Berliner Boersenzeitung - Mexican schoolboy set on fire for being Indigenous

EUR -
AED 4.00597
AFN 73.797772
ALL 98.646717
AMD 422.230181
ANG 1.966152
AOA 991.471908
ARS 1068.85851
AUD 1.622208
AWG 1.963746
AZN 1.853094
BAM 1.953368
BBD 2.202657
BDT 130.367074
BGN 1.955091
BHD 0.411093
BIF 3218.30744
BMD 1.090667
BND 1.426118
BOB 7.554559
BRL 6.103594
BSD 1.090937
BTN 91.715079
BWP 14.50687
BYN 3.570106
BYR 21377.072086
BZD 2.198972
CAD 1.505191
CDF 3138.939176
CHF 0.940531
CLF 0.036634
CLP 1010.840865
CNY 7.730864
CNH 7.736099
COP 4590.878924
CRC 564.39465
CUC 1.090667
CUP 28.902674
CVE 110.128377
CZK 25.261262
DJF 193.833274
DKK 7.459987
DOP 65.628282
DZD 145.490606
EGP 53.003686
ERN 16.360004
ETB 131.057811
FJD 2.45433
FKP 0.834545
GBP 0.834889
GEL 2.961162
GGP 0.834545
GHS 17.378282
GIP 0.834545
GMD 74.713545
GNF 9411.324523
GTQ 8.436495
GYD 228.234764
HKD 8.466384
HNL 27.147197
HRK 7.513638
HTG 143.621168
HUF 400.848492
IDR 16992.481908
ILS 4.102331
IMP 0.834545
INR 91.66374
IQD 1429.120514
IRR 45919.806064
ISK 149.290479
JEP 0.834545
JMD 172.704954
JOD 0.772954
JPY 163.221564
KES 140.728795
KGS 93.246753
KHR 4431.380639
KMF 490.251101
KPW 981.600003
KRW 1480.242364
KWD 0.334486
KYD 0.909064
KZT 529.348449
LAK 23925.318789
LBP 97691.110908
LKR 319.64053
LRD 209.997556
LSL 19.126984
LTL 3.220456
LVL 0.659733
LYD 5.228466
MAD 10.694832
MDL 19.270916
MGA 5018.773822
MKD 61.523264
MMK 3542.443687
MNT 3706.086303
MOP 8.726314
MRU 43.189025
MUR 50.411019
MVR 16.741817
MWK 1891.553381
MXN 21.180447
MYR 4.688767
MZN 69.686829
NAD 19.126984
NGN 1783.463487
NIO 40.149823
NOK 11.783937
NPR 146.744606
NZD 1.791312
OMR 0.41988
PAB 1.090942
PEN 4.063721
PGK 4.290677
PHP 62.629914
PKR 303.000726
PLN 4.293361
PYG 8538.36835
QAR 3.976667
RON 4.973874
RSD 117.01549
RUB 104.26924
RWF 1469.649836
SAR 4.095375
SBD 9.051801
SCR 16.410741
SDG 656.012798
SEK 11.374446
SGD 1.426543
SHP 0.834545
SLE 24.567271
SLL 22870.736976
SOS 623.426591
SRD 34.995172
STD 22574.603676
SVC 9.545158
SYP 2740.333707
SZL 19.123101
THB 36.284319
TJS 11.617861
TMT 3.828241
TND 3.358019
TOP 2.554453
TRY 37.378165
TTD 7.406676
TWD 35.061662
TZS 2968.243543
UAH 44.945442
UGX 3998.021816
USD 1.090667
UYU 45.543083
UZS 13941.576568
VEF 3950998.299184
VES 42.360745
VND 27103.073538
VUV 129.486203
WST 3.055159
XAF 655.126245
XAG 0.034908
XAU 0.000412
XCD 2.947582
XDR 0.815181
XOF 655.144243
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.048363
ZAR 19.1447
ZMK 9817.308706
ZMW 28.826974
ZWL 351.194311
  • RBGPF

    1.7400

    61.23

    +2.84%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    24.69

    -0.08%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    47.38

    +1.16%

  • SCS

    0.0700

    12.98

    +0.54%

  • GSK

    0.3000

    39.13

    +0.77%

  • RIO

    0.4700

    67.7

    +0.69%

  • BP

    -0.1200

    31.99

    -0.38%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.98

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    0.6500

    66.89

    +0.97%

  • AZN

    0.7500

    78.1

    +0.96%

  • BTI

    0.2700

    35.45

    +0.76%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    7.03

    +0.43%

  • BCC

    0.6100

    142.98

    +0.43%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    9.68

    +0.31%

  • BCE

    -0.4600

    32.56

    -1.41%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.22

    -0.23%

Mexican schoolboy set on fire for being Indigenous
Mexican schoolboy set on fire for being Indigenous / Photo: PEDRO PARDO - AFP/File

Mexican schoolboy set on fire for being Indigenous

A Mexican schoolboy was set on fire and badly burned in a classroom -- his "only crime" was speaking an Indigenous language in a country struggling to end racial discrimination.

Text size:

Two classmates are accused of pouring alcohol on Juan Zamorano's seat at a high school in the central state of Queretaro in June.

When the 14-year-old realized his trousers were wet and stood up, one of them set Zamorano on fire, according to his family.

He suffered second and third degree burns and was only this week discharged from hospital.

Juan had already suffered weeks of bullying because of his Indigenous Otomi roots, according to his family's lawyers, who filed complaints against the alleged attackers and school authorities.

With an estimated population of 350,000, the Otomi are one of dozens of Indigenous groups in the Latin American country.

The Otomi language is Juan's mother tongue "but he doesn't like to speak it much because it's a cause of ridicule, harassment and bullying," Ernesto Franco, one of the family's lawyers, told AFP.

The family has alleged to the media that even Zamorano's teacher harassed him because of his origin.

"She thinks that we're not her class, we're not her race," Zamorano's father, who described the attack as "attempted murder," told the newspaper El Universal.

- 'Recurring attacks' -

Queretaro state prosecutors have announced an investigation into the attack and the alleged perpetrators face possible legal proceedings.

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said that if necessary, the country's attorney general's office might handle the case.

Juan's "only crime was speaking Otomi," tweeted Lopez Obrador's spokesman Jesus Ramirez, who said that eradicating racism was everyone's responsibility.

Mexico's National Institute of Indigenous Peoples urged the authorities to "sanction minors and adults involved in harassment and recurring attacks on minors."

Urgent measures are needed in schools to prevent further cases of discrimination and racism, it said.

Discrimination is common in Mexico, a country of 126 million where 23.2 million people identify as Indigenous and more than 7.3 million speak an Indigenous language, according to a 2020 census.

In a case in March, an Otomi woman accused staff at a restaurant in a trendy Mexico City neighborhood of preventing her from using the toilet, telling her it was only for customers.

- Systemic racism -

Around 40 percent of the Indigenous population complained of having faced discrimination in a survey published by the national statistics agency in 2018.

Almost half felt that their rights were respected little or not at all.

The survey also revealed prejudices against the Indigenous population.

Three out of 10 people questioned agreed with the statement: "The poverty of Indigenous people is due to their culture."

Cases like Zamorano's are not isolated but part of systemic racism, said Alexandra Haas, the Mexico head of the international charity Oxfam.

In 2019, an Oxfam study in Mexico found that speaking an Indigenous language, identifying with an Indigenous, Black or mixed ethnicity community, or having a darker skin tone, meant less chance of educational and labor advancement.

Mexico has a law aimed at preventing discrimination and has created institutions responsible for dealing with complaints.

Even so, Zamorano's case is a stark illustration of "how far discrimination can go," according to Haas, a former president of the country's National Council to Prevent Discrimination.

"We can't say that it was impossible to predict. There have been centuries of racial, Indigenous and very structural discrimination," she said.

(L.Kaufmann--BBZ)