Wednesday, December 25, 2024

College hazing ceremony investigated in Michoacán

A Michoacán teacher training college is under fire after a hazing ceremony.

According to a public complaint, a group of students at the Physical Education Teachers’ College (ENEF) in Morelia had their heads shaved as part of a hazing ceremony within the school.

A video of the students being shaved was posted by Facebook user Rene Valencia Reyes, who said he had received it from a student.

“It was 9:30, they locked us in the room, and several students came and cut our hair and didn’t let us leave,” the student said. “They kept cutting, forcefully, and they grabbed a girl, and it looks like they dislocated her arm. Supposedly the hair was going to be donated, and they did it in an orderly way, but it was all very ugly.”

The video also shows a female student lying on the ground with an apparent injury as other students attend to her.

Michoacán Education Secretary Alberto Frutis Solís said the Education Secretariat will investigate the incident to find who is responsible and apply sanctions.

In a statement, the secretariat said it will not tolerate violent actions that put students’ physical safety at risk.

“We call on everyone to act respectfully and with a culture of peace,” the SEE said.

There have been worse incidents in hazing at Mexican school. At least two students are believed to have died at incidents last year in Durango and Chiapas.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
The project addresses a major cross-border pollution problem by treating the sewage flowing north from the Tijuana River.

Tijuana River cleanup takes major step forward

2
Imperial Beach in San Diego, just north of the Mexico-U.S. border, is one of the country's most polluted beaches due to sewage flow from the Tijuana River.
Ears of dried corn in a big pile

Mexico loses GM corn trade dispute with US

9
Mexico will have to modify its restrictions on genetically modified corn imports after a trade dispute panel sided with the United States.
Two photos, one of U.S. President-elect Trump and another of Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum

Trump promises to designate Mexican cartels as terrorist organizations: Sheinbaum responds

56
President Sheinbaum responded with forceful rhetoric to the announcement, which would open the door to U.S. intervention in Mexico.