domingo, 12 de octubre de 2014

INTELLECTUAL REGRET WHAT HAPPENS IN MEXICO

INTELLECTUAL REGRET WHAT HAPPENS IN MEXICO 


 * "The whole country will be a mass grave" 




 "The walk looking up under the truck. When in fact he killed "lamented 
writer Margo Glantz 

  "I find it absolutely disgraceful and unacceptable rudeness put all those pictures with the faces of the boys as criminals. The walk looking up under the truck. When in reality they were killed. 


 The most obvious is that it will appear in a pit, "cried the writer Margo Glantz. From Xalapa, Veracruz, where he participated at the Hay Literary Festival concluded yesterday in that city, the author of the recent I remember also (Sixth Floor), lamented the "dreadful shame" representing "the forced disappearance of persons that multiplies the country and the cynicism with which they face. "

Very affected, storyteller and novelist Ana García Bergua HOWEVER predicted before that "the whole country will be a mass grave." For journalist Diego Enrique Osorno, what comes is ordering the immediate resignation of the Governor of Guerrero, whom he considers the most responsible for the crimes of students in Iguala. 

  The author of besieged Oaxaca, Sinaloa Cartel, We are the guilty dead and Country, among others, said in an interview that was often in the school to which they belonged Ayotzinapa students assaulted. "I've seen that are children of very dedicated to the study peasants, who read for pleasure and at least four books a week, who are very active dedicated as we wanted to have nationwide student, very involved in their society, very critical, and suddenly know that some of them are buried in a clandestine grave, like animals, it's tremendous, "said Osorno. 

  "This country is very disappointing, it is true that as Ana García Bergua says is becoming a common grave, but it is also true that on this mass grave reforms are being built again as in the days of Carlos Salinas benefit a few "said professional born in 1980" I think that even if students meet is a very strong spirit of Mexico hit, we have to follow the example you have given the school Ayotzinapa for so long with the theme itself school that says: Here you learn to not bend. 

Although we want to send everyone into a common grave, we have to learn to get up, "he concluded. Rosa Maldonado, the Collective for Peace Region Xalapa, "an almost lawyer and fundamentally citizen" as it was presented to HOWEVER, was not surprised by the events of Iguala, "since it happens here too, in the State of Veracruz, almost every day. ""It is the policy of the State repression and enforced disappearances to silence social movements fighting for education or the environment. 

This is a policy that has hurt us a lot and that instills terror in the population, "said the militant. "What has happened in Iguala is seen by social movements in different states of the country as a logical consequence of the repressive policy of the authorities. We are not surprised, unfortunately. I just got here in Xalapa, the call advising the disappearance of a 24 year old. It happens all the time, "he said. Benito Taibo Speaks: "At the end of Heart of Darkness, Kurtz's character [Joseph] Conrad, feverish, beside himself, describes a few words his bloody reign, pitiful, festering, malaria, 'The horror ... 'No less certainly what happened in Iguala. 

Name to be added to the list of other, ominous, that will remain forever open wounds in our history. ""Chinameca, Huitzilac, Parral, Xochicalco, Tlatelolco, San Fernando, Tlatlaya and many others. The crime of Iguala, the barbarity of Iguala, the horror of Iguala, is a new insult that cuts our legs and we suddenly clears, any slight glimmer of hope, "he said. The short story writer and novelist Ana García Bergua HOWEVER predicted before that "the whole country will be a mass grave." 


 The short story writer and novelist Ana García Bergua 



WHAT IS THIS COUNTRY? 

"Imagine this: what country is one in which a very poor student teachers belonging to one of the poorest and most marginalized regions of Mexico, they are captured, led who knows where and then killed and buried by the police. It is grotesque and horrifying, "says veteran writer and philosopher Hugo Hiriart. 

"What have the news media is that all police Guerrero consists narcos and then believed that those who came in the truck were a contrast group and that is the likely explanation. But still, it is immensely grotesque, is not the most grotesque, "he says. "The most grotesque is never going to not know anything about the crimes. Because this is the country where nothing has consequences. Mexico is a makeup mummy laughs cynically. And it's a horrible, horrible thing, "he said Hiriart. 

"The Iguala case is a confirmation that all the triumphs and achievements that both assumptions cackles the federal government with reforms that nobody understands, contrasting with a reality that is still bleeding," says Jorge F.Hernández writer, author among others of the Empress of Lavapies. "It is shameful and inexcusable. First, we did not know for a week the whereabouts of 49 people and worse we now see photographs of the bodies in the media. Out of respect for the family would have to accompany them in grief and worry because increasingly the map of Mexico, which looked like a horn of plenty is actually a psychoanalyst's couch, "Hernandez said. 

THERE CORPSES 

  "Under the bushes / grasses In / On bridges / On channels / There Corpses" begins the poem "Corpses" by Argentine Nestor Perlongher, an almost must in this circumstance does not forget the Mexican poet Luis Felipe Fabre. "If we read the poem in the Zocalo or elsewhere in Mexico, would be more than appropriate. Perlongher wrote for those who disappeared during the dictatorship in Argentina, but in Mexico today there are corpses on the bridges, in channels, "says Fabre. 

"This issue is not just a concern for intellectuals, concerns us all Mexicans. Situations how are you degrade us as a country, I think from any trade or profession have to do something about it, "cries the Mexican poet. The writer and journalist Sergio González Rodríguez believes that the facts of Iguala constitute "the most egregious" that can happen in a country. However, for the winner of Anagram Field Essay Prize for war, "is not something new. 

We have many years warning about the serious lack of respect for human rights of citizens, impunity of crimes and the failure of the authorities in everything it does to public safety, "he explains. "Today we see that any demonstration against the public mandate can represent death, torture and disappearance of people. This is terrible because it strikes at the juncture of Tlatlaya and shows the government is not working. This is unacceptable, "he concludes. 


A TALE OF TERROR 

  "I am very afraid, this is a horror story, much terror" admits Pancho Francisco Hinojosa, author of the beloved mistress of the world's worst. "We do not know the whole truth, so there is a thread of hope, but the fact that the police availing students to kill students is one of the most horrible things that happened Mexico," he says. "Also, one of the anniversaries of the October 2, terrible and abominable. Must have placed a fear of what is happening now. This is not even the Narco War Felipe Calderón, what happens now we can take a very deep hole, "says Hinojosa. 

  "Leave this country and say you're from Mexico is becoming a national embarrassment. The country is in a tailspin. How many have already killed the government of Guerrero? Show a protest is the common grave risk, "admits novelist and poet Myriam Moscona. Face the facts of Iguala, the author of Fabric Sevoya, Villaurrutia Award 2013, says that many people see it as more of a state of widespread violence. "Maybe remain unnoticed (crimes) in this country from oblivion. I remember the verse of a poet who said: Be afraid of my anger, "says Moscona. "It is totally monstrous, no words to describe the acts of repression in Iguala and clearly obey state policy. Tlatlaya first passes, crosses and continues to meet throughout the Republic, "says Rafael Barajas" The Voyeur "in an interview with HOWEVER. 

"This shows that organized crime and the system began to be synonymous," concludes visibly affected. With so many cries of pain, the writer of Culiacán Elmer Mendoza rises further hard voice to demand immediate action. "A responsible, led by President Enrique Peña Nieto, tell them that this can not happen. If you aspire to be a civilized country, have respectable laws, can not pass these things, "says the author of the recent The mystery of the skull orchid. "We can not let them kill our students, our youth because we are breaking chains and that's not fair, is not normal and it is not human. We need to become another country, a country where dreams are possible, "he said Elmer.

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