As most of Mexico's 26
million students return to school this week, more than two million
remain at home after teachers launched strikes to protest reforms aimed
at improving the country's woeful public education system.
The strikers shut down some 24,000 schools in five impoverished
states across southern Mexico, including the violence-plagued Pacific
Coast state of Michoacan, in pursuit of a host of demands. Chief among
them was a call for cancellation of new federal regulations requiring
teachers to take competency exams to be hired and retained. More than
1,500 teachers idled 500,000 other students in the Gulf Coast state of
Tabasco to force the resignation of the state's education minister.
Some 20,000 strikers poured into Mexico City to besiege the National
Congress and set up camp in the sprawling central plaza, where leaders
say they will stay indefinitely. Hundreds trying to force their way into
a session of legislators voting on reforms fought with riot police
outside the congress building, smashing cars and injuring 22 officers.
At the behest of President Enrique Peña Nieto, congress passed
sweeping educational reforms last December. Legislators this month have
been negotiating secondary legislation to put the reforms into effect.
"Education is the most powerful instrument for Mexicans to reach new
and better opportunities in life," Peña Nieto said Monday, as classes
began and strikers entered the Mexican capital.
The striking teachers say they are being used as scapegoats for the
real problem: years of inadequate budgets and endemic corruption that
have made Mexico's among the worst public education systems in the
industrialized world.
“We want the whole national education system to be evaluated,' strike leader Juan Jose Ortega told Reforma newspaper on Monday.
A generation ago most Mexican adults were lucky to finish six years
of grade school. Today, practically every Mexican child 15 years old and
younger is in school, according to the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development. But the quality of education varies
dramatically. Mexico leads the OECD's 34 member nations in dropouts,
with less than half the students who begin eventually earning a diploma.
Federal police jailed Elba Esther Gordillo, the powerful boss of the
National Education Workers Syndicate, or SNTE, the largest teachers'
union, in February on corruption charges, removing a powerful political
obstacle to the reforms. Despite reportedly living on her teacher and
union salaries, Gordillo amassed a fortune worth millions of dollars in
her more than two decades in control of the 1.2-million member
syndicate.
Gordillo's arrest and replacement with an underling subdued the giant
union. The strikes this week are being led by the National Education
Workers Coordinator, a rival and often more radical union to the larger
SNTE. But among the more radical strikers are those of the SNTE's
Section 22, which maintains a grip on public education in Oaxaca state.
Section 22 launches crippling strikes in the state nearly every spring,
pushing for sometimes trifling wage increases and other benefits.
The teachers throughout southern Mexico have been fighting against
the reforms all year, marching on Mexico City, striking at home and
fighting with state officials. Rioting teachers attacked and burned
government and political party offices in the Guerrero state capital of
Chilpanincingo in April after legislators approved the reforms.
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
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