No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeTopicsArts and CultureCosta Ricans March for Women's Rights and Safety on International Women's Day

Costa Ricans March for Women’s Rights and Safety on International Women’s Day

As part of the commemoration of International Women’s Day, dozens of people took to the streets of Costa Rica to demand rights and safety for women. With banners and the conviction that a better and fairer society is possible, the march began in San José’s Central Park. The demonstrators continued their journey until they reached the Plaza de la Democracia, situated near the Legislative Assembly.

Both adults and children participated, as Costa Rican women raised their voices for all those women who were gone, for their reproductive rights, and the release of political prisoners in Nicaragua.

“We demand justice and persist in the struggle for our rights in the face of the escalating state violence we have faced since 2007 in Nicaragua, intensified during the crisis of 2018. Marching in this country is an act of resistance,” said one of the Nicaraguan refugees in Costa Rica.

A prominent banner leading the procession boldly declared, “Freedom for the political prisoners of Nicaragua,” encapsulating the collective call for justice and freedom.

With unwavering resolve, the women voiced their condemnation of abuse, sexual harassment, and femicide, asserting their fundamental right to exist in a society free from violence and oppression.

“I was the girl you touched without consent, but I am the aunt of the girl you will NEVER touch or destroy,” declared one woman.

The women called for a society that respects them, where they do not have to go out in the streets in fear, that allows them to make their own decisions about their lives and to close gender gaps in order to have equality. They also complained to the authorities about their lack of attention to the problems that women face on a daily basis.

Others told their stories of sexual abuse, hoping that one day justice can be served for the violence they have suffered.

“I come to fight for all those girls who were never believed. There were many years of silence in which my family never knew what happened to me. They never believed my mother and my aggressor was the same as hers,” said one of the protestors.

International Women’s Day, commemorated around the world every March 8, has been a symbol of the struggle and demands for women’s rights against sexism and inequality compared to men for more than a century.

Trending Now

Dollar Hits 17-Year Low in Costa Rica as Tourism Feels the Pinch

Costa Rica's tourism industry is under pressure yet again as the US dollar exchange rate on the Monex market dropped to ₡498 last Friday...

Costa Rica and El Salvador Issue First Digital Yellow Fever Certificates

Costa Rica and El Salvador have taken a key step in modernizing public health by issuing the first digital yellow fever vaccination certificates in...

Costa Rica Bridges Crisis Deepens with 70 Percent in Poor Condition

Costa Rica's road network faces a critical breakdown, with seven out of 10 bridges in poor condition, according to the latest State of the...

Nicaragua Releases Doctor to House Arrest After Disappearance

Nicaraguan authorities have released Yerri Estrada, a 30-year-old doctor with dual Costa Rican and Nicaraguan citizenship, from prison after holding him in forced disappearance...

Costa Rica Football Federation Dismisses Coach Miguel Herrera

The Costa Rican Football Federation has ended its partnership with Mexican coach Miguel "El Piojo" Herrera after the national team missed out on the...

Costa Rica Forecasts 40,000 Starlink Subscriptions by 2030

Costa Rica's telecommunications regulator forecasts that satellite internet connections will hit 40,000 by 2030, with Starlink leading the charge. The Superintendencia de Telecomunicaciones (Sutel)...
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica