Carlos Lopez Lopez He is a specialist in public policies with a focus on human rights, equality and diversity; He served as deputy director of Equality and Diversity of the Undersecretary of Human Rights of Mexico City and as national delegate of the Gay Latino Network.
When presenting his plan for the capital’s Human Rights Commission, he stated that among its main objectives will be to strengthen the presence in the territory to promote local and daily appropriation of human rights, especially in the social and geographical peripheries of the city.
“(We will promote) a culture of denunciation that transforms the perception of the role of institutions,” said López López.
María Dolores González Saravia Calderón She has a degree in Economics from UNAM and has 40 years of experience in the defense and promotion of human rights. She directs the civil association Eutopia and Strategy, and served two terms as director of Services and Advisory for Peace (Serapaz).
She proposed that if she is appointed as ombudsperson of Mexico City, she will seek to strengthen attention to complaints, rights restitution processes and seek an approach to social defense of human rights and peace building that articulates the necessary social actors and institutions.
Nancy Pérez García She has a master’s degree in International Development Cooperation from the Dr. José María Luis Mora Institute and works as executive secretary in the Human Rights Commission of Mexico City.
To direct the organization, he proposed promoting its transformation into a Commission with more territorial and proactive presence, in order to bring the defense of human rights to the peripheries and deploy a greater number of mobile defenders.
“A commission that assumes its role as defender of the common causes and interests of the population that lives in this city, but above all of those communities that are excluded as an act of social justice for all other groups,” said Pérez García.
