Education Is Latest Casualty In Mexico's Drug War
by JASON BEAUBIEN
September 28, 2011
In the coastal Mexican city of Acapulco, teachers are out on strike ? not over wages, working conditions or pensions, but because of crime.
Teachers say they're being extorted, kidnapped and intimidated by local gangs and they're refusing to return to their classrooms until the government does something to protect them. Over the last two years, drug cartels fighting for control of Acapulco have terrorized the once-popular tourist resort.
I believe that this fight that the teachers are making is a defining moment, because having been a teacher for 32 years, I'm convinced that teachers have their finger on the pulse of what's happening in every house, every neighborhood, every street, every family.
more..
by JASON BEAUBIEN
September 28, 2011
In the coastal Mexican city of Acapulco, teachers are out on strike ? not over wages, working conditions or pensions, but because of crime.
Teachers say they're being extorted, kidnapped and intimidated by local gangs and they're refusing to return to their classrooms until the government does something to protect them. Over the last two years, drug cartels fighting for control of Acapulco have terrorized the once-popular tourist resort.
I believe that this fight that the teachers are making is a defining moment, because having been a teacher for 32 years, I'm convinced that teachers have their finger on the pulse of what's happening in every house, every neighborhood, every street, every family.
more..