Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum on Wednesday called for sexual harassment to be made a crime nationwide after being groped on the street in an attack that underscored the dangers women in the Latin American country face.
Sheinbaum, 63, was attacked while greeting supporters near the presidential palace in Mexico City on Tuesday as she was walking to a public event.
A drunken man approached her, put his arm around her shoulder, and with the other hand touched her hip and chest, while attempting to kiss her neck.
Photo: Reuters
A member of the presidential security detail pulled him away.
Mexico’s first female president initially appeared confused by the incident, which was caught on camera, even agreeing to take a picture with the man.
“This person approached, completely intoxicated ... it wasn’t until I saw the videos later that I realized what had really happened,” Sheinbaum said on Wednesday.
He was later arrested, and the president’s office confirmed that he has been charged with “harassment,” a category of crime that is enforced in the capital and about 20 Mexican states.
The harassment code bans lewd behavior, groping and disrespectful behavior that undermines dignity and causes emotional distress.
The incident put the focus on Mexico’s troubling record on women’s safety, with sexual harassment commonplace and rights groups warning of a femicide crisis.
About 70 percent of Mexican women aged 15 and older experience at least one incident of sexual harassment in their lives, UN data showed.
An average of 10 women are murdered every day in Mexico, the data showed.
Sheinbaum said she had pressed charges against the man and would review nationwide legislation on sexual harassment.
“My thinking is: if I don’t file a complaint, what becomes of other Mexican women? If this happens to the president, what will happen to all the women in our country?” she told her regular morning news conference.
Mexico’s 32 states and Mexico City, which is a federal entity, all have their own penal codes.
Mexico City defines sexual harassment as “conduct of a sexual nature that is undesirable to the person who receives it” and is punishable by one to three years in prison.
Not all states consider sexual harassment a crime.
“It should be a criminal offense, and we are going to launch a campaign,” Sheinbaum said, adding that she had experienced similar attacks in her youth.
Feminist groups said that such incidents were a daily reality for many Mexican women.
“Every day they are experiencing this situation of harassment, of intimidation,” Veronica Cruz, of Las Libres feminist collective, said, calling the fact of “it happening even to the president of the Republic” a symbol of the problem.
The attack also drew criticism of Sheinbaum’s security detail and of her insistence on maintaining a degree of intimacy with the public, despite Mexican politicians regularly being a target for cartel violence.
Former anti-drug prosecutor Samuel Gonzalez said that Tuesday’s incident sent a message to criminals that the head of state is “vulnerable,” a development he called “very worrying.”
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