Monday, May 13, 2024

Islas Marías prison, ‘symbol of oppression,’ to become arts center

“We should have more schools and fewer prisons,” President López Obrador said today while announcing that the Islas Marías prison will become an arts center.

A federal prison has operated on one of the four islands in the Islas Marías archipelago, located about 100 kilometers off the coast of Nayarit, since 1905 when dictator Porfirio Díaz sent political prisoners to work in the islands’ salt mines.

Over the years, the prison population has fluctuated from 300 to 3,000.

The president said the island prison has been a symbol of oppression and the site of human rights violations.

He said it currently houses 600 low-risk inmates, 200 of whom will be released. The other 400 will be transferred to prisons closer to their home states. Prison employees will also be transferred.

[wpgmza id=”151″]

“The island will be transformed into a center for the arts, for culture, and to learn about the environment and nature, and the flora and fauna of these and other islands,” López Obrador said.

The Islas Marías were declared a biosphere reserve in 2000 and designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2005.

The president recalled that former South African leader Nelson Mandela spent most of his 27-year imprisonment on an island penal colony not unlike the Islas Marías. He told reporters that the islands would present an opportunity to learn from the past.

“This will become an island for children and young people, with camps for them to learn about how these models of punishment must disappear.”

Environment Secretary Josefa González Blanco Ortíz explained that activities will include hiking, wildlife watching, sports, theater, writing classes and literature workshops. One particular work to be studied will be Walls of Water by José Revueltas, who was once imprisoned at Islas Marías.

Source: Reforma (sp), Animal Político (sp), ADN Político (sp)

CORRECTION: The photo that initially appeared with this story was not Islas Marías, but Alcatraz. We regret the error.

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Aurora borealis in Baja California

Weekend solar storm lights up Mexican skies with auroras

0
There were reports of sightings as far south as Holbox Island in Yucatán.
The Yucatán bullring caught fire and burned to the ground in minutes.

Fire consumes ‘artisanal’ bullring at Yucatán fair; no injuries reported

0
Miraculously, around 2,000 people managed to escape the blaze uninjured.
Nearly 20,000 people reported visited the Zócalo on it's first day as a pedestrian-only area.

19,000 people visit the Zócalo on its first day as a pedestrian-only plaza

0
The sections of three streets leading to the square — 20 de Noviembre, Pino Suárez and 16 de Septiembre — are now closed to vehicles.