Government prepares bills against school violence for next week

The Chilean government met on Tuesday to address recent school violence and announced it will introduce one or two bills on Monday or Tuesday next, when Congress resumes. Ministers José García Ruminot, Trinidad Steinert, and María Paz Arzola took part in the meeting, focusing on incidents like a fatal attack on an inspector and molotov cocktails in a school.

Around 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March 31, Ministers José García Ruminot of the General Secretariat of the Presidency, Trinidad Steinert of Public Security, and María Paz Arzola of Education, along with undersecretaries, met to discuss rising violence in educational establishments.

Highlighted incidents include a student's fatal attack on an inspector and molotov cocktails thrown inside a school.

Following the meeting, García Ruminot stated the executive will submit "one or two bills" on Monday or Tuesday at the latest to tackle the issue. "We have Wednesday and Thursday tomorrow to work on this set of measures to ensure greater protection and security in educational establishments," the minister emphasized.

The proposals aim for fast-track processing: one to toughen penalties for crimes in schools, the other to allow backpack checks and monitoring. "We want them to be bills with fast processing. They are tools we want available to schools as soon as possible. Security cannot wait," García Ruminot added.

Artikel Terkait

Education Minister María Paz Arzola thanks lawmakers after the Education Committee's approval of the Protected Schools bill amid tense debate.
Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI

Education commission dispatches Protected Schools bill to chamber

Dilaporkan oleh AI Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI

The Chamber of Deputies' Education Committee approved the Executive's Protected Schools bill on Thursday and sent it to the floor after a tense debate lasting over six hours. Education Minister María Paz Arzola thanked lawmakers for the progress, emphasizing its urgency to combat school violence. Opponents filed constitutionality reservations and criticized the burden on educators.

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.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

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.

Building on its March announcement of 20 priority bills, José Antonio Kast's government has assigned urgencies to 70 bills total—five of its own and 65 sponsored—prioritizing security, justice, and migration. Nine have already been enacted into law.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has directed government agencies to investigate the root causes of recent violent incidents involving minors across the country.

Public Security Minister Martín Arrau confirmed the government will present a national security strategy in the Senate in the coming days.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

Chile's Chamber of Deputies ended an eight-hour debate yesterday on the National Reconstruction Plan bill. The government-backed initiative aims to cut corporate taxes and provide investment certainty.

 

 

 

Situs web ini menggunakan cookie

Kami menggunakan cookie untuk analisis guna meningkatkan situs kami. Baca kebijakan privasi kami untuk informasi lebih lanjut.
Tolak