Coronavirus pandemic no barrier to Maya Train construction

The coronavirus pandemic will not stop President López Obrador’s signature infrastructure project.

Rogelio Jiménez Pons, head of the National Tourism Promotion Fund (Fonatur), told reporters on Monday that the president ordered the continuation of the Maya Train railroad project during the worsening Covid-19 outbreak.

Speaking outside the National Palace after meeting with López Obrador, several cabinet ministers and the CEO of a company that will build part of the new railroad in the country’s southeast, Jiménez said that the president “wants all of us to be working” on the government’s infrastructure projects despite the suspension of nonessential activities announced on March 31 to limit the spread of Covid-19.

Fonatur is managing the US $6-$8 billion Maya Train project, which will link cities and towns in the states of Tabasco, Campeche, Yucatán, Quintana Roo and Chiapas.

“The fundamental message is that the [infrastructure] projects have to be done because they are [of] strategic [value] to the country,” Jiménez said.

He said that the construction company ICA, whose CEO Guadalupe Phillips attended the National Palace meeting, has almost completed the basic engineering work for a section of track it will build between Izamal, Yucatán, and Cancún, Quintana Roo.

ICA will build a double-track railway on the southern side of the Kantunil-Cancún highway and add two new lanes to the road, Jiménez said. The twin projects will cost about 3 billion pesos (US $127.8 million) and start on May 29, he added.

The Fonatur chief said that he will meet again with López Obrador, Communications and Transportation Minister Javier Jiménez Espriú and other top officials in two weeks to discuss the progress of the 1,500-kilometer project.

A judge last month granted a definitive suspension order against its construction to a group of Maya and Ch’ol people in Campeche but it only applies to one community in the municipality of Calakmul. The Fonatur chief said that he wasn’t aware of any other legal action aimed at stopping the project.

In addition to announcing that Fonatur will continue to work on the Maya Train through the coronavirus pandemic, Jiménez revealed that a deputy director of the project, Javier Carrillo, tested positive for Covid-19 two weeks ago.

“He doesn’t have a fever anymore but he says the headaches are insane,” he said.

Although he had contact with the official before he became sick, Jimenez said that he hadn’t experienced any coronavirus symptoms and consequently hasn’t been tested.

“What I do do is go out with a mask,” he said, explaining that he wanted to avoid any possibility that he might infect others.

Source: Reforma (sp) 

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Paseo de la Reforma

Mexico City’s mayor announces a World Cup parade along Reforma for June 13

0
The parade is Mayor Brugada's latest project in her ongoing campaign to expand the World Cup from a global sporting event to a spectacular celebration of the capital's culture and status as a world-class city.
Gerardo Mérida

NY judge sees ‘abundant’ evidence against Sinaloa’s former top security official

2
Former Sinaloa state Security Minister Gerardo Mérida is one of 10 Mexican officials recently accused by the United States of cartel ties, including former Sinaloa Gov. Rubén Rocha.
habaneros

Yucatán Peninsula states create habanero council to protect the famous pepper

1
The council will be responsible for guaranteeing the traceability, certification and quality of habanero, as well as promoting it in national and international markets.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity