Overview
- Students from several IPN schools, who entered IPN-owned Canal Once on Thursday, cut into a live program to read their demands.
- They said the institute faces a structural crisis with empty supply rooms, outdated labs and classrooms, poor campus transport and misuse of funds.
- The group called for the removal of director Arturo Reyes-Sandoval, alleging corruption involving current and former officials.
- Canal Once staff said they would review the petition, and IPN leaders had not responded publicly by early Friday.
- Protesters warned they could step up actions around the June 11 World Cup opening in Mexico City if their demands go unanswered.