untitled design

Madrid bans demonstrations for Women’s Day

Due to the state of health, the Spanish authorities announced today the ban on any mobilization on the occasion of the International Women’s Day in Madrid, which is usually a theater of mass demonstrations on March 8.

“I have decided to ban, for reasons of public health, all demonstrations and rallies, because Madrid remains one of the regions in Spain with the highest infection ratesFrom Covid-19, said in front of reporters, the chief representative of the central government in the Madrid region Jose Manuel Franco.

Franco said the local government received 104 requests for demonstrations on March 7.8, which could be attended by at least 60,000 people.

This decision provoked strong reactions from feminist organizations.

“They want to silence us, but our cry is already global,” representatives of the March 8 commission in the Madrid region wrote on Twitter.

“We will be present on March 8. Because the crisis caused by the pandemic affected “women in particular,” they added, without going into details about the form of their mobilizations.

A member of the Podemos party, Equality Minister Irene Montero complainedthose who want to deny us our right (to go down) on the streets“, Assuring that he will respect the ban.

Several ministers of the ruling Socialist Party, which is in a coalition with the Podemos, had called for a non-demonstration in late February due to the epidemiological situation.

Last year, more than 100,000 people gathered in the Spanish capital for the March 8 rally. Among them are many ministers. Three members of the government were diagnosed with the virus shortly afterwards, including Irene Montero.

On March 14, less than a week after the march, the country would declare one of the strictest quarantines in the world to halt the epidemic, and a police report released in May criticized the permit for the protest. pandemic, rekindling the political controversy over whether this mobilization was a source of over-transmission of the coronavirus.

Fears of resurgence of cases with mass movements during Holy Catholic Week

Fearing a resurgence of infections, the Spanish authorities announced today their intention to restrict travel during Holy Week, despite improving health indicators.

Following a meeting between the central government and the country’s 17 regions, the Ministry of Health announced an agreement to exclude the regions, which means that it will not be possible to move from region to region to go, for example, to visit his family.

This agreement also provides for a ban on public events and a curfew between 22.00 and 06.00 in the morning. In addition, up to 4 people will participate in the social gatherings.

The agreement is expected to be formally adopted next week with the Madrid region disagreeing, voicing opposition to a lockdown and proposing an improvement in health.

«Our goal remains to save lives, not to save weeks (Big)Health Minister Carolina Darias said yesterday, a slogan the government is considering using for an information campaign “we do not save weeks, we save lives”.

At a time when the indicators have been improving for a few weeks now, the government wants to avoid at all costs the resurgence of the epidemic during the Easter period, as it did in early January, by easing restrictions on Christmas and New Year.

You may also like

Get the latest

Stay Informed: Get the Latest Updates and Insights

 

Most popular