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With this argument, the togado denied 7 of the 11 tutelas that formal merchants of San Victorino filed against the Mayor’s Office of Bogotá, because they consider that there is no control over informal vendors in the sector, and that affects them.
The judge indicated, according to Noticias Caracol, that the District has established unified command posts to implement public space policies and strategies to raise awareness among merchants and visitors about the need for biosafety protocols and elements.
In addition, the togado appealed to the right to work that informal vendors have, and assured the Mayor of Bogotá has given alternatives to these merchants to carry out their work safely, added Caracol Radio.
The formal merchants of San Victorino, where there have been crowds in the popular ‘madrugones’, alleged that street vendors (or informal) did not have the same restrictions, and that without paying taxes, rent or wages they were “getting rich”, while they were “touched” by the recession.
To prevent crowds from showing up, the capital’s Mayor’s Office chose to pedestrianize some of the city’s streets —among them, Carrera 10 in the San Victorino sector — and thus control the capacity during Christmas shopping.
This problem is added to the insecurity of the sector that has been recorded in videos, in which it is seen how robbers surround their victims and take their belongings in front of the eyes of several citizens who can do little to prevent robberies.
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