Mariano gavira
02/17/2021 18:17
Clarín.com
Society
Updated 02/17/2021 7:12 PM
Thousands of women on the street
asking, once again, for justice
.
The convocation of the Ni Una Menos movement in front of the Buenos Aires Tribunals building this time bears another name of its own: that of
Úrsula Bahillo
, the 18-year-old girl murdered in the town of Rojas by a Buenos Aires policeman who was her boyfriend.
The march is also replicated in different cities of the country, such as Mendoza, Corrientes or Santa Fe and in Buenos Aires towns such as La Matanza or San Martín, among others.
In Córdoba, the claim centered on
another proper name: that of Ivana Modica
, who has disappeared since Thursday 11.
In downtown Buenos Aires,
the Court Square was full of protesters
.
Groups of friends sitting.
Artistic performances.
Political militants.
Women in pain.
With anger.
With claims.
Under the slogans "For Úrsula and for everyone", "Enough of patriarchal justice!"
and "Enough of police repression!", the demonstration is
attended by Patricia Nasutti, Úrsula's mother
, who went to the courts after meeting at Casa Rosada with President Alberto Fernández.
They received her
with applause and shouts for justice.
"
Úrsula will be the reference point for all the girls who suffer violence
. I promised her while I hugged her and cried her in the drawer,
" Patricia told Clarín
.
"As a mother, I ask that justice be done. For
a girl who was brutally murdered
. I never thought that I would have to be here for my daughter. Now she is in another field watching us and
I am here to prevent another Úrsula from existing," he
added .
One of the claims of the group points out
the incidence of the police forces in the murders of women
: "
One in every five femicides
in our country are committed by
members of the security forces,
" the statement of the convocation details.
"The bureaucracy of the
State and Justice does not take seriously the risk
denounced over and over again when evaluating the dangerousness of the aggressor if he has already had other episodes of violence," they list in the claim that already has thousands of women and the adherence of different political parties.
The posters that accompany the protesters mark the diversity of views in the common claim.
"Without judicial reform there is no Ni Una Menos," read several banners signed by the political group La Cámpora, which carry a drawing of Úrsula.
The slogan of La Cámpora militants in the Ni Una menos march.
Photo Marcelo Carrol.
"Justice for Úrsula" is a general slogan in the march.
But there are also posters that ask: "What woman in your life would you have to kill to worry you?"
"Today I fight to exist tomorrow", "I don't want to live in fear", "enough to kill us", the phrases of the youngest girls echo in the symbolically empty judicial corridors.
After 7 pm, the deconcentration began.
Posted in the sidewalk
of the Courts are posters with
the names of the 46 victims of femicide in the months of the year
.
In another sector, on a garbage can in the square, the faces of some of the femicide men.
News in development.
DS
Look also
Alberto Fernández received Úrsula Bahillo's mother and promised to visit her at her home in Rojas
Femicide of Úrsula: Matías Martínez did not give the password, but they still managed to open his cell phone and that of the victim