San Francisco Chronicle

Women activists take over human rights office

- By Ginnette Riquelme Ginnette Riquelme is an Associated Press writer.

MEXICO CITY — In a colonialer­a building in downtown Mexico City, dozens of feminist activists and crime victims have settled in after nearly three months of occupying the headquarte­rs of Mexico’s National Human Rights Commission.

The women said they took over the building because the government has been slow to protect or support women who have suffered abuse or help them find their missing loved ones.

The activists are there in support of women like Erika Martinez as she demands justice for her 10yearold daughter who suffered sexual abuse. Three years ago, Martinez reported her daughter’s abuser to the sexual crimes prosecutor, but the man remains free. So she decided to join the activists in their occupation of the human rights commission offices.

“I decided to do it to draw more attention to my daughter’s case,” Martinez said. Martinez said that she suffered sexual abuse as a girl as well and that her mother did not defend her and did not report the abuse.

Martinez’s 10yearold and another daughter are living at the building with her. Martinez paints women’s faces on key chains she sells at marches. Women who support the movement buy the trinkets and they serve as a way to recognize those empathetic to the cause.

The rights commission is funded by the government but has a measure of independen­ce. It can make recommenda­tions to government agencies, which are usually followed. The offices have become a refuge for other victims of abuse as well.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador drew criticism in September after he expressed anger at how the demonstrat­ors were defacing portraits of Mexican heroes inside the offices. He also has suggested his political opponents are behind the occupation.

Activists say they have seen little progress from his administra­tion on violence perpetrate­d against women.

After huge protests in March over killings of women, López Obrador said the demonstrat­ions would not change his administra­tion’s longterm approach to the problem. He stresses addressing the root causes of crime through employment and support for family integrity.

According to official figures, 3,825 women met violent deaths in 2019 in Mexico, an average of more than 10 per day and a rise of 7% over the previous year.

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