Thursday, August 21, 2025

Homeowner wonders if airport cancellation will allow her to keep her house

A homeowner in Atenco, México state, is wondering if the cancellation of Mexico City’s new airport will allow her to keep her house.

The house owned by Nieves Rodríguez, 59, for the past 21 years lies on the route of the Ecatepec-Peñón highway, one of many infrastructure projects whose future remains in limbo after President López Obrador announced cancellation of the airport project.

Work on the highway surprised her, she said, because no one had consulted her or warned her that her house would soon be in the middle of the new road.

“I found out when I started to see a lot of movement. I noticed they were raising the road more and more, and I was still here. I thought, ‘I’m not worried, this is my land, it’s my house,'” said Rodríguez.

Then a year and a half ago a representative of the construction firm paid a visit.

“They told me they needed to move my house . . . and that if I was not OK with that they would have to expropriate,” she recalled.

Despite the cancellation of the airport project work on the road continues, Rodríguez said, as do the threats of expropriation.

The woman is not alone. Some farmers from Atenco who have set up a camp in her backyard claim the project destroyed hillsides and resulted in the illegal occupation of land and illegal mining operations.

“I am not the only one opposing the airport; all I want is to live in peace,” said Rodríguez.

Source: Criterio Hidalgo (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
border building in Guatemala with a welcome sign

Guatemala grants humanitarian visas to 161 Mexicans who fled organized crime

0
Reversing the usual northbound migration route, the refugees fled a cartel war in their home state of Chiapas.
Kirsti Noem painting the border wall

Paint it black: Trump’s new security measure for the Mexico-US border wall

1
The idea behind the new measure — proposed and scuttled during Turmp's first term — is that the black color will absorb heat and make the wall too hot to climb.
A streetside altar in Mexico City with flowers and a banner honoring two aides to Mayor Clara Brugada who were killed in May

13 suspects arrested over targeted attack that killed two Mexico City officials

0
Authorities said the arrested suspects inclde three direct participants in the attack and 10 accomplices, though the shooter himself remains at large.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity