar told the El Paso Times. "Josefina was a strong advocate against injustice and the violence. And to silence her, the cartel killed her son -- my nephew. But she didn't give up and continued to fight alongside my brother, Ruben. They were both killed in 2010." Both Marisela and Olga Reyes-Salazar, who used to live in Juarez, fled the violence and now live elsewhere in Mexico. They began to fear for their lives in 2008 when a drug cartel war erupted. "We're tired of the killings and the violence," Marisela Reyes-Salazar said at the rally. "We want them to stop, and we want our family's killers to be brought to justice." - --- The Associated Press contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom