Houston Chronicle Sunday

Mexico’s leader seen as feckless as femicides rise

- By Kirk Semple and Paulina Villegas

MEXICO CITY — The gruesome murders this month of a woman and a girl in Mexico have shocked the nation, triggering a groundswel­l of outrage punctuated by near-daily street protests, unbridled fury on social media and growing demands for incisive government action against genderbase­d violence.

The woman, Ingrid Escamilla, 25, was stabbed, skinned and disembowel­ed, and the girl, Fátima Cecilia Aldrighett, 7, was abducted from school, her body later found stuffed in a plastic bag. The outcry over their deaths is forcing a reckoning in a country that has long wrestled with violence against women, analysts and activists say.

It is also amounting to a major leadership test for President Andrés Manuel López Obrador — and critics, who have called his response at turns anemic, insensitiv­e and condescend­ing, say he is falling far short.

Xóchitl Rodríguez, a member of Feminasty, a feminist activist collective, said she has been deeply disappoint­ed by the response of López Obrador, who campaigned as a transforma­tive figure who would defend marginaliz­ed population­s.

“He was supposed to represent a change and it turns out that he is not,” she said. “The fact that you wake up in the morning and your president cannot reassure you on what specific actions he is taking to deal with the issue, is outrageous.”

In 2019, the Mexican government recorded 1,006 incidents of femicide, the crime of killing women or girls because of their gender — a 10 percent increase from 2018. The overall number of women who die violently in Mexico has also increased, rising to 10 killings per day in 2019 from seven per day in 2017, according to the Mexico office of U.N. Women.

“Women are demanding a shift of paradigm and nothing less,” said Estefanía Vela, executive director of Intersecta, a Mexico City-based group that promotes gender equality. “These are not only hashtags. These are students protesting at the universiti­es, and mothers demanding justice for their daughters.”

But López Obrador has seemed to struggle with how to respond to the issue.

Speaking at one of his regular morning news conference­s last week, the president bristled at journalist­s’ question about femicide and tried to bring the conversati­on back to his announceme­nt that the government had recovered more than $100 million in criminal assets and would be channeling it into poor communitie­s.

“Look, I don’t want the topic to be only femicide,” he said. “This issue has been manipulate­d a lot in the media.”

And on Monday, when asked about Fátima’s death, he sought to blame femicides on what he called the “neoliberal policies” of his predecesso­rs.

Mexican society, he said, “fell into a decline, it was a process of progressiv­e degradatio­n that had to do with the neoliberal model.”

Amid the escalating violence and facing a lack of what they consider effective government response, a feminist protest movement has gained momentum in the past year and become more violent, with some protesters smashing windows of police stations and spraying graffiti on monuments.

The deaths of Fátima and Escamilla, both in the past two weeks, have injected even greater urgency into the debate surroundin­g gender violence and machismo and have intensifie­d the demands for a more effective government response.

The killing of Escamilla, whose body was found on Feb. 9, was so ghoulish that it managed to transcend the daily drumbeat of bloodshed and shock the nation. A man, found covered in blood and said to be her domestic partner, was arrested and confessed to the crime, authoritie­s said.

Adding to the outrage was the fact that photos of Escamilla’s mutilated body were leaked to tabloids, which published the images on their front pages.

On Feb. 11, Fátima went missing after she was led away from her primary school by an unidentifi­ed woman — an abduction that was captured by security cameras. The discovery of the girl’s body over the weekend, wrapped in a plastic bag and dumped next to a constructi­on site on the outskirts of the capital, added to the rising anger.Last Friday, protesters, most of them women, spraypaint­ed “Femicide State” and “Not One More” on the facade and main doorway of the National Palace in Mexico.

A senator from the National Action Party, Josefina Vázquez Mota, filed a proposal in the Senate to create a special commission that would monitor the prosecutio­n of femicides against minors.

But López Obrador has been seen as dismissive. To the women who spray-painted calls for change on the National Palace, for example, he said “I ask feminists, with all due respect, not to paint the doors, the walls. We are working so that there are no femicides.”

“If trashing monuments makes authoritie­s look at us and listen to our demands, then we will continue to do so,” said Beatriz Belmont, a student in economics and internatio­nal relations at ITAM, a Mexico City university, and a member of the Fourth Wave, a feminist student collective.

She called the president’s responses to the crisis “unacceptab­le and unfitting for someone who should be acting as a national leader.”

“It seems like he is closing his eyes before a reality that is not only sitting in front of him but is slapping him in the face,” Belmont said.

 ?? Guillermo Arias / AFP via Getty Images ?? Recent femicide cases in Mexico have shocked the country, mobilizing women into protesting gender violence.
Guillermo Arias / AFP via Getty Images Recent femicide cases in Mexico have shocked the country, mobilizing women into protesting gender violence.
 ?? Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images ?? Fátima, a 7-year-old girl who was reported missing earlier this month, is buried after being dumped at a constructi­on site.
Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images Fátima, a 7-year-old girl who was reported missing earlier this month, is buried after being dumped at a constructi­on site.

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