The head of the Ministry of the Interior (Segob), Rose Icela Rodriguezopened the dialogue with commissioners of the National Institute of Transparency, Access to Information and Data Protection (Henna), before the eventual disappearance of the organism.
“By instruction of the President @Claudiashein we received members of the @INAImexico
at @SEGOB_mx to listen to their ideas. We express to you that the @GobiernoMX is open to dialogue, always privileging transparency and accountability to the people of Mexico,” he wrote on his X account.
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For its part, the Plenary Session of the National Institute of Transparency, Access to Information and Protection of Personal Data held the meeting with the Secretary of the Interior, Rosa Icela Rodríguez Velázquez, who expressed her willingness to work on the modernization and strengthening of the Mexican State.
The president commissioner of Inai, Adrián Alcalá Méndez, and commissioners Norma Julieta del Río Venegas, Blanca Lilia Ibarra Cadena and Josefina Román Vergara thanked the opening to maintain a respectful and institutional dialogue.
“Having had this meeting allowed us to establish a permanent dialogue table through which we will analyze how the Inai can modernize and strengthen itself, taking into account the principles of responsibility, ethics, efficiency and austerity, and on how to work on those legal or institutional aspects that contribute to enhance the social utility of the institution,” said Alcalá Méndez, in the ordinary session of the Inai Plenary Session.
Commissioner Del Río Venegas said that one of the central topics of the meeting was the restructuring of Inai. “He asked us to make an effort to lose significant weight. He asked us for some information and we agreed that we will collectively prepare a document that we will send to him next week.”
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Commissioner Ibarra Cadena reiterated that the INAI is an organ of the Mexican State that strengthens democracy and the system of checks and balances. “There is no doubt that as long as there are open doors and bridges of dialogue, consensus can be built and ways can be found to carry out projects that do seek to strengthen democracy and continue guaranteeing the human rights agenda.”
Commissioner Román Vergara appreciated the opportunity that the Inai Plenary Session had never had before to dialogue and be heard by representatives of the Executive Branch to present the work that the Institute carries out in terms of access to information and protection of personal data. “We still have a lot to contribute to Mexico with the expertise, with the specialization and the technical capacity that we have specifically in these two human rights.”
CSAS