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19 Jun 2017 | 11:50 AM UTC

Colombia: Teacher strike continues as thousands march June 6 /update 3

Tens of thousands of people march in protest in Bogotá and Medellín as teacher strike continues on June 6

Warning

Event

Ongoing negotiations between Colombia’s largest teacher union – the Federación Nacional de Educadores (Fecode) – and the government have so far been unsuccessful as of the evening of Tuesday, June 6, despite the government reportedly proposing a larger pay increase than previously offered. Fecode announced that the strike, which has already lasted nearly one month, would continue and requested the union leadership have a personal meeting with President Juan Manuel Santos. Additionally, the union organized large demonstrations in Bogotá and other cities across the country on Tuesday, June 6, with 60,000 reportedly demonstrating in the capital, causing severe transportation disruptions, while an estimated 10,000 more marched in Medellín. More marches and other demonstrations are expected in the coming days; anticipate associated transportation disruptions and the possibility of related outbreaks of violence.

Context

On Sunday, June 4, Fecode entered the fourth week of talks with the government over pay increases and better working conditions. Teachers are demanding a 35 percent increase in salaries and bonuses, as well as investment in education infrastructure and an improvement in the quality of school meals, among other demands. The government has previously offered a 15 percent increase, stating that a 35 percent increase would cost an unreasonable 450 billion pesos (USD 155 million).

On May 16, tens of thousands of people took to the streets in anti-government protests following a failed round of negotiations between education sector workers and the government over wage increases and improved working conditions. Teachers have been on strike since May 12 and some eight million students have been out of school since the strike action began. A recent report by organization the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) slammed the country's poor and failing education system and urged the Colombian government to improve national standards and the quality of education, increase public investment by prioritizing preschool education for the most disadvantaged, and set better teacher training policies. 

Social tensions are on the rise across the country due to poor economic conditions following a decline in commodity prices, insecurity, and rampant corruption and tax evasion.

Advice

Individuals present in Colombia are advised to avoid all demonstrations as a precaution.​