FEATURE-Mexican school teaches students to shun sex trafficking tradition
SAN LUIS TEOLOCHOLCO, Mexico, Mar 5 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A t a spacious, tree-lined high school at the foot of the Matlalcueyetl volcano in central Mexico, students gathered outside to play a game of snakes and ladders with a twist.
One boy stepped on a panel that read: 'Sexual relations should never be forced'. A female classmate took a ladder away from a square warning men against becoming human traffickers.
"Do women have the right to decide what to do with their bodies?" one student asked her peers during another exercise.
This was not an normal lesson but a unique workshop designed to prevent boys from becoming sex traffickers and stop girls from falling prey in Tlaxcala state, which has become synonymous with the crime after more than a decade of high-profile cases.
Some of the pupils' families are known to traffic women for a living, to other states and also the United States, and often encourage their children to one day join the family business.
"'I want to be a trafficker like my grandfather' … is what you'll usually hear at least from some of them," one of the teachers running the project, who requested anonymity due to the sensitivity of the issue, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Mexico is an origin, transit and destination country for human trafficking. Victims range from men forced to kill for criminal groups to indigenous women in domestic work under slave-like conditions and girls coerced into the sex trade.
"It's important for them to see that it's not normal … that it's violence." If the workshops changed the attitudes of just a few students, they were worthwhile, the teacher added.
Yet such schemes are few and far between in a country where concern is rising over widespread violence against women and the use of young people as footsoldiers for organized crime groups.
Mexico suffered its highest homicide rate in years in 2019 - with 23 victims per 100,000 people - while femicides rose almost 10% against the previous year, according to government data.
The recent murder of a 7-year-old girl in Mexico City sparked outrage across the region over violence against women in a nation where at least three quarters of women reported feeling unsafe, a 2019 survey by national statistics body INEGI found.
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