MEXICO CITY: Riot police stormed Mexico City’s historic center to remove striking teachers, using water cannons to clear the area while protestors responded with firebombs.
Hundreds of federal officers broke through barricades, chasing out a few hundred protestors who had disobeyed a deadline to vacate the Zocalo plaza ahead of the nation’s independence day celebrations this weekend.
At least 29 people were injured in the clashes, the Red Cross said. Authorities detained 20 protestors, said federal police chief Manuel Mondragon y Kalb.
Thousands of teachers had been living in a tent city in the square for the past three weeks to protest a major education reform championed by President Enrique Pena Nieto, but most had cleared out before the ultimatum.
After police took back control of the Zocalo — home to the National Palace, Aztec ruins and the city’s cathedral — clean-up crews came in to pick up trash and plastic tarps ahead of the celebrations on Sunday and Monday.
Some 200 protestors had placed metal barriers in adjoining streets and threw rocks and Molotov cocktails at the incoming police. Clashes continued along the city’s avenues with hundreds more protestors, with some swinging clubs at the officers, who fired tear gas.
Minutes before the police moved in, Pena Nieto’s government released an invitation to the holiday celebrations, with his appearance at the National Palace late Sunday to deliver the annual “Cry of Independence” and a military parade on Monday.
Teachers who had agreed to leave the Zocalo moved their camp to the city’s Revolution Monument.
The dissident National Education Workers Coordinator (CNTE) union led several protests in the city for the past three weeks that failed to stop the passage of an overhaul of the education system, which ranks last in the 34-nation Organization of Economic Co-operation and Development.
Their demonstrations disrupted traffic in the already congested megalopolis, and twice they blocked road access to the international airport.
The demonstrations irritated many chilangos, as Mexico City residents are known, with 59 percent favoring the use of force against the teachers, according to a poll conducted last month by Reforma newspaper.
Mondragon y Kalb had warned earlier that the officers would clear the Zocalo after the deadline passed “otherwise this will go on forever and we will never resolve the issue.”
Pena Nieto signed the reform this week in order to break the hold unions have on education, and to require teachers to undergo mandatory performance evaluations.
The teachers say the new rules violate their labor rights and fail to take into account conditions in rural and indigenous regions.
The new law is among the major structural reforms that Pena Nieto has pushed since taking office in December.
His plans to open the state-controlled oil sector has also sparked protests, but his centrist Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) has struck a pact with conservative and leftist rivals to enact reforms that all agree are needed.
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