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ILPES: Último llamado a responder la 2da Consulta Clima de la Igualdad a 2030

El ILPES le invita cordialmente, si aún no la a respondido, a participar en la segunda fase de la Consulta sobre el Clima de la Igualdad en América Latina y el Caribe al 2030, la cual estará disponible entre el miércoles 6 y el sábado 30 de abril (faltan sólo 3 días). Esta segunda fase pretende: (1) dar a conocer y consolidar las tendencias del futuro del cierre de brechas delineadas por los expertos durante la primera fase de la consulta; (2) Identificar posibles acciones regionales para promover el cierre de las brechas del desarrollo y, (3) conocer sus opiniones y recoger sus aportes acerca de los escenarios para América Latina y el Caribe al 2030, configurados a partir de los resultados obtenidos en la primera fase de esta misma consulta, realizada en 2015.

Se consulta su opinión experta sobre una o varias de las ocho brechas del desarrollo identificadas por CEPAL a través de los documentos presentados en los períodos de sesiones de 2010, 2012 y 2014. Se trata de las brechas fiscal, de crecimiento económico, de productividad, territorial, social, de género, del mercado del trabajo y de sostenibilidad ambiental.

La primera fase de este ejercicio se realizó en 2015 y sus resultados se encuentran disponibles en el informe descargable al inicio de la consulta.

A continuación usted encontrará el enlace desde el cual podrá responderla. Para hacerlo no es necesario que haya participado de la primera fase.

https://es.surveymonkey.com/r/climadelaigualdad2030

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Youth Resistance Unleashed: Black Lives Matter

“Those who kill their own children and discriminate daily against them because of the color of their skin; those who let the murderers of blacks remain free, protecting them, and furthermore punishing the black population because they demand their legitimate rights as free men—how can those who do this consider themselves guardians of freedom?”

Che Guevara
Before the United Nations
12-11-1964

In my lifetime young people rose up to challenge and change the world in Little Rock and Birmingham, in Soweto and Tiananmen, in Palestine and Chiapas. In the last decade we saw the rise of Arab Spring and Occupy, and now we are in the midst of vivid mass resistance to the police killing of unarmed Black men and women spurred by the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. Now and historically, it is the youth who reject taken-for-granted injustices.[1] In this moment, young people are the social actors – the leadership, catalysts,  the activists, and the organizers – who seized and defined a continuing travesty of North American life: the police murder of Black lives. Rising up against the thickening layers of institutionalized white supremacy, young people are insisting that Black Lives Matter.

Black Youth Project 100 action to #DecriminalizeBlack (Photo Credit: Sarah Jane Rhee)

With their radical impulse to revolt, that spirit of hopefulness and possibility, the laser-like insight of adolescents into the hypocrisies of the adult world, propel youth to break the rules, resist together, and transcend the immoral status quo. Inspired by the courage and determination of Ferguson youth, young people across the nation walked out of schools, sat-in, died-in, blocked highways and bridges – becoming the fresh, searing forces for equality, racial justice, and dignity.

Youth were not unaware of the risks they were taking by challenging police violence. In fact, it is young people who were painfully and brutally aware of the police targeting of Black youth, and pervasive US institutionalized de-valuing of Black lives.

Though many young activists had already been challenging police violence and the criminalization of Black lives in their own communities, the harrowing, police stalking and shooting of unarmed teenager Michael Brown on August 9, 2014 in Ferguson, Missouri, became the spark that generated a fresh wave of youth uprisings. This new movement in the long struggle for racial justice brought young people together across the country to become more than the sum of their parts.

The activism of the Black Lives Matter movement not only illustrates the brilliance and clarity of young people, but also flies in the face of popular currency that children and youth are less competent, less thoughtful, less wise and more dangerous than adults. The continuing reality of young people as social actors stands in opposition to official policies of silencing, suppressing, expelling and punishing our youth, depriving them of an education and denying their creativity and right to be heard.

Think of young peoples’ loss of rights, for example, through truancy laws; school censorship of high school newspapers, email communication and graduation speeches; the banning of books; relentless harassment and violence against LGTBQ and trans youth; school locker searches and drug testing without reasonable suspicion or due process; school zero tolerance policies that include punishments, school suspensions and expulsions, gang terrorism profiling, stop and frisk, and the calling of police for minor misbehavior. Control, cameras, drug searches, testing, arrests, and school exclusion have replaced dignity.

Rights vs. protections and the myth of the “Superpredator”

Children and youth, in fact, are whole persons who bear human and constitutional rights. They are inevitably an active part of their time and place, their culture and community, their race, class, and ethnicity, and their extended family. Simultaneously, they may also be more vulnerable, more easily manipulated and used by adults, such that they must be, to the extent possible, protected, sheltered and insulated from serious harm, both from their own impulses, and adults who might prey upon them or use youth for their own purposes. This is why human rights activists, for example, advocate for children to be protected from the harshest consequences of war and hazardous labor and family violence.

Of course, young people are becoming-persons, not yet fully adults; but what kind of a person is a child? In considering children as social actors, this contradiction is worthy of continuing deliberation and nuance. How can society heed this paradox – rights versus protections – and tilt toward children as bearers of rights while taking the responsibility for providing youth with equal access, due process, Constitutional rights, economic rights, and human rights? Are youth not right to see the adult world as compromised, duplicitous, and worst of all—indifferent to the crimes and suffering around them?

Children were acknowledged as Constitutional persons almost fifty years ago in the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case of In re Gault.  Yet the with the subsequent repressive wave to restrict their active whole personhoods, U.S. courts and legislators have shrunken the Constitutional rights of children by constricting or eliminating their rights to speech and expression, association, action, education, privacy, health care, due process, equal protection, and their right to liberty (by depriving them of liberty). This has been done in the name of either protecting them and “saving” them from themselves, or by constructing some children as superpredators, fearful, larger- than-life monsters, wolf-packs and gangs out to rob, rape and even kill (white) adults. Consequently, specific populations of children are seen as dangerous and capable of destroying civilization.

The diabolical invention of the 1990s youth predator by law enforcement, academics, and the mass media resulted in the harsh criminalization of youth of color– subjecting them to arrests, incarceration, trials in adult criminal courts, and extreme sentencing. The profound echo of young Black men as “superpredator” would arise again with the Ferguson grand jury testimony of Officer Darren Wilson, who saw in Michael Brown someone enormous, looming up and becoming larger even after being stalked and shot by Wilson six times.

It looked like a demon,” Wilson told the grand jury.

Fully 75% of youth who are locked up are confined for non-violent offenses. Racial and ethnic disparities are unconscionable, but the naked disproportion of who is arrested, beaten, and killed characterize the entire youth justice system.[2]

At its best, contemporary analysis of children and adolescents recognizes the dialectical nature of youth: being and becoming, categorically less culpable than adults, and with enhanced prospects for recovery, rehabilitation, and “attaining a mature understanding of [one’s] humanity.”[3]  Diminished culpability is not, however, the same as lesser competence or capacity.  Culpability is commonly misunderstood, and the current conversations about adolescent development research frequently becomes an imprecise discourse that easily collapses into language of lesser adolescent competence or moral action.

Military arsenal deployed against Ferguson protesters

The story of the Aug. 9, 2014 police killing of Michael Brown stayed in the news because the young people in Ferguson refused to leave the streets. And although the protests there and nationally was one of the broadest and most sustained radical coalitions in decades, the protesters themselves were largely young, black, queer, poor, working-class, secular, women and trans.

The young people of Ferguson did not back down in the face of a highly militarized small town police force armed with federally-funded Kevlar helmets, assault-friendly gas masks, combat gloves and knee pads, woodland Marine Pattern utility trousers, tactical body armor vests, some 120 to 180 rounds for each shooter, semiautomatic pistols attached to their thighs, disposable handcuff restraints hanging from their vests, close-quarter-battle receivers for their M4 carbine rifles and Advanced Combat Optical Gunsights[4].

There are scattered reports of stun grenade use in Ferguson, also known as flashbangs or flash grenades. This weapon of choice for American SWAT teams (and Israeli soldiers) originated within British Special Forces more than four decades ago. Ostensibly less than lethal, stun grenades have been known to kill or severely injure numerous victims, and the device was recently in the news for burning a 19-month-old baby in Georgia, resulting in a coma, during one of the thousands of domestic police raids this year. They are designed to temporarily blind and deafen, thanks to a shrapnel-free casing that is only supposed to emit light and sound upon explosion

The grenade launchers used against unarmed youth in Ferguson included the ARWEN 37, which is capable of discharging 37mm tear gas canisters or wooden bullet projectiles. The police used tear gas unsparingly in Ferguson. The Chemical Weapons Convention of 1993 actually bans the gas as a permissible means of warfare. Then again, it is allowed for domestic riot control, and nations like Turkey, Bahrain, Israel and the United States who have exploited the loophole to great avail. Tear gas sucks out your organs, hogs your oxygen and burns you inside and out. Interim blindness and extended coughing fits are common, as well as an overall sense that you are dying or dead. These are police weapons against an unarmed, Black, civilian, domestic population.

The use of “pepper balls” is lethal; the Boston Police Department banned them after a young woman was killed by one which passed right through her eye and skull to the brain. She was guilty of being present in a rowdy crowd after a Red Sox/Yankees game in which the former won. The same goes for the rubber bullets, wooden bullet projectiles, and beanbag projectiles on view with the police in Ferguson

Contemplate the Ferguson police department’s possession of the BEARCAT G3, the SWAT team’s version of the military’s Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicle, or its MRAP All Terrain Vehicle. This armored tank was donated to the Ferguson police by the US Department of Homeland Security.  There are no known mines or IEDs in Ferguson, an ambush is unlikely, so the decision of the St. Louis County Police Department to roll out (or even own) one of these tanks is apparently the contemporary version of fire hoses and dogs.

K-9 dogs. Yes, the 2014 St. Louis County and Ferguson Police Departments also used growling German shepherds to threaten demonstrators. In addition, these police forces had access to the Long Range Acoustic Device (LRAD), which emits a sound so pain-inducing that is causes bleeding from the ears. LRADs were also on display (though not used) during the Chicago anti-NATO demonstrations in 2011. On top of all this, the police department of Ferguson – a police force that is 94% white, in a town that is 67% Black – not only possessed an armored personnel carrier and weapon loads to intimidate demonstrators, carried out surveillance of the protesters from an MD Helicopter 500 Series in the sky above Ferguson.

Vibrant transformation of the possible

The fierce young, unarmed and highly disciplined young people who dared to stand up against police violence are to thank for revealing to the US public that the war-making hardware, paid for by our tax dollars, is coming home to police forces for use against the Black, Latino, indigenous communities and to patrol US borders.

This military-grade weaponry of the police in Ferguson was not about riot control during the long months leading up to the grand jury verdict in the murder of Michael Brown. It was the arsenal of white supremacy and racial oppression.

In the face of this violent intimidation, young people continued to peacefully demonstrate in Ferguson and to document their struggle at websites like Ferguson Action and using Twitter hashtags like #SHUTITDOWN.

Created in the crucible of Black Lives Matter is a new generation of young, African American organizers and activists, with experience in strategy development, tactics, decision-making under pressure, coalition building, and clarity about long range, radical goals, about their vision. They are savvy and wise, filled with love and caring for each other and for everyone who has suffered the terror of police violence: youth, their families and loved ones, allied people of color, trans and LGBTQ youth, native and Palestinian people, victims of police violence and whole communities.

Thus the Chicago struggle for city reparations for those who suffered police torture and subsequent decades on death row or juvenile life without parole before they were exonerated utilizes art, performance, persistence and unlikely allies. New York activists agitate for divestment from corporation that construct and operative for-profit prisons. There are movements to end solitary confinement from California to Rikers Island, and renewed efforts to commemorate and open old cases of lynchings across the nation.  The struggle for dignity and justice continues in immigrant rights struggles and the fierce, elegant courage of the youth and dreamers who have seamlessly embraced their queerness, their multiple heritages, and their human rights.

All this indicates a vibrant transformation of the possible. Police torture and killing of African Americans is visible, no longer background normal, as Black youth resist being branded as criminals at birth. Their resistance is communal, shared, and collective.

Can we hold the moment? Do we have the knowledge that young people are capable of seeing and seizing what adults cannot imagine?  In the uncertainty and complexity of civil strife and disciplined rebellion, shall we see children and young people capable of being agents of their own liberation?


[1]   Sources for the Ferguson story include: Darryl Pinckney, Ferguson and Resistance Against the Black Holocaust, © 2015 The New York Review of Books, Distributed by The New York Times Syndicate;Chris Crass, SpeakOut | Op-Ed; Kevin Zeese and Margaret Flowers, Ferguson Exposes the Reality of Militarized, Racist Policing, Popular Resistance | News Analysis; Adeshina Emmanuel, Ferguson Case Highlights Need for National Data on Police Shootings, The Chicago Reporter .

[2]  See the website of the W. Haywood Burns Institute, at www.burnsinstitute.org for racial and ethnic disparities at every stage of the youth justice system.

[3] See the trilogy of U.S. Supreme Court cases and the accompanying Amicus briefs: Roper v. Simmons(2005) , Graham  v. Florida (2010), and Miller v. Alabama (2012).

[4] See Radley Balko’s Rise of the Warrior Cop: The Militarization of America’s Police Forces (2013) for this research, photos, and the following details of Ferguson police weaponry.

 

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El Banco Mundial eleva el pronóstico de 2016 para el precio del petróleo y reduce las proyecciones para los precios agrícolas

Fuente Banco Mundial / 27 de Abril de 2016

Se prevé que los precios del petróleo aumentarán a medida que disminuya la oferta excesiva.

Ciudad de Washington. En la última edición del informeCommodity Markets Outlook (Perspectivas del mercado de productos básicos), y en medio de la mejora en las percepciones del mercado y el debilitamiento del dólar, el Banco Mundial elevó su pronóstico de 2016 para los precios del petróleo crudo de USD 37 a USD 41 por barril, ya que se prevé que la oferta excesiva en los mercados retrocederá.

Tras caer hasta alcanzar el precio de USD 25 por barril a mediados de enero, el mercado del petróleo crudo se recuperó y llegó a los USD 40 por barril en abril, luego de las alteraciones experimentadas por la producción en Iraq y Nigeria y de una disminución en la producción de los países no pertenecientes a la Organización de Países Exportadores de Petróleo (OPEP), principalmente, el petróleo de esquisto de los Estados Unidos. En una reunión realizada a mediados de abril, se propuso que los grandes productores congelaran su producción, pero esto no pudo concretarse.

“Esperamos precios ligeramente superiores para los productos básicos energéticos en el transcurso del año, cuando los mercados se restablezcan luego de un período de oferta excesiva”, indicó John Baffes, economista superior y autor principal deCommodity Markets Outlook. “Aun así, los precios de la energía podrían disminuir aún más si la OPEP aumenta la producción significativamente y la producción de los países que no pertenecen a la OPEP no se reduce tan rápido como se prevé”.

Se prevé que todos los principales índices de productos básicos controlados por el Banco Mundial se reducirán en 2016 con respecto al año anterior debido a que los suministros aumentan constantemente y, en el caso de los productos básicos industriales, entre los que se incluyen energía, metales y materias primas agrícolas, debido a las débiles perspectivas de crecimiento de los mercados emergentes y las economías en desarrollo.

Los precios de la energía, incluidos el petróleo, el gas natural y el carbón, se reducirán un 19,3 % en 2016 en relación con el año anterior, una caída más gradual que la del 24,7 % pronosticada en enero. Los productos básicos no energéticos, como los metales y minerales, los productos agrícolas y los fertilizantes, disminuirán un 5,1 % este año, lo que representa una revisión a la baja con respecto a la caída del 3,7 % pronosticada en enero.

Según las proyecciones, los precios de los metales caerán un 8,2 % durante el año que se inicia, menos que la caída del 10,2 % pronosticada en enero, lo que refleja expectativas de un crecimiento más sólido de la demanda por parte de China. Según los pronósticos, los precios agrícolas caerán más que lo previsto en enero en lo que se prevé que será otro año de cosecha favorable para la mayoría de los productos básicos como los cereales y las oleaginosas. Los precios de los productos básicos agrícolas también se reducen debido a los menores costos de la energía.

Los bajos precios de los productos básicos están debilitando las perspectivas de crecimiento para muchos países con abundantes recursos que experimentaron un aumento en la exploración, inversión y producción durante el auge de los productos básicos de la década de 2000. Los países que han solicitado préstamos y hecho fuertes inversiones esperando un crecimiento más rápido pueden tener dificultades para atender el servicio de sus deudas y sostener la inversión cuando el crecimiento es desalentador, según indica un tema central del informe Commodity Markets Outlook.

Debido a que los precios del petróleo y los metales hoy en día son entre un 50 % y un 70 % más bajos que los picos de principios de 2011, los proyectos de aprovechamiento de recursos naturales se suspendieron o postergaron en varios países emergentes y en desarrollo.

“Las demoras en estos proyectos pueden perjudicar a los países a los que les resulta muy difícil afrontar dichos contratiempos”, sostuvo Ayhan Kose, director del Grupo de Análisis de las Perspectivas de Desarrollo del Banco Mundial. “Dichas perturbaciones podrían atenuarse con un mayor nivel de transparencia, mayor eficiencia gubernamental y mejoras en los marcos macroeconómicos. Se recomienda que los países esperen a que los precios comiencen a aumentar nuevamente antes de poner en marcha nuevas iniciativas para el aprovechamiento de recursos naturales”.

El informe Commodity Markets Outlook del Banco Mundial se publica trimestralmente: en enero, en abril, en julio y en octubre. Este informe brinda un análisis detallado del mercado para los grupos de productos básicos más importantes, como la energía, los metales, los productos agrícolas, los metales preciosos y los fertilizantes. Se presentan pronósticos de precios hasta 2026 para 46 productos básicos, junto con datos históricos sobre los precios.

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México: Demandarán en desfile alza del salario mínimo

México/ 27 de Abril de 2016/La Voz de la Frontera
El aumento de los salarios mínimos, la situación de los jubilados y pensionados y la desaparición de la Comisión de Salarios Mínimos (CNSM) será la temática que los integrantes del Congreso del Trabajo del Municipio de Mexicali habrán de llevar en su participación del desfile del 1 de mayo.

En una reunión celebrada ayer por representantes de varios sindicatos y organizaciones sociales, el CTMM que preside el doctor Carlos Octavio Maya Quevedo, señalaron que estas marchas deben servir para hacer conciencia en las autoridades y la sociedad de las dificultades económicas de la clase trabajadora.

Dirigentes como el maestro Alfredo Miranda Maciel de la Asociación de Jubilados y Pensionados del ISSSTE en la capital de Baja California, Margarita Quiroz del Movimiento de Resistencia Magisterial, Manuel Pimentel Osornio de ASA, entre otros, advirtieron la necesidad de hacer una revisión de la legislación laboral.

Resaltaron las luchas constantes que muchas organizaciones sindicales han sostenido en los últimos años en busca de mejores condiciones de vida, sin embargo, diferentes acciones de Gobierno a nivel nacional como local, han afectado la situación económica de millones de mexicanos.

Maya Quevedo destacó la importancia de que se busque contener la depreciación del salario el cual ha perdido más del 70% del poder adquisitivo en las últimas tres décadas, incrementando las desigualdades en donde hay sectores que viven en marginación extrema.

Es por ello que se requiere la desaparición de la Comisión Nacional de Salarios Mínimos (CNSM) por haberla convertido en un ente que ha servido para mantener los salarios comprimidos en comparación a los índices de la inflación y culpando al salario por ello lo cual es completamente falso, señalaron.

Esas serán las demandas que se habrán de llevar al desfile, insistieron, no obstante que lamentaron que desde hace varios años las autoridades no han querido escuchar las demandas de los trabajadores y no acuden a la invitación que les hacen los líderes sindicales.

Más adelante, dijeron que en los próximos días se estarán reuniendo para hacer la planeación estratégica de su participación en el desfile junto con los maestros del SETE, en coordinación con el SUTI, ASA, el sindicato de trabajadores de Sagarpa, jubilados y pensionados del IMSS y del ISSSTE y el MRM, entre otros.

Fuente: http://www.oem.com.mx/lavozdelafrontera/notas/n4147406.htm
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The scourge of illiteracy and the authoritarian nightmare

At the present historical moment, Americans live in a society in which thinking is viewed as an act of stupidity, and ignorance is treated as a virtue. Literacy is now regarded with disdain, words are reduced to data, and science is confused with pseudo-science. For instance, two thirds of the American public believe creationism should be taught in schools and most of the Republicans in Congress do not believe that climate change is caused by human activity, making the U.S. the laughing stock of the world. News has become entertainment and echoes reality rather than interrogating it. Popular culture revels in the spectacles of shock and violence. Unsurprisingly, education in the larger culture has become a disimagination machine, a tool for legitimizing ignorance, and it is central to the formation of an authoritarian politics that has gutted all those public spheres in which thoughtfulness, critical exchange, and informed dialogue can take place.

Illiteracy has become a scourge and a political tool designed primarily to make war on language, meaning, thinking, and the capacity for critical thought. Illiteracy no longer simply marks populations immersed in poverty with little access to quality education; nor does it only suggests the lack of proficient skills enabling people to read and write with a degree of understanding and fluency. More importantly, illiteracy is about what it means not to be able to act from a position of thoughtfulness, informed judgment, and critical agency. It suggests not only learning the skills and knowledge to understand the world but also to intervene in it and change it when necessary. Illiteracy has become a form of political repression that discourages a culture of questioning, renders agency as an act of intervention inoperable, and restages power as a mode of domination. It is precisely this mode of illiteracy that both privatizes and kills the imagination by poisoning it with falsehoods, consumer fantasies, data loops, and the need for instant gratification.

This is a mode of manufactured illiteracy and education that has no language for relating the self to public life, social responsibility or the demands of citizenship. It is important to recognize that the rise of this new mode of illiteracy is not simply about the failure of public and higher education to create critical and active citizens; it is about a society that eliminates those public spheres that make thinking possible while imposing a culture of fear in which there is the looming threat that anyone who holds power accountable will be ignored or punished. At stake here is not only the crisis of a democratic society, but a crisis of memory, ethics, and agency.

What role might education and critical pedagogy have in a society in which the public goods disappear, emotional life collapses into the therapeutic, and education is reduced to either a private affair or a kind of algorithmic mode of regulation in which everything is reduced to a market-based outcome. What role can education play to challenge the deadly claim of casino capitalism that all problems are individual, regardless of whether the roots of such problems lie in larger systemic forces? In a culture drowning in a new love affair with instrumental rationality, it is not surprising that values that are not measurable — compassion, vision, the imagination, trust, solidarity, care for the other, and a passion for justice — wither.

One of the challenges facing the current generation of educators, students, progressives, and other cultural workers is the need to address the role they might play in educating students to be critically engaged agents, attentive to addressing important social issues and being alert to the responsibility of deepening and expanding the meaning and practices of a vibrant democracy. At the heart of such a challenge is the question of what education should accomplish, not simply in a democracy but at an historical moment when the United States is about to slip into the dark night of authoritarianism. In a world in which there is an increasing abandonment of egalitarian and democratic impulses, what will it take to educate young people and the broader polity to challenge authority and hold power accountable? How might we construct an education capable of providing students with the skills, ideas, values, and authority necessary for them to nourish a substantive democracy, recognize anti-democratic forms of power, and to fight deeply rooted injustices in a society and world founded on systemic economic, racial, and gendered inequalities? What will it take for educators to recognize that the culture of education is not simply about the business of culture but is crucial to provide the conditions for students to address how knowledge is related to the power of both self-definition and social agency? What work do educators have to do to create the economic, political, and ethical conditions necessary to endow young people and the general public with the capacities to think, question, doubt, imagine the unimaginable, and defend education as essential for inspiring and energizing the citizens necessary for the existence of a robust democracy?

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Henry A. Giroux is a widely published social critic and McMaster University professor who holds the McMaster Chair for Scholarship in the Public Interest, the Paulo Freire Distinguished Scholar Chair and is a Visiting Distinguished University Professor at Ryerson University. Born in Rhode Island, he held numerous academic positions in the U.S. and now lives in Hamilton.

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México: En unos días se decidirá sobre mega paro interuniversitario

Fuente: revoluciontrespuntocero/ 27 de Abril de 2016

Tras llevarse a cabo el día de hoy la asamblea interuniversitaria, estudiantes del Instituto Politécnico Nacional (IPN),  de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México UNAM, la Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana (UAM), la Universidad Autónoma de la Ciudad de México y la Universidad de Chapingo, y otras, acordaron que el próximo 16 de mayo se decidirá si se realiza un mega paro en mencionadas instituciones.

Reunidos en la  UPIICSA, alrededor de 200 jóvenes aseguraron que  la reforma al nivel básico es una muestra de lo que el Gobierno quiere hacer con la educación pública y los maestros.

Además, se acordó que los estudiantes se  unirán a la marcha de la Coordinadora Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (CNTE) y la de los padres de  Ayotzinapa, programada para el 1 de mayo.

Del mismo modo,  padres de los normalistas  asistieron también a la  asamblea, al cumplirse 19 meses, ofreciendo apoyo a los universitarios.

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México: La CNTE recibe a Nuño con protestas y vandalismo en Michoacán; hay 44 detenidos

Fuente: proceso.com / 27 de Abril de 2016

MORELIA, Mich. (apro).- La visita a esta ciudad del secretario de Educación Púbica, Aurelio Nuño, desencadenó protestas y actos de vandalismo por parte de la Sección 18 de la Coordinadora Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (CNTE), los cuales dejaron 44 personas detenidas, entre maestros y normalistas.

Y es que los inconformes rompieron vidrios y lanzaron piedras al Centro de Convenciones y Exposiciones de esta ciudad (Ceconexpo), por lo que la policía tuvo que intervenir.

Con pancartas en contra de la reforma y del descuento a los salarios, los trabajadores de la CNTE, calificaron la visita de Nuño como “una provocación”.

Aunque no portaban palos en el momento de su llegada, un grupo trató de irrumpir al salón Michoacán donde se efectuaba el evento, causando destrozos en puertas y ventanas, lo que movilizó a elementos de seguridad que se encontraban en el sitio.

Minutos después, otro grupo que se encontraba afuera del recinto intentó ingresar de igual manera, pero fueron detenidos por elementos de seguridad que ya se encontraban resguardando los alrededores.
En ese momento hubo discusiones, gritos, reclamos y rechiflas por la seguridad que consideraron excesiva.

Posterior a ello, y como generalmente sucede, los docentes intentaron bloquear avenidas, en este caso la Ventura Puente y comenzaron a aventar a los elementos de seguridad.

Cuando se intentó detener a algunos profesores, estos huyeron a Plaza Camelinas para evitar detenciones, pero fue inútil. En ese instante comenzaron a arrojar a la policía estructuras metálicas y piedras mientras corrían a diversas zonas alrededor del Centro de Convenciones.

Tras este hecho, los elementos lograron detener a 44 profesores y normalistas que se unieron a la movilización y a los actos vandálicos cometidos en el recinto, donde se encontraban Aurelio Nuño y el gobernador de Michoacán, Silvano Aureoles Conejo.

El titular de la Secretaría de Seguridad, José Antonio Bernal, informó que tras el operativo desplegado afuera del Centro de Convenciones fueron detenidas 44 personas, entre los que hay estudiantes normalistas y docentes adheridos a la CNTE.

El funcionario estatal señaló que el operativo se desplegó tras los actos de vandalismo realizados por los estudiantes, quienes destrozaron Ceconexpo. Acto seguido, elementos de la corporación acudieron a desalojar a los estudiantes y posteriormente detenerlos.

Ante ello, el recinto permanece resguardado por elementos de Seguridad para evitar más desmanes, pues en el sitio también se encuentran estudiantes normalistas.

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