Student protests in Villahermosa after violent eviction
After the eviction operation carried out with violence against the sit-in of the student community of the Los Ríos Technological Institute in Balancán, dozens of university students from Villahermosa demonstrated in front of the Government Palace. Their main demands include the cessation of militarization of the country and sanctions for the officials involved in the incident.
Request document and key demands
During the rally, the protesters read a document of demands that, in addition to condemning the repression, requested the elimination of university fees in public institutions. Ricardo, UNAM student and spokesperson for the movement, highlighted: “Punishing those responsible, from public servants to security forces, is essential.” The protest included posters with slogans such as “May Oppressor” and “May 7 is not forgotten,” alluding to the date of the eviction.
The speech also criticized former president Andrés Manuel López Obrador for failing to fulfill his promise not to militarize the country: “Today we are worse than with Calderón or Peña Nieto in organized crime and military presence,” he stated. The third demand required increasing the educational budget and eliminating excessive charges, such as the 4,800 pesos for registration at the Juárez Autonomous University of Tabasco (UJAT).
Call to student organization
Ricardo urged his companions to articulate themselves against repression, evoking historical episodes such as the massacres of 1968 and 1999: “We cannot normalize these barbarities. If Governor Javier May must resign, let him do so.” Luis Castillejos, a UJAT student, warned about the risks of violent escalation: “What happened yesterday brings the country closer to scenarios like Tlatelolco.”
A student from Tecnológico de Villahermosa closed with a call to the authorities to resolve the conflict, highlighting that institutional violence deepens citizen distrust. The mobilization reflects a growing unrest against policies that, according to protesters, violate fundamental rights.
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