Mexico City-Puebla highway blockade ends after 5 days

All lanes on the Mexico City-Puebla highway are now open after protesters ended a five-day blockade early Saturday.

Residents of the municipality of Santa Rita Tlahuapan, Puebla, commenced a blockade of the Mexico City-Puebla highway and the Arco Norte toll road last Tuesday.

They hoped to pressure on authorities to compensate them for land expropriated more than 60 years ago for the construction of the highway.

The protesters, among whom were ejidatarios or community land owners, cleared their blockades on Saturday morning after several hours of dialogue with state authorities.

Puebla Interior Minister Javier Aquino Limón told reporters on Saturday morning that the Mexico-Puebla highway and the Arco Norte road had been “completely reopened in both directions.”

Earlier last week, the protesters agreed to clear one lane in each direction after their blockades halted truckers and motorists for two full days and caused economic losses in excess of 10 billion pesos (US $524.3 million), according to business groups.

Semi-trailers wait in long lines on the Mexico-Puebla highway, before the blockade ended on Saturday.
Protesters lifted the blockade Saturday morning, after five days. (Alaín Hernández/Cuartoscuro)

Aquino said that ejidatarios and their “committees and advisors” would meet with federal authorities on Monday to discuss their compensation claim for 41 hectares of land on the López Rayón ejido that the government expropriated for highway construction in 1958.

As of 2:30 p.m. CST, there was no news of the outcome of that meeting.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said last week that the government couldn’t pay more than the amount established by an appraisal carried out by a federal authority.

“The appraisals are done, we have the money to pay the campesinos but the lawyers say, ‘We don’t agree with the appraisals.’ They want more,” he said last Thursday.

“[But] we, as public servants, can’t pay more than an appraisal establishes,” López Obrador said without revealing the valuation amount.

With reports from El Universal, Proceso and La Jornada 

2 COMMENTS

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
An Ancient aqueduct Queretaro, Mexico. 2023

Innovation and clean government push Querétaro to top of IMCO’s 2026 Urban Competitiveness Index

1
Querétaro, Puerto Vallarta, La Paz and Delicias are Mexico's most competitive cities, according to the 2026 Urban Competitiveness Index (ICU), which ranks metropolitan areas on their capacity to generate, attract and retain talent and investment.
Tlallipan FLoating Garden

An oasis for pedestrians — in the form of a verdant elevated walkway — is inaugurated in Mexico City

2
The elevated walkway, with 10,000 plants and trees, converts one of the capital's most congested areas into a pleasant diversion for residents and visitors.
capybaras

Wild picks: Elephants, pumas and gorillas make World Cup predictions at Guadalajara Zoo

0
The animals picked winners — mostly for the four matches scheduled at Guadalajara Stadium — by choosing between food, shirts, boxes and soccer balls linked to the different teams.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity