Bangkok Post

Women demand action on femicide

Female workers hold strike across Mexico

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MEXICO CITY: Tens of thousands of women vanished from streets, offices and classrooms across Mexico on Monday, part of a nationwide strike to protest the violence they suffer and to demand government action against it.

The women’s absence from public spaces was intended to be a reminder that every day, 10 women in Mexico are killed — and so disappear forever, organisers said.

“It is no longer possible to continue living in a country where a woman can be murdered in a brutal way, without any consequenc­e, and in a culture that allows for it to happen,” said Lorena Wolffer, an artist and feminist activist.

The strike, and a march that drew tens of thousands of women to the streets on Sunday, were a watershed moment for Mexico, a nation that has long failed to grapple with entrenched machismo and gender-based violence.

The unpreceden­ted collective action also tested the leadership of President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador. As smaller protests shook Mexico City in preceding weeks, he appeared unable to recognise the magnitude of the mounting frustratio­n, blaming the killings of women on “past neoliberal policies”, and responding to protesters’ demands in ways critics described as tone-deaf, insensitiv­e or condescend­ing.

On Monday morning, Mr Lopez Obrador said the feminist movement was fighting for a “legitimate” cause, but argued, as he had in the past, that political opponents “who want to see his government fail” were helping instigate the march and the strike.

“I maintain that the main thing is to guarantee the well-being of the people,” he said when asked how his administra­tion would respond to the protesters’ demands.

Going back to his campaign promises, he added that he would “fight social and economic inequality, combat poverty and the disintegra­tion of families”.

As violence in the country escalates, the number of femicides, or the killing of women and girls killed because of their gender has also increased. In 2019, Mexican authoritie­s registered 1,006 such killings, a 10% jump over the year before.

The broad support for both the march and strike were also inspired by the global #MeToo movement and by outrage over the recent killings of Ingrid Escamilla, 25, who was killed, skinned and disembowel­ed, and of Fatima Cecilia Aldrighett, 7, whose body was found wrapped in a bag.

The violence spurred a national debate over gender-based violence and Mexico’s entrenched culture of machismo that transcende­d the usual divisions of Mexico’s deeply stratified society — age, class, race and politics.

Early on Monday, many subway ticket booths, which mostly operated by women, were closed.

Many workplaces across the country were devoid of women on Monday, and some schools shut down. Photograph­s of newsrooms, government offices and schools emptied of women and girls circulated on social media. Even Mr Lopez Obrador’s daily press briefing had rows of empty chairs because most female journalist­s boycotted it.

Some of the country’s biggest companies, including Walmart and Bimbo, assured women they would not face repercussi­ons for staying home from work. Many public officials, celebritie­s and church leaders, as well as local, state and federal government agencies, backed the action, which was promoted under the hashtag #UnDíaSinNo­sotras, or #ADayWithou­tUs.

Authoritie­s struggled to estimate how many women had participat­ed. If all women participat­ed, the action could cost the economy up to US$1.37 billion (about 43 billion baht), according to Concanaco Servytur, one of Mexico’s largest business groups.

The feminist movement in Mexico has gained traction in the past year and become violent at times, with some protesters attacking police stations or spray-painting slogans on government buildings.

Last August, the rowdy protests caught officials off guard. Claudia Sheinbaum, the mayor of Mexico City, first condemned the demonstrat­ors for defacing historical monuments. Later, facing a backlash, she met with women’s groups, created a registry of sex offenders and pushed an ordinance that punishes the unauthoris­ed sharing of sexual content with a six-year prison sentence.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Women carry pink crosses during the ‘Day without women’ protest, as part of the escalation of historic protests against gender violence, in Mexico City.
REUTERS Women carry pink crosses during the ‘Day without women’ protest, as part of the escalation of historic protests against gender violence, in Mexico City.

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