President agrees with Mexico City mayor: the capital not maximum risk for Covid

President López Obrador overruled his Health Ministry Tuesday by declaring Mexico City is not at maximum risk for Covid-19.

A difference of opinion surfaced last Saturday when Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum insisted that the capital would remain at the orange high risk level on the federal government’s coronavirus stoplight map. Federal health authorities announced Friday that the city would join five other states and regress from orange to red due to the growing number of cases.

At yesterday morning’s press conference, the president put an end to uncertainty by siding with the city and did so in front of the minister of health and his deputy, who is responsible for directing coronavirus strategy. But he stressed there was no “substantial difference” between the parties involved and that all had the public interest at heart.

“It has been decided,” he said, “because it’s the city’s responsibility, that the stoplight is orange and that is what’s happening.”

Since the stoplight system was introduced last year, allocating stoplight colors to the states has been the sole responsibility of federal health authorities, who have made their decisions based on data provided by the states.

The president played down the issue on Tuesday, saying that the important issue is that there aren’t many restrictions being placed on citizens “because the fact is that now is the time for us to look after ourselves.”

He then went off on a favorite tangent, attributing restrictions on people’s movement to “authoritarian zeal.”

The people are old enough to act on their own without being told what to do, López Obrador said.

The purpose of the stoplight system is to guide states in the implementation of restrictions based on nationwide standards. But many of the decisions have been questioned, particularly by state governors unhappy with the designations they have been given. There have also been questions about the degree of political involvement in the process.

On Saturday, Mayor Sheinbaum urged federal authorities to take into account the number of people who have been vaccinated against Covid in assigning stoplight risk levels.

With reports from López-Dóriga Digital and Milenio

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.

300-kg crocodile alarms bathers at Puerto Escondido’s Bacocho Beach

1
The croc may have been wandering after being displaced from its usual home, a phenomenon that has led to increasing out-of-place crocodile spottings along the Jalisco and Oaxaca coasts.

Sheinbaum again dismisses UN disappearances report as attack on the government of Mexico

3
President Sheinbaum on Tuesday reiterated and expanded her criticisms of the UN's Committee on Enforced Disappearances' report, which asserts the practice is still occurring from within the government.

Border BioBlitz is back! Here’s how you can help document biodiversity in the borderlands

0
Past editions have documented rare or little-known plants, such as Tecate cypress and carpets of common goldfields growing right up against a portion of border wall.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity