Mexico president: Anti-femicide protests won't change policy | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
Subscribe

Would you like to subscribe to our newsletter?

Current Conditions Sunny  8.3°C

Mexico president: Anti-femicide protests won't change policy

Women march during International Women's Day in Mexico City, Sunday, March 8, 2020. Protests against gender violence in Mexico have intensified in recent years amid an increase in killings of women and girls. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)

MEXICO CITY - President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said Tuesday that recent protests against rising killings of women in Mexico will not change his government’s long-term, ground-up approach to dealing with the problem.

Asked at his daily news conference whether the outpourings of indignation would have any concrete impact on his administration or result in a change of focus, the president doubled down on his broader policy for tackling all sorts of violence and criminality in the country.

“No, on the contrary, we are going to reinforce the same strategy of addressing the causes that create the violence,” López Obrador said, “to seek to live in a better society, to attend to young people, to attend to the countryside, for there to be no unemployment, for disintegration of families to be avoided, for values to be strengthened.”

He spoke two days after an estimated 80,000 women marched through Mexico City and other cities across the country saw smaller demonstrations, and a day after untold thousands of women and girls skipped work or school in a protest billed as “a day without women” to call attention to those who are killed or disappeared.

Such demonstrations have grown in recent months, especially in the capital, amid increasing anger over gender-based violence, including a grisly murder-mutilation and the kidnap-killing of a 7-year-old girl, both in Mexico City.

According to official figures, 3,825 women met violent deaths in 2019, an average of more than 10 per day and a rise of 7% over the previous year. Homicides generally have also been rising for several years straight, dating back to before López Obrador took office in December 2018, though the rate of increase slowed last year. The vast majority of all crimes in the country go unpunished.

Asked whether the government could present a detailed plan for reducing violence against women, López Obrador responded that his government has a policy on women’s rights more broadly.

“If it is not complete or is insufficient or is not disseminated, is not known, let it be presented again and updated,” he said. “Let (Interior Secretary Olga Sánchez Cordero), who co-ordinates all these actions in defence of women’s rights, make a presentation next week, if that works for you.”

The president called women’s movements “very important” and said his government supports them. He also alleged that his political opponents are cynically taking advantage of them to try to hurt his government.

López Obrador noted the extensive reporting on the protests and suggested that demonstrations he led when he was in the opposition were not similarly covered. López Obrador regularly pushes back against critical coverage during news conferences and sometimes speaks derogatorily about media outlets and specific stories.

News from © The Associated Press, 2020
The Associated Press

  • Popular kelowna News
View Site in: Desktop | Mobile