Chilean law allows metal detectors in schools with multiple approvals

On April 1, Chile's Official Gazette published the Law on Coexistence, Good Treatment, and Well-being of Educational Communities, authorizing metal detector portals in schools under strict conditions. The measure addresses rising school violence, including a recent student stabbing in Calama. Implementation is not immediate due to pending regulations and lack of specific funding.

The law, published Wednesday in the Official Gazette, states in Article 10 that school maintainers may use technological resources to detect weapons, provided there is community educational agreement and the measure is justified, proportional, necessary, and suitable.

Education Minister María Paz Arzola clarified that "it is not an obligation for schools, but a tool for those who deem it necessary and have their educational community's agreement." However, it requires a regulation from the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Public Security within 12 months, plus internal protocols approved by the Undersecretary of Education after a technical report from Security.

The backdrop is rising school violence, including the murder of an inspector at Calama's Liceo Obispo Silva Lezaeta and, on the same day, an eighth-grade student stabbed by a peer outside Escuela República de Chile D-52 in that city. Carabineros detained the attacker, also a minor, shortly after.

Maintainers must fund installations from existing resources like the Preferential School Subsidy or Public Education Support Fund. Reactions differ: SLEP Santiago Centro awaits community agreements, Ñuñoa is evaluating, Vitacura prioritizes prevention, and FIDE president Pedro Díaz sees it as belated legal backing. Lo Barnechea Mayor Felipe Alessandri warns technology does not solve root issues.

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Emergency response scene at Calama school after student stabbing incident, showing police tape, vehicles, and distressed crowd.
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Student kills inspector in Calama school

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An 18-year-old student stabbed to death inspector María Victoria Reyes and injured four people at Instituto Obispo Silva Lezaeta in Calama on Friday. Authorities suspended classes at the school and announced urgency for a bill to bolster school security. The teachers' union president called for more education funding amid rising violence.

Mario Aguilar, president of the Teachers' Union, welcomed the government's increase in police patrols around schools but criticized the absence of fundamental measures against school violence. Security Minister Trinidad Steinert announced more frequent patrols at high-risk schools following incidents like the fatal attack in Calama.

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Following the Education Committee's approval last week, Chile's Chamber of Deputies passed the 'Protected Schools' bill on Tuesday with 103 votes in favor, 43 against, and three abstentions. Promoted by the government, it bolsters school security via backpack checks and bars free higher education for those convicted of school violence. The bill now heads to the Senate amid opponents' constitutional concerns.

The Tarapacá Regional Prosecutor's Office has launched probes into at least three reports of school shooting threats in the region, occurring on Wednesday. The PDI is conducting investigations at the affected schools, with some suspending classes on Thursday. Similar incidents were reported in other parts of the country.

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Following a fire set by hooded students at Liceo Lastarria, Security Minister Trinidad Steinert announced that the government will present a bill to increase penalties for criminal acts in educational establishments. Steinert described the events as “gravísimo” and attributed them to “delincuentes” rather than students. The measure aims to ensure peace for those who want to study.

Cali's mayor Alejandro Eder led an extraordinary security council to bolster measures against possible terrorist threats. The actions include increased checks at six main entry points and presence in seven strategic zones. This comes amid recent violence in nearby areas like Jamundí and northern Cauca.

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Education Minister María Paz Arzola has floated the idea of pausing the transfer of municipal schools to the Local Public Education Services. The proposal aims for a mixed system and must go through Congress.

 

 

 

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