Lemus holds a roundtable for social development in Ajijic

With the aim of defining the direction of the state and the municipality for the next six years, the governor-elect, Pablo Lemus, met with 150 civil society associations in Ajijic.

In the magical town of Ajijic and ensuring that it is essential to listen to all positions, to build the State Development Plan, which will be the government program, the governor-elect of Jalisco, Pablo Lemus, met with about 150 civil society associations, explaining that the objective is to define the direction of the state for the next six years, and all opinions will be taken into account.

“Through these tables, the entire fight against inequality will be worked on in the 125 municipalities of the state of Jalisco. There is representation from all regions of the state, because how we are going to confront inequality in the Ciénaga region is not the same as how we are going to do it in the northern area of ​​Jalisco. They are diametrically different realities, but we have to work with those who truly know the problem, which are the civil associations that for decades have done extraordinary social work.”

When heading the table to combat inequality and social development, he said that together they have to find the mechanisms to support all sectors, corn farmers, cattle farmers, dairy farmers, agave growers, in general all the producers of the field from their particularities.

After having headed the roundtable on combating inequality and the roundtable on industrial and agro-food development, the governor-elect of Jalisco, Pablo Lemus, announced that they are preparing for the most complex one, that of security, because they have already received requests and proposals from groups on the issues of missing persons and gender violence.

“We will continue, of course, also with the Roundtable on Security, which will be very important. Today we have already begun to talk about very important issues, such as the eradication of violence against women and the eradication and attention to victims and family members of forced disappearance. We have to eradicate disappearance in Jalisco and we have to attend to its victims.”

Lemus Navarro said that he has a very good relationship and closeness with the governors of Colima, Nayarit, Guanajuato and in general all the states that border the state in the western area.

He admitted that the government cannot do it alone, and that the only way to find a solution to the serious and painful problem of forced disappearances will be to build it with groups, with families, to understand this reality that has brought mourning to so many homes.

Source: meganoticias