Overview
- Parent representatives accepted UNAM’s response with reservations and said there are no conditions for in‑person classes, disputing a university statement suggesting a possible restart next week.
- CCH Sur authorities delivered a timeline covering immediate, medium and long‑term steps that include metal detectors, stricter credential‑based entry with code readers and potential biometrics, more cameras and emergency buttons, and increased on‑campus rounds with police support outside.
- UNAM committed to immediate training for security staff, first‑aid readiness, updated emergency protocols, mental‑health support, prevention campaigns and an anonymous reporting line, with a mixed commission to track progress.
- Parents separately arranged external measures with Coyoacán, SSC and Semovi, securing reinforced patrols with women officers, repaired lighting, a planned safe route and proposed transport adjustments pending UNAM follow‑through.
- Families raised distrust of the campus Legal Department and questioned medical response during the recent homicide, prompting commitments to retrain legal staff with an adolescence and gender focus, renew the department’s leadership and review clinical response times.