Monday, June 23, 2025

Women in Sinaloa create culinary acts of remembrance for Mexico’s missing

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Members of the Rastreadoras del Fuerte
Members of the Rastreadoras del Fuerte at work, searching for their loved ones.

Verónica López Álvarez sinks a long, T-shaped rod into the soft earth, pulls it out, smells it and screws up her face. Six other women flock around to sniff too, reeling back in horror at a stench like rotting fish.

Then it’s action stations. “We’re going to dig here,” says Delfina Herrera Ruíz. “It’s a body.”

With their shovels, the women — mostly housewives in their 40s and 50s, some manicured and made-up in the sticky morning sun — start sifting the earth with shallow, careful movements. The banter en route to El Teroque Viejo, in Sinaloa in northwest Mexico has given way to a grim focus.

Mirna Medina Quiñonez, the group’s leader, hits a bone with her spade. Among butterflies fluttering in the breeze and birds singing, these mothers and sisters are hunting for their dead — what Medina calls their missing “treasures.” Their group is known as the Rastreadoras del Fuerte (the searchers of El Fuerte) — a reference to the place where Medina’s son disappeared.

Their “treasures” are among the more than 82,000 people recorded as having disappeared and not been located in Mexico since 2006, when the government declared a war on drug cartels, unleashing terrible, seemingly unstoppable violence. Notwithstanding Covid-19, 2020 may prove to have been the deadliest year on record. As of November there had been 31,871 murders, compared with a record 34,648 in 2019.

Rastreadoras del Fuerte: hunting for the dead.
Rastreadoras del Fuerte: hunting for the dead.

These women have been rescuing their loved ones’ memories in more ways than one. Together, they have created Recipes to Remember, a book of favourite dishes of some of the missing. Each dish has the name of the person it was made for and the date they disappeared. It was the idea of Zahara Gómez Lucini, a Spanish-Argentine photographer who has documented the group since 2016.

The book has only recently been published and when I show it to Herrera, it is the first time she has seen it. It gives her goosebumps just to hold it, she says. Turning to the recipe for shrimp ceviche that she contributed in memory of her youngest brother, Luis Reinaldo Herrera Ruíz, she smiles. Then sorrow clouds her face: Luis Reinaldo disappeared in 2016, aged 51. With her baseball cap bearing the message “Where are you, you old bastard?” she has been looking for him ever since.

The women’s shovels have unearthed some shredded orange plastic, sometimes used to tie victims up. At the sight of the bone, the mood becomes tense. Medina expertly teases it free. A heady stench hangs in the air. More bones emerge.

But it is a false alarm. These are the ribs of an animal — they are too big, and the smell is not that of a decomposing human body, she says. “Still, we have to rule everything out.” The women fill in their hole, pack up their shovels, and set off to search somewhere else.

According to official data, Mexico has counted 4,092 clandestine graves and exhumed 6,900 bodies since 2006. Sinaloa is notorious as the home of Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, once Mexico’s most powerful drug baron, now locked up in a maximum-security jail in the U.S. The city of Los Mochis, where the Rastreadoras are based, is currently in the grip of Fausto Isidro Meza Flores, known as El Chapo Isidro.

The Rastreadoras give short shrift to the idea that they could turn to the authorities for help, rather than searching for victims themselves. As shown in the mass disappearance of 43 Mexican students in 2014, which rocked the country, municipal police have a terrible reputation for being infiltrated by cartels. “They won’t help us — they’re the same ones who are involved,” scoffs Reyna Rodríguez Peñuelas, whose son, Eduardo González Rodríguez, disappeared in 2016.

recipe book
‘The recipe book enables the Rastreadoras to connect with the memory of their loved ones through food and brings the readers closer … It weaves empathy:’ Mexico City chef and restaurateur Enrique Olvera.

Since taking office in 2018, the government of President López Obrador has stepped up efforts to locate missing people and identify bodies. It says the number of reported disappearances for 2020 was trending down. But the government acknowledged in November that in 2019, a record 8,804 people had been reported missing and not been found.

Worse, says Karla Quintana, head of the National Search Commission, a government agency spearheading efforts to find Mexico’s missing, “there have only been 25 sentences passed for forced disappearances in Mexico … and we’re still missing more than 82,000 people.”

Many, like Rosa Elvira Cervantes Meza, whose son Víctor Ulíses Acosta Cervantes has been missing for “four years, two months,” count the time with the precision of a new mother measuring her baby’s age to the week.

Ofelia Flores Moreno succeeded in finding the body of her husband, José Candelario Espinoza Ochoa, a month after he disappeared in 2017, but not thanks to the police. “They say they’ll investigate, but do nothing. If I went there now, they’d say the same thing,” she says, speaking in the Rastreadoras’ offices where the walls are plastered with missing-person notices.

The women have gathered to be presented with copies of the book. Jessica Higuera Torres speaks of her son Jesús Javier López Higuera, who disappeared in 2018, in the present tense. For the book, she prepared a soup with pork rind because “he loves it — when I was cooking, I felt as though he was by my side.”

On the other hand, Esther Preciado no longer cooks chile ribs, her recipe for her daughter’s father, Vladimir Castro Flores, who has been missing since 2013. “That one’s just for the memories now,” she says.

Mirna Medina founded the Rastreadoras after her son disappeared in 2014
Mirna Medina founded the Rastreadoras after her son disappeared in 2014. She found his remains three years later.

A former nursery-school teacher, Rastreadoras founder Medina, 50, talks fast, fuelled by “about 20 cups of coffee a day.” She founded the organization after her son, Roberto Corrales Medina, disappeared in 2014, leaving three daughters and another child on the way. “I kept looking for Roberto because they left him somewhere,” she says simply. Three years to the day after he went missing, she located bone fragments that proved to be his. Having found him, she sports a green shirt with “Promise Kept” on the back. Those still hunting wear white ones that read: “I’ll look for you until I find you.”

“You get addicted to searching,” she says. The 120 or so Rastreadoras have found 68 people, but only about a quarter of those are their missing loved ones. She acknowledges many victims may have got into trouble because they sold or used drugs; others were just in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Despite being the driving force behind the Rastreadoras, Medina says she almost didn’t meet the deadline for the book. Her recipe for pizadillas, meat and cheese-filled tortillas, was the last to be included and, she says: “I’m terrible at cooking.” Yet preparing it, she felt her son’s eyes on her “and that relieved some of the pain.”

For the Rastreadoras, food strengthens community — and, as Gómez says, “the book is a tool for building ties.” After coming back empty-handed from today’s search, the women pull out a table and share a meal.

“This recipe book is very important because it’s an exercise in collective memory and that’s very necessary,” says Enrique Olvera, the chef and restaurateur behind Pujol in Mexico City and Cosme in New York and a sponsor of the book. “It enables the Rastreadoras to connect with the memory of their loved ones through food and brings us, the readers, closer … It weaves empathy.” Olvera donated proceeds from dinners organized with two other Mexican chefs, Lalo García and Óscar Herrera, to help fund the book’s publication. Half of its proceeds go to the Rastreadoras.

Demonstrating her friend Susy Atondo Gastélum’s favourite dish, Erika Acosta González de-veins shrimps, chops cucumbers and squeezes lemons. She sprinkles the seafood with coarse salt — “Susy said it doesn’t pickle properly otherwise” — and follows her friend’s preference for red, not white, onion, plus green serrano chiles.

“I said when she comes back to see me, this is the first thing I’ll make her,” she smiles, although it has been more than seven years. “I dreamed she’d died and I’d find her. I dreamed of her eight days in a row. But she’s never told me where she is.”

Jude Webber is The Financial Times‘ Mexico and Central America correspondent.

© 2021 The Financial Times Ltd. All rights reserved. Please do not copy and paste FT articles and redistribute by email or post to the web.

In Mexico’s deep south, some chinks of light can be seen in the months ahead

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covid vaccination
A lot hinges on Mexico's Covid vaccination program.

Pandemic, pandemic, pandemic. You could be forgiven for thinking that there was little else on the table this coming year, and what a long, lonely year it already feels like, as we stand atop the winter summit and look down onto the lowlands of the year ahead.

But is there only darkness before us? Or are there surprising chinks of light in the months to come in Mexico’s deep south?

Of course, the impact of the pandemic across the region in 2020 can hardly be overstated; not just in terms of the effect of the Covid virus itself, but how it has highlighted existing systemic issues in state economies, healthcare systems, and the wider society which underpins these. Mérida and Yucatán have perhaps suffered most, regionally, with high-profile clusters and deaths, but the Yucatecos have always had bounce-backability, and the city of Mérida remains an international hub for industry and tourism (even with the reduced numbers we are seeing), medical infrastructure, agriculture, and new industries.

Though it has suffered, and its people have suffered, so has everyone else: look to Mérida to come back strong and likely announce surprising, innovative initiatives to spring forward ahead of the national and regional competition.

Added to which, the current economic downturn is likely to fuel a perhaps unrealistic hope that the construction and implementation of the Maya Train will be a cure-all for the region’s ills. Most politicians would have us believe that this is so, but scratch the surface and there is still widespread general unrest and often downright anger at how the project has been forced on — in particular — indigenous communities and their territories. If we can be sure of anything this coming year it is that regional politicians will be waxing lyrical about the transformative capabilities of the train, over a thin veneer of general unrest.

The open question is not whether the train will get built. Despite flaws in established national and international protocol, the federal government has pinned its coat to this particular mast, so the only real question is how the conflict will play out — because conflict there certainly is; one doesn’t have to look too far to find it. Current strategy seems to be to downplay or even ignore dissenting voices, which — rather than heal the wounds — irritates the wound further.

Talking of open wounds, on October 2020, at the 38th UN session of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, representatives from the 33 countries in the region signed a political declaration aimed at a sustainable and inclusive recovery from Covid-19. The declaration acknowledges the relevance of inequalities, and promises an increase in social protection.

You may be forgiven for thinking that these are promises we have heard before. Consequently, though it remains to be seen whether the political will of a handful of representatives can be translated into meaningful, equitable action, there are nonetheless signs of burgeoning change in the region, in particular among women’s groups and the social impact they are having.

Of course, although no physical legislation has been passed in Mexico’s south, the legalization of abortion in Argentina has been seen by feminist groups as a sign that their activism is on the up, and that they need to push on, because although reproductive rights are an aspect of the topic, at heart the actual topic is gender equality.

The increasing recognition of the rights of women in several parts of the world is coinciding with the emergence of a generational voice in Latin America who are demanding that governments address gender inequality, femicide and domestic violence by enshrining it into their statutes, just as Chile did following the October 2020 referendum. The women of the Yucatán see and hear this, and are a part of it.

Recovery in most Latin American economies after the Covid-19 downturn is expected to be slow, partly due to the systemic economic and political weaknesses across the region which preceded the pandemic, and partly due to the severity of the damage inflicted upon the labour market.

Despite this, the outlook for most of the region is hopeful; most countries are expected to return to their pre-pandemic GDP in the second half of 2022 (though forecasts for Mexico and Argentina stretch into 2023 and beyond) with GDP in the six largest economies in the region expected to grow by 4.1% in 2021 after falling an estimated 7.7% in 2020.

Of course much of this is dependent on the practical emergence of one of a number of vaccines currently being sanctioned, as well as their mass take-up, because without this happening .…

Maybe this colossal roll-out, more than any other, is the real challenge for governments in 2021. They have showed structural promise in dealing with the pandemic to date, but reaching the vast majority of citizens with effective, safe, functional vaccines?

Well, good luck 2021. We wish you all the best, for all our sakes.

Shannon Collins is environment correspondent at Ninth Wave Global, an environmental organization and think tank. She writes from Campeche.

French-Algerian brothers’ restaurants bring a dash of Europe to Ixtapa

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Brothers Julian, left, and Edmond Benloulou emigrated to Mexico from Canada.
Brothers Julian, left, and Edmond Benloulou emigrated to Mexico from Canada.

Of the many reasons to visit Ixtapa-Zihuatanejo, dining out is sure to top the list. You can find the incredible food at any number of restaurants that range from burger-selling street carts to mom-and-pop hole-in-the-wall spots to fine dining establishments. When it comes to searching for good food in this part of Mexico, most people will agree it is nearly impossible to get a bad meal.

Although Ixtapa is quite different from Zihuatanejo — the former is more resort and hotels while the latter is a bustling community — there is an almost overwhelming choice of places to dine.

However, two standouts are Bistro Soleiado in Ixtapa, owned by Edmond Benloulou, and El Mediterraneo in Zihuatanejo, owned by his younger brother Julian. Both say that the restaurant business is in their blood, thanks to their family being in the business for a long time.

Born and raised in North Africa under the French government in Oran, Algeria, the family first moved to Marseille, France, in 1962. After 10 years there, they emigrated to Montreal and became Canadian citizens.

In 1980, Edmond, who trained as a chef in Montreal and Mexico City, grew tired of Canadian winters and decided to move to Ixtapa-Zihuatanejo. Once here, he worked at several restaurants before opening a few of his own, including his current venture, Bistro Soleiado. With over 40 years in the industry, it is safe to say that he is one of the oldest restaurateurs in the area.

Bistro Soleiado features live music in the evenings.
Bistro Soleiado features live music in the evenings.

Meanwhile, Julian followed his brother to Ixtapa-Zihuatanejo in 1999 for much the same reason: to escape the cold.

He opened the first El Mediterraneo restaurant on the malecón, the waterfront walkway closest to the pier, but later moved to its current location next to the Catholic church on Cinco de Mayo.

Although the two brothers’ restaurants are similar in some ways — primarily in that both restaurants specialize in Mediterranean food — the differences in style and menu and décor offer patrons a unique experience at each.

Bistro Soleiado is mostly an open patio filled with plants, with tables under umbrellas or sheltered by a canopy. A large replica of the Eiffel Tower at its entrance lights up by night, and it is easy to imagine you’re at a sidewalk cafe in Europe for breakfast or a candlelit romantic dinner.

During the evenings, you will find local musicians playing on a small stage set to one side. The restaurant also boasts a small boutique that carries exquisite purses, clothing, jewelry and various gift items made by Mexican artists. The hallway walls are adorned with articles written about Edmond’s restaurant and photos with famous patrons such as Pierce Brosnan (of James Bond fame) and numerous Mexican actors and celebrities.

In contrast, El Mediterraneo, which also gives off a definite European vibe, consists of two dining areas and a bar. The first dining room closest to the street is the perfect place to people-watch, while the bar is an excellent spot for a quiet drink or as a place to wait until your table is ready. A stunning 3-D print takes up one wall depicting a famous street in Italy’s Lake Como area; it is easy to imagine stepping through it to another time and place.

A long dining table at El Mediterraneo.
A long dining table at El Mediterraneo.

The second dining area is breezy and expansive, open to the sky and featuring plenty of plants to allow the gentle air to flow through. Throughout the restaurant, you will find paintings for sale by local artists, including Julian’s wife, Gloria Hernandez, as well as artist Oscar Armenta and the late Kristy Alopaeus, a painter from Finland.

Julian supports the arts and local organizations in various ways, whether as host for a charity dinner, presenting a night of opera or showcasing dancers and local musicians throughout the dinner hours.

No matter your preference, you’ll want to try them both.

• For reservations:

Bistro Soleiado (in front of the Hotel Park Royal)

Blvd. Paseo Ixtapa, Zona Hotelera, Ixtapa

Call: 755 553 0420

El Mediterraneo

Av 5 de Mayo 4, Centro Zihuatanejo

Call: 755 554 1202

The writer divides her time between Canada and Zihuatanejo.

Another day, another record as coronavirus case total surpasses 1.5 million

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Mexico City ambulances are finding it hard to locate beds for Covid patients.
Mexico City ambulances are finding it hard to locate beds for Covid patients.

New coronavirus case numbers broke the record for the third day in a row Friday.

Health officials said last night that 14,362 new cases were registered, bringing the accumulated total to 1,507,931 since the pandemic began early this year.

It was also the fourth consecutive day on which Covid-19 deaths exceeded 1,000. There were 1,038 fatalities registered, bringing that total to 132,069.

Rising case numbers continue to put pressure on hospitals in Mexico City, where the virus has hit harder than any other region of the country.

As of Friday, 89% of general hospital beds and 84% of those with ventilators were occupied, while figures for México state were only slightly lower.

Coronavirus cases and deaths in Mexico as reported by day.
Coronavirus cases and deaths in Mexico as reported by day. milenio

But healthcare workers say those figures are deceptive, according to a report by Reuters.

“The whole system is completely saturated. There’s no room in the public or private hospitals now,” said paramedic Daniel Reyes, decked from head to toe in protective gear, including eye goggles and a thick face mask.

He said ambulances are forced to spend hours driving around looking for a hospital bed.

Sometimes, after fruitlessly searching for a hospital with room, there is no other option but to take the patient home.

Then the problem turns to locating oxygen, for which heavy demand has pushed up prices and stretched supplies.

Meanwhile, Puebla has announced it will extend an alert that was to conclude January 12 in a bid to avoid what the governor called “the collapse of the healthcare system.”

Miguel Barbosa told a press conference Friday that the maximum alert will continue until January 25, prohibiting the opening of nonessential businesses.

Industrial activity considered essential must not operate at more than 30% capacity, and an increased police presence in the streets will enforce compliance with the restrictive measures.

The state is painted medium-risk yellow on the coronavirus stoplight map, although Puebla city and its metropolitan area is currently designated maximum-risk red.

If hospitalizations continue at the current rate, the system will be saturated by January 18, said Health Minister José Antonio Martínez.

Hospital occupancy in the state on Friday was just 10 patients shy of the peak reached in July, when 1,018 beds were occupied.

Mexico News Daily

Pioneering archaeologist made waves studying Mexico’s prehistory on foot

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Otto Schöndube in the field he was committed to traversing.
Otto Schöndube in the field he was committed to traversing.

A pioneer in the archaeology of western Mexico, Otto George Schöndube Baumbach died on December 30 at the age of 84. Although his name might suggest that he was a foreigner,  Schöndube was born in Guadalajara and grew up on a sugar cane plantation in Tamazula de Gordiano, Jalisco, where his father worked as an engineer in a sugar refinery.

Schöndube eventually attended the Institute of Sciences in Guadalajara and went on to study mechanical engineering at Mexico City’s Universidad Iberamericano, perhaps in an effort to follow in his father’s footsteps, but his heart was not in it. Beset by poor grades and vexing allergies, he left off studying for more than three years.

“My father said I was allergic to engineering,” he later wrote.

Downhearted, Schöndube wandered the streets of Mexico City. One day, inside the National Museum on Moneda Street, he discovered that the country had a school of anthropology. This brought back memories of his grandfather Rodolfo, who would show him figurines and pots he had found in his fields and recount exciting tales of archaeologists he had known, like the American anthropologist Isabel Kelly. Intrigued, Schöndube decided to switch careers and received his degree in 1962 at the National School of Anthropology and History.

As an archaeologist, Schöndube worked all over Mexico, from Tlatelolco to the 1,500-year-old ruins of El Grillo within the confines of greater Guadalajara, and from the cenotes of Chichén Itzá to the peak of the Nevado de Toluca. It was there he discovered, lying out in the open, an ancient stele — a sculpted stone slab — dating back to 650 AD, which had been used for astronomical observation.

Otto Schöndube (1936-2020) specialized in studying pre-Hispanic western Mexico.
Otto Schöndube (1936-2020) and the ancient stone slab he discovered on the Nevado de Toluca.

Eventually, he specialized in the pre-Hispanic cultures of western Mexico. A good example of his contributions and his way of working is the archaeological study of the Sayula Basin in Jalisco, for which Schöndube was the coordinator.

“We chose the Sayula Basin,” he wrote, “because it’s a graben with well-defined borders and because it’s not far from Guadalajara. Now, that doesn’t mean we didn’t end up busting our butts traipsing over every inch of it because those Sayula flats are nearly 50 kilometers long and four to five wide and we walked all of it. We wanted to see the development of human occupation of the region over long periods of time. Yes, we also studied satellite photos and air photos, but good archaeology is done on foot.”

The archaeologists not only walked the length of the basin but also did perpendicular transects “to observe everything we could see in every ecological niche.” This obliged them to climb from the salt flats all the way up to the adjoining highlands, typically towering hundreds of meters above them.

“We came upon ceramics, the foundations of ancient constructions,” said Schöndube, “evidence of the exploitation of the area’s resources, such as agricultural terraces, ancient salt works and the remains of old highways that actually crossed the lake. Our studies demonstrated palpable evidence of continuous human occupation from approximately 300 BC right up to the moment of the Spanish Conquest.”

Schöndube had to deal with INAH, the National Institute for Anthropology and History, which over many years of centralization and power politics had been accused of rigidity, of failure to protect Mexico’s patrimony and of corruption. He represented INAH at its very best: his frequent observations about good archaeology being done out in the field were in contrast to the opinions of some archaeologists who were quite content to do their work in the office.

It didn’t bother him that western Mexico has no Teotihuacán. He put his whole life into uncovering what he could find and documenting it.

The Nevado de Toluca crater, where this stele (insert) was found.
The Nevado de Toluca crater, where this stele (insert) was found.

“I like to defend the ancient cultures of west Mexico even though they don’t present us with grandiose monuments like those of the Mayans and Teotihuacanos,” he once said. “Bueno, nosotros somos de aquí, ¡qué chingados el DF! [After all, we’re from here, and to hell with Mexico City!] I’m concerned with what’s around me. Sure, it’s interesting to learn about the Mexicas and the Mayas, but how about what was going on right here? What is it that makes us different?”

That’s the spirit, Otto. And if there are any artifacts out there in the Great Beyond, I’m sure you are already busy digging them up.

The writer has lived near Guadalajara, Jalisco, for 31 years, and is the author of “A Guide to West Mexico’s Guachimontones and Surrounding Area” and co-author of “Outdoors in Western Mexico.” More of his writing can be found on his website.

Schöndube studied mechanical engineering before switching to archaeology.
Schöndube studied mechanical engineering before switching to archaeology.

 

Schöndube's work proved that humans occupied Jalisco's Sayula Basin from 300 BC.
Schöndube’s work proved that humans occupied Jalisco’s Sayula Basin from 300 BC.

 

1800s sketch of salt works on the Sayula Flats by Carl Lumholtz.
1800s sketch of salt works on the Sayula Flats by Carl Lumholtz.

 

Guadalajara's El Grillo complex as it may have looked in pre-Hispanic times.
Guadalajara’s El Grillo complex as it may have looked in pre-Hispanic times.

 

CDMX, state of México will be red for another week on virus stoplight map

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Nearly 23,000 people have died from Covid-19 in Mexico City.

Mexico City and México state will remain “maximum” risk red on the coronavirus stoplight map for a fourth consecutive week between January 11 and 17.

Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum told a press conference that the same economic restrictions implemented on December 19 will apply next week, meaning that all nonessential businesses must remain closed.

She said the red light restrictions have helped slow the infection rate but the hospital occupancy rate in the capital remains a concern.

Sheinbaum said that there are currently 6,681 coronavirus patients in Mexico City hospitals including 1,674 on ventilators. According to federal data, 89% of general care beds are occupied in Mexico City hospitals and 84% of those with ventilators are in use. The mayor said that extra beds will be added to several hospitals in the coming days.

Mexico City has recorded 354,011 confirmed cases since the start of the pandemic, a figure that accounts for almost a quarter of all cases detected in Mexico. The capital’s official death toll is 22,897.

In neighboring México state, which includes many municipalities that are part of the Mexico City metropolitan area, red light restrictions will also remain in place next week.

“Today we have hospital occupancy of 83%, which means that we’re at a very high level,” Governor Alfredo del Mazo said in a video message.

The governor said there are about 3,000 coronavirus patients hospitalized in the state, more than at any other time of the pandemic. Like Sheinbaum, he highlighted that capacity is being increased at hospitals to respond to the high demand for medical treatment from seriously ill coronavirus patients.

Del Mazo said that the government is aware of the financial pain the shutdown is causing families but called for residents to keep following the health advice.

“We have to prioritize health and the lives of everyone. It’s about saving lives, we’re still in a time of high risk of infection, let’s not drop our guard, let’s keep looking after ourselves,” he said.

México state ranks second behind Mexico City for both accumulated cases and Covid-19 deaths. As of Thursday, it had recorded 153,001 of the former and 15,126 of the latter.

Hospital occupancy reached 92% on Thursday in Morelia.
Hospital occupancy reached 92% on Thursday in Morelia.

In addition to Mexico City and México state, Baja California, Guanajuato and Morelos are red on the stoplight map. The federal government is not due to update the map until next Friday, meaning that those states will also remain red next week.

In other Covid news:

• The Michoacán Health Ministry reported that hospital occupancy in state capital Morelia reached 92% on Thursday. Hospitals operated by ISSSTE, the State Workers Social Security Institute, have reached 100% capacity and private hospitals are 98% full, the ministry said.

The occupancy rate across Mexican Social Security Institute hospitals and those run by the state government is 88%.

As part of efforts to slow the spread of the virus in Morelia, municipal authorities announced that all businesses must close by 7:00 p.m. Thursday to Saturday and remain shut on Sunday. Morelia has recorded more than 8,500 confirmed coronavirus cases and over 600 Covid-19 deaths.

Michoacán, currently “high” risk orange on the stoplight map, has recorded over 34,000 cases and 2,806 Covid-19 deaths.

• There was a spike in new coronavirus cases in Sinaloa over the Christmas-New Year vacation period. The newspaper El Universal reported that 1,576 new cases were reported in the northern state between December 16 and January 6. The number of active cases in Culiacán, the state’s capital and largest city, increased to 239 from 206 in the period, a 16% spike. In Guasave, active cases rose 48% from 58 to 86.

An additional 188 Covid-19 fatalities were reported in Sinaloa during the 20-day period to January 6.

State Health Minister Efrén Encinas Torres said that case numbers could continue to rise over the next two weeks as a result of end-of-year gatherings.

He said the first batch of Covid-19 vaccines will arrive in the state by January 15 and that they will be used to immunize frontline health workers.

Sinaloa has recorded 27,386 confirmed cases since the start of the pandemic and 4,293 Covid-19 deaths. It is currently orange on the stoplight map.

• The number of hospitalized coronavirus patients in Nuevo León is higher now than at any other time in the pandemic. There are currently 1,786 hospitalized patients, according to state government data updated Friday.

Governor Jaime Rodríguez Calderón, a 2018 presidential candidate widely known as “El Bronco,” said this week that the economy would not fully reopen until the state’s residents have been vaccinated against Covid-19. He said he will seek to find a way to force the federal government to allow his government to purchase vaccines so that it can undertake its own vaccination program without having to rely on federal authorities.

Nuevo León has recorded more than 129,000 coronavirus cases and 6,811 Covid-19 deaths, according to state data.

Source: Milenio (sp), El Universal (sp) 

Establishment of second buffalo herd celebrated in northern Mexico

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The American buffalo herd in Coahuila.
The American buffalo herd in Coahuila.

Things are looking up for the American bison in the north of Mexico: a second herd of the large mammals, also known as American buffalo, has been successfully reintroduced in Coahuila.

“After almost 100 years of absence of the American bison on the plains of Coahuila, in 2020 the National Commission for Natural Protected Areas [Conanp] achieved the establishment of a second herd of these beautiful animals,” Environment Minister María Luisa Albores wrote on Twitter on Thursday.

“Look at how they welcomed 2021,” she added in a post that showed the herd in a snow-covered landscape on a new postcard.

Tens of millions of American bison once roamed Mexico, the United States and Canada but by 1880 there were only about 1,000 of the mammals in the wild in Mexico due to destruction of their habitat, disease and hunting, according to Conanp.

Just over a decade ago, efforts began to reintroduce buffalo to the north of Mexico. In November 2009, a herd of 23 bison from the Wind Cave National Park in South Dakota was released in the Janos Biosphere Reserve in Chihuahua thanks to a project in which environmental authorities, universities, scientists and the United States National Park Service participated.

In March 2020, Conanp, in conjunction with other environmental authorities, released a herd of 19 bison from Janos into the El Carmen nature reserve in Coahuila, a private trans-boundary conservation area in Mexico and the United States owned by the cement company Cemex.

“The establishment of herds in Mexico contributes significantly to the recovery of the species on a continental scale,” Conanp said.

However, environmental authorities acknowledge that a lot more needs to be done to ensure the long-term survival of the buffalo in Mexico. The clearing of land for agriculture and hunting remain a threat to the species, which were once an important food source for the native peoples who populated North America prior to the arrival of Europeans.

Source: Milenio (sp),  El País (sp) 

Covid won’t stop Zipolite’s annual nudist festival from going ahead

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Zipolite Beach, site of a world-famous nudists' festival.
Zipolite Beach, site of a world-famous nudists' festival.

An annual nudist festival in Oaxaca will go ahead as planned at the end of this month despite Covid-19, say its organizers, who have promised that they will follow all required sanitary protocols.

The Zipolite Nudist Festival — put on by the Mexican Nudists’ Federation — has taken place in the coastal municipality of San Pedro Pochutla for six years on Mexico’s only legal nude beach. The event attracts as many as 8,000 people.

This year, it will run from January 29–February 1.

The festival’s promotional brochure warns visitors that they need to have reservations in a local hotel and will be expected to observe sanitary guidelines, including wearing masks and using sanitizer. It also urges people to avoid coming if they are experiencing sore throat, fever or fatigue and is apparently trying to avoid any gatecrashers augmenting the numbers by urging those who don’t already have plans in place not to go.

“If you don’t yet have flight and hotel reservations, then we invite you to stay at home,” says a message on the festival’s Facebook account, adding that another event is planned for September 17–19.

The publicity about the festival has inspired some negative comments online, with one commenter saying, “This will be chaos. We are already seeing the first cases [of Covid-19] in Zipolite.”

Festival organizers defended their decision to go ahead with the event, saying that the town’s general assembly voted on December 20 to allow it to happen with the understanding that it would not be a massive event and that organizers would make sure visitors comply with health protocols, both on the beach and off.

Municipal officials have made no comment on their decision even though the entire state is currently listed as orange or “high” risk on the national coronavirus stoplight map.

Currently, Oaxaca has accumulated 28,730 cases of the coronavirus and 2,153 deaths from the disease. Of those, the coastal region where this event is to take place has seen 1,459 Covid cases and 143 deaths.

The municipality of San Pedro Pochutla has registered 145 cases and 10 deaths.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

Fire consumes 36 businesses in Tulum, 1,000 people evacuated

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Wednesday's fire rages in Tulum.
Wednesday's fire rages in Tulum.

A fire in Tulum’s hotel zone Wednesday night destroyed several businesses and prompted emergency personnel to evacuate around 1,000 people.

There were no casualties, Tulum Civil Protection director Gilberto Gómez Mora said, but the fire, which is believed to have begun shortly before 10 p.m. and was already raging out of control by the time emergency personnel arrived at 10:06, stripped 36 business owners of most or all of their possessions.

“It was enormous. The losses were in the millions [of pesos],” he said. “Smothering the fire and avoiding that it spread was a titanic job. We didn’t have any loss of life, but there were certainly owners of businesses in shock, watching their entire life savings being consumed.”

No hotels in the area were damaged, he said.

According to Gómez, the fire currently appears to have one of two possible origins: either a discarded lit cigarette at a party in the area or a short-circuit of Christmas lights that were hanging behind a clothing shop in the plaza.

“We are doing an analysis,” Gomez said. “We detected Christmas lights. Some of them could have caused the short circuit and ignited a spark that spread throughout the businesses, which were all made with materials from the region.”

Gomez was referring to the fact that many of the shops, in accordance with regional tradition, use palalpa-style thatching on their roofs, which may explain how the fire spread.

Regarding the party, Gomez said that a cleaning woman for the plaza told Civil Protection about having seen a party in the area where candles had been lit and people were smoking.

“We found spent fire extinguishers. Some lit cigarette butt could have been the origin [of the fire],” Gómez explained.

The fire also damaged 10 living quarters, officials said.

Evacuations were hampered by the sheer number of people Civil Protection was trying to move out of the area.

Firefighters managed to put out the fire around 1:00 a.m. with request assistance from nearby towns.

Sources: El Universal (sp), Milenio (sp), Yucatan Expat Life (en)

US Ambassador Landau announces his departure

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christopher landau
The ambassador takes a selfie during a visit to Mazatlán, Sinaloa, earlier this week.

United States ambassador to Mexico Christopher Landau announced Friday that he would be leaving his post due to the imminent change of government in the U.S.

“With the change of government in the United States on January 20, my position as ambassador in Mexico will come to an end,” he announced on Twitter.

“One of my great pleasures has been this communication with hundreds of thousands of Mexicans though social media – the new channel of diplomacy, especially during the pandemic,” Landau wrote.

His post had attracted 3,000 generally favorable comments and 27,000 “likes” by 1:00 p.m.

“Dear friend and colleague, thanks for all the collaboration, friendship and dialogue these years. We’ll see each other soon and continue working for the benefit of our people. A hug,” responded Mexico’s ambassador to the United States, Martha Barcena, who announced last month that she would soon leave her post.

Landau, formerly a lawyer, assumed the ambassadorial role in August 2019, more than a year after his predecessor, Roberta Jacobson, resigned.

During his almost 1 1/2 years in the job, he cultivated a strong following among Mexican Twitter users, many of whom praised him for his apparent love of Mexico and his promotion of its culture, food and traditions. As of Friday he had nearly 280,000 followers on the social media network.

He has also courted controversy at different times during his tenure. Not long after he arrived in Mexico, Landau triggered a heated debate on Twitter after criticizing painter and cultural icon Frida Kahlo for her support of communism.

He raised eyebrows in November 2019 by traveling to Michoacán because his own government warns against travel to that state and last month said that traveling in Mexico is safe during the coronavirus pandemic if one follows established health protocols.

That advice stood in stark contrast to the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s warning against all travel to Mexico.

Landau also made the news when he declared last June that it’s not a good time to invest in Mexico because the government has not fulfilled its promise not to change investment rules. He subsequently revised his remark.

Mexico News Daily