More than 40 court orders have been filed against this law for human rights violations
On Friday, the temporary suspension was approved with general implications for the General Humanities, Science, Technology, and Innovation Act, known as the New Science Act.
In a statement, Uniendo Caminos México reported that the suspension indicated that “once the authorities have been notified, they will not be able to carry out administrative operations until the issue is resolved.” Science against the law.
Uniendo Caminos México explains that “the suspension does not put an end to the trial, it only suspends the operations carried out as part of the waiver of the new law.”
“This highlights the hundreds of people from academic, scientific and technical unions who have taken refuge in this new law that contains human rights violations,” the document states, which makes it clear that this temporary suspension benefits all unions, even if they did not protect themselves.
The statement detailed that 37 Amparos were accepted in total.
“With this, we are notifying you today that 41 lawsuits have been filed against reforming the new CONHACYT law. Today we have been granted comment with Public Effects of Protection 912/2023 based in Monterrey Nuevo León. This is part of the line of defense that civil society organizations face against arbitrary approval of A set of 20 fast-track laws approved on April 28. We will continue to fight to stop reforms that do not benefit citizens and seek to eliminate organizations that have taken a lot of time and effort to build.”