Mexico. Mexican singer Julieta Venegas said today that the case of 43 students disappeared in the state of Guerrero is a true horror story, a chapter of the "nightmare" of violence that the country is living. "My reflection in recent days has been in the aspect of how it is that we pass this, it's a nightmare.
What happened to those guys is a nightmare, what they did is a nightmare, it's a horror story, "he told Efe in an interview.
The story of the 43 student teachers from the Rural Normal Ayotzinapa who remain missing since Sept. 26, after being attacked by local police in Iguala, has produced the singer something "beyond outrage," a " pain "that is difficult to recover.
"That can happen and something, a crime so young will raise that ... To me not only unworthy, I feel this impotence and this profound sadness that we are this," he added.
The night of September 26 last six people died and 25 were injured by several police attacks Iguala, which disappeared after the 43 young people who were brought in patrol, witnesses said. "Youth who dies is the same death of our heart.
My blood is in mourning today because my country ceased to feel the beat of his voice, "published these days the singer in a message social network Twitter. As shown in the songs from his latest album "Moments" (2013), in which the issue of violence and hard times that crosses Mexico are featured in several issues, the artist is very concerned about this situation.
"It's not a personal afraid I can happen to me, but what is happening to this country. We are in a kind of moral decadence where there are no limits to the things that can happen and in this sense it gives me fear what might happen, but for everyone, "said the artist.
And in Mexico there are many people "who are living daily nightmare stories because violence is already at a level where there is no respect for anyone, and no respect for nothing, life is this way ". Cases like Ayotzinapa students, and others like women who have to give birth in the street because they do not accept them in hospitals, said, are "inhuman". "It can not be that what is happening is happening.
We are as descuidándonos. There are a very large and very rich country, but there are many places that are completely neglected, "he said. What happened in Guerrero, he added, "is a sign that there is no control," "it appears as if they are abandoned, and a lot going on there," insisted the artist, born in Long Beach (California, USA. UU.) in 1970, but he raised in the Mexican city of Tijuana.
While acknowledging no idea "how we will get through this," does see need among Mexican "look at us more between us," he said, "look what is happening," "look at our people, look what they are suffering and see what we can do, because this is getting worse. "
- Blogger Comment
- Facebook Comment
Suscribirse a:
Enviar comentarios
(
Atom
)

0 comentarios:
Publicar un comentario