“Let’s stop importing agendas that don’t correspond to Durango. Durango has its own problems, its own needs, its own sensitivities,” he emphasized.
He explained that organized action must be taken to resolve the problems, and not resort to actions that he considered vandalism or organized crime.
“I invite the leaders of the collective to take responsibility for the events and to prepare themselves professionally because they are university directors, teachers, and doctors of law (…) and they cannot call for a conciliatory roundtable instead of denigrating what isn’t being done, to bring a proposal of what should and can be done,” he commented at a press conference.
He acknowledged that in Durango, there are daily news reports of disappearances or cases of violence that pain us all, and questioned what tools are being given to citizens to raise awareness, “but burning, seizing, and painting don’t solve anything,” he added.
She referred to the fire that broke out in Congress on March 8th and asserted that “one of the protesters almost died” and that “Durango doesn’t want abortion.”
“If this movement says that only privileged women can have abortions, then they should raise their funds and support them to have an abortion in another city. The Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation has already ruled that no woman can be penalized for having an abortion, so why do they want to remove from the State Penal Code something that remains as an indication of Durango’s values, where we defend the life of the most vulnerable: the unborn?” stated the daughter of the founder of the ITD and the EPEA.

Source: elsiglodedurango