Mexico GDP from 2010 to the third quarter of 2020. inegi
The Mexican economy bounced back strongly in the third quarter compared to the previous three months as industrial activity surged, but GDP was still well below 2019 levels.
Revised, seasonally-adjusted data published Thursday by the the national statistics institute Inegi showed that the economy grew 12.1% between July and September compared to the second quarter.
The quarter-over-quarter growth, 0.1% higher than that shown by preliminary data published late last month, was the highest since comparable data was first kept in 1990.
Economic activity in the secondary sector, including manufacturing, mining and construction, increased 21.7% between July and September compared to the second quarter but was down 8.8% compared to the same three months last year.
The primary sector, including agriculture, forestry and fishing, grew 8% compared to the second quarter but was down 8.8% annually, while the tertiary or services sector, including commerce, transport, financial and media, expanded 8.8% on a quarterly basis but contracted 8.9% compared to a year ago.
The quarter-over-quarter and annual statistics for the three individual sectors show that a recovery is underway but that the coronavirus pandemic and associated restrictions nevertheless continue to exact a heavy toll on the economy.
Overall GDP in the third quarter was 8.6% lower than in the same period of 2019. The year-over-year contraction follows an 18.7% decline in the second quarter, a period that included two full months – April and May – during which the government ordered the suspension of nonessential economic activities.
The economy was floundering even before the pandemic: GDP also declined on an annual basis in the first quarter of 2020 and the final three quarters of 2019.
According to Banco Base economic analysis director Gabriela Siller, the last time Mexico recorded six consecutive quarters of negative growth was in 1982.
It appears almost certain that Mexico will record its largest economic contraction since the Great Depression in 2020 even though the central bank on Wednesday revised its forecast upward for this year.
The Bank of México (Banxico) predicted a contraction of between 8.7% and 9.3% in 2020, an improvement from its previous quarterly report when it forecast a recession in the 8.8% to 12.8% range.
“There is still a high degree of uncertainty about the future evolution of both domestic and global activity; this is reflected in the breadth of the growth interval,” Banxico said.
For next year, the central bank is less optimistic than it was.
It is forecasting growth of between 0.6% and 5.3% in 2021 whereas in its previous report it predicted GDP expansion of 1.3% to 5.6%.
Banxico also predicted a net loss of 700,000 to 850,000 formal sector jobs this year and the creation of 150,000 to 500,000 in 2021. Both the former and latter predictions are more optimistic than those made by the central bank in its previous report.
Using ingenuity and a couple of boats lashed together, men in the flooded municipality of Tenosique, Tabasco, created a large makeshift raft to help people move their cars to escape rising floodwaters.
Tenosique and much of the area southeast of the state capital of Villahermosa has been experiencing crippling floodwaters for weeks now thanks to the effects of Hurricane Eta and two cold fronts.
The weather events brought heavy rains, affecting 300,000 people in the state, leaving many homeless or trapped in homes in waist-deep water.
In many flooded towns, transit is only possible by boat. Tenosique is one of seven Tabasco municipalities for which the Ministry of the Interior issued emergency declarations on Monday, making them eligible for federal aid.
The good samaritans with the raft were not identified but were captured in action on video by observers who recorded the transport of one family, with their car, across the rising Usumacinta River in the town of El Faisán.
▶ Lancheros usaron su creatividad para rescatar un auto que quedó atrapado en el río Usumacinta, en #Tabasco
Authorities have declared four municipalities around the river to be on maximum flood alert and evacuated around 3,600 people.
The rescuers lashed planks on top of two rafted boats to provide a flat surface for the car, then transported the vehicles across the river, to the delight of onlookers.
Some major hospitals in Mexico City are completely full with coronavirus patients, Deputy Health Minister Hugo López-Gatell said Wednesday as Mexico recorded its second consecutive day of more than 10,000 new cases and 800 Covid-19 deaths.
“In Mexico City, … there are hospitals that are completely full, some of the national health institutes [for example]. It’s the same in other federal entities,” he told the Health Ministry’s coronavirus press briefing, adding that large hospitals tend to fill up the quickest.
An interactive map on the Mexico City government website shows that numerous Covid-19 designated hospitals in the capital are at capacity. Among those that are full are the National Institute of Medical Sciences and Nutrition, the Central Military Hospital, the Ignacio Zaragoza General Hospital and the Tacuba General Hospital.
Data presented by López-Gatell showed that 63% of all general care hospital beds set aside for coronavirus patients in Mexico City are currently occupied while 61% of those with ventilators are in use.
According to Mexico City government statistics updated on Wednesday night, 2,722 coronavirus patients are in general care beds in the capital and 831 are intubated.
Coronavirus cases and deaths in Mexico as reported by day. New cases Wednesday numbered more than 10,000 for the second consecutive day.milenio
Across Mexico, 11,124 of 29,193 general care beds are currently occupied by coronavirus patients for an occupancy rate of 38%.
Durango, one of two red light “maximum” risk states on the federal government coronavirus stoplight system, has the highest occupancy rate for general care beds at 75%. Zacatecas and Coahuila follow with occupancy rates of 65% and 64%, respectively.
As for beds with ventilators, 3,335 of 10,538 are in use for an occupancy rate of 32%. Mexico City has the highest occupancy rate for critical care beds followed by Aguascalientes and Zacatecas, which have rates of 57% and 51%, respectively.
López-Gatell urged people to seek medical attention as soon as they develop any symptoms of the coronavirus such as a fever or cough. He reiterated that people with chronic diseases, those aged over 60 and pregnant women are more susceptible to serious illness.
Earlier in the press briefing, the deputy minister reported that Mexico’s accumulated case tally had increased to 1,070,487 with 10,335 new cases registered. It was the second day in a row that more than 10,000 cases were reported after the tally spiked by 10,794 on Tuesday.
The official Covid-19 death toll increased to 103,597 with an additional 858 fatalities registered – 45 more than the number reported on Tuesday.
López-Gatell said that six states – Coahuila, Nuevo León, Zacatecas, Aguascalientes, Querétaro and Mexico City – are at risk of joining Chihuahua and Durango as red light states.
Those six states are among 14 that are currently classified as orange light “high” risk on the stoplight system.
There are also 14 yellow light “medium” risk states while the risk of coronavirus infection in two states – Campeche and Chiapas –is green light “low.”
Veteran carpenter Francisco Castillo has seen Chipilo's economy transform.
The whine of power saws cutting wood in the carpentry shop fills the air while, just a few feet away, a cow calmly chews its cud, looking completely unconcerned. It’s an apt image for what’s happening in Chipilo, a town in Puebla that, for over a hundred years, had been known almost exclusively for its dairy products but now is becoming more famous for its furniture.
“In the future, it will be furniture,” said José Armando Piloni, whose family has had the dairy farm for 38 years and the attached carpentry shop for 25. “The price of milk has dropped; people are consuming less. In two years, we will not have the dairy.”
Chipilo was settled in October 1882 by 38 families from the Veneto region in northern Italy who were enticed to move to Mexico by the government’s promise of free, fertile land. Soon after they arrived, they learned that the land wasn’t always free but it was good, and chipileños (as they’ve come to be called) settled down and started farms and dairies.
It seems like every other building lining Chipilo’s streets houses a dairy or carpentry shop, although the carpentry shops now greatly outnumber the dairies.
“Before there were probably 300 [dairies],” says Antonio Zaraín García, who opened one of the first large furniture factories in the pueblo. “Now, maybe 80 and many have transformed to making furniture.”
In Chipilo, dairy farms reigned for a century but have given way to carpentry.
Mexico has a long history of furniture-making.
“The Spaniards brought furniture from Spain to Mexico,” said José Eskawratz, the founder and CEO of Mexsol, a furniture exporting company. “Puebla was the first city in the Americas to make furniture. The first items were basic trunks. Of course, there was a lot of Spanish influence.”
Although artisans in Puebla have been making furniture for centuries, the first furniture factory in Chipilo didn’t open until 1970, and it wasn’t until 1982 that Zaraín García started his, which he called Segusino.
“Segusino is … the pueblo in Italy where about 20% of chipileños come from,” he explained. He began attending furniture shows in the U.S. and started exporting furniture, first to California, Washington and Dallas.
In the early 80s, a different style began to develop.
“The style changed to rustic furniture and wood,” said Zaraín García. “It was much stronger.”
Workers prepare metal frames for furniture at a Chipilo factory.
According to Eskawratz, that style has an American influence.
“Rustic furniture came out of the [Great] Depression,” he said. “Many Americans survived the Depression by making rustic furniture, putting it on the road in front of their houses and selling it. That’s what, in the 80s, was brought to Chipilo. The Chipilo style, if there is one, is traditional rustic with a wax finish and wrought-iron fittings. It’s solid, heavy furniture. In Chicago, they call this rustic style, ‘hungry furniture.’”
The fact that the style grew out of the Depression doesn’t mean it’s inexpensive.
“In Chipilo, all furniture is made by hand, and it costs more,” added Zaraín García. “A machine makes it perfect, but many people in Europe and the U.S. want furniture made by hand. People feel that it is more like the furniture they remember from their nonna [grandmother] or from the countryside. People value things more when they are made by hand.”
In addition to running Mexsol, Eskawratz has four furniture factories in Chipilo, the largest of which is Seguisino, which his father bought from Zaraín García in 2010. The Seguisino factory, which he renamed Muebles Rústicos y Forjados de Chipilo, is a whirl of activity. In one section, sparks fly as workers cut and weld metal strips together to make frames for the furniture while in others, dust hangs in the air as the wood is cut and assembled into furniture.
“We use pine from Chile, Brazil and Mexico [and] walnut and poplar from the U.S.,” says Eskawratz. “Old wood has been bought from the favelas (slums) in Brazil. They’re paid $10,000 for their shack, and then they build another house out of cinderblock.”
Flavio Stefanoni Merlo, left, plans to succeed his father Luís, a fourth-generation dairyman. He’ll be a dying breed in Chipilo.
The Seguisino factory alone employs 350 workers and ships out 3,000 to 4,000 pieces a week; his other two factories ship about 2,000 pieces a week each. He estimates that in Chipilo, a pueblo with a population of less than 4,000, about 30,000 people work in the furniture factories and carpentry shops, the workers coming from the 12 surrounding towns.
“Before, they were vaqueros [cowboys] and campesinos [farmers],” said Zaraín García. Now they’re furniture makers.
Although the larger factories dominate furniture manufacturing in Chipilo, there are about a dozen medium-sized ones. Eskawratz figures there are at least 200 small shops. Francisco García Castillo owns one of the small carpentry shops, located a mile or so outside of Chipilo’s town center. Although he never had cows, like many people in Chipilo, he did work in a dairy for some time.
“I have been a carpenter for 20 years,” he told me, “and have had this business for 10.”
He has seven employees and ships 50 or 60 pieces a week — mainly small bureaus and tables — to an exporter. Although his shop is small, he expects the furniture business in Chipilo to keep growing, and he hopes to expand his shop soon.
Piloni, who has both the carpentry shop and the dairy, is finding it increasingly difficult to sustain the latter. He doesn’t have enough land to grow forage, so he has to buy it, adding to his costs, and it’s difficult to find workers. He’d like to get out of the dairy business and put all his energy into furniture, but there’s a problem.
[wpgmza id=”243″]
“Right now there are no buyers, only sellers,” he says.
Still, despite the challenges, not everyone in Chipilo’s ready to give up on dairy. Luís Stefanoni Precoma’s dairy has been in his family for four generations, and if Flavio Stefanoni Merlo, his 17-year-old son, has his way, there will be a fifth.
“I will continue with the dairy,” Stefanoni Merlo said proudly. “It is a family tradition.”
The dairy has 300 cows, which he says is large for Chipilo. “You need that many to survive,” he explains.
He is unfazed at the information there are fewer dairies in the pueblo and that many of the owners were looking to transition to furniture-making.
“I believe we can continue. I believe we can grow.” After a pause, he added, “I do not think we will change to furniture.”
Joseph Sorrentino is a regular contributor to Mexico News Daily.
The previous federal government left office almost two years ago but some of the many corruption scandals that plagued it have life in them yet and could result in the imprisonment of former president Enrique Peña Nieto’s right-hand man.
Media attention this week has focused on the so-called “Master Fraud” embezzlement scheme in which government departments allegedly diverted billions of pesos to shell companies via public universities.
The highest-profile former official who has been arrested in connection with the scheme is Rosario Robles, who served as both minister of social development and minister of agrarian development in Peña Nieto’s 2012-2018 government.
A lawyer for Robles, who remains in custody in a Mexico City prison, claimed this week that former finance and foreign affairs minister Luis Videgaray was in charge of the fraud scheme and used it to divert public funds to political campaigns of the then-ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party.
Sergio Arturo Ramírez said his client will cooperate with the federal Attorney General’s Office (FGR) and provide details about Videgaray’s involvement.
His claims were met with a firm denial from the former finance minister, who also faces accusations of wrongdoing related to a corruption scheme involving Brazilian construction company Odebrecht.
Robles, who was jailed over a year ago, took to Twitter on Tuesday (going online is apparently not a problem in the Santa Martha prison) to announce that she had agreed to become a “collaborating witness” in the “Master Fraud” case.
“For now it’s the only thing I can say. … I’ve instructed my lawyers to abide by the legal process. What I must say is that I will speak the truth,” she wrote.
Robles added that she had asked her lawyers to seek an agreement with the authorities, apparently indicating that she is prepared to talk in exchange for acquittal or a reduction in any jail sentence she might receive.
“There will surely be those who deny the facts but the proof will speak [for itself],” she wrote.
Robles’ decision to cooperate with authorities came after it was revealed that she would face organized crime and money laundering charges in addition to being accused of improper exercise of public office.
Perhaps complicating her attempt to get out of jail are claims made by Emilio Zebadúa Gonzále, who was a high-ranking bureaucrat in the Ministry of Social Development (Sedesol) when it was led by Robles.
According to the newspaper El Universal, Zebadúa – who is also accused of involvement in the “Master Fraud” – told the FGR that Robles met with colleagues every week to plot the diversion of public funds via the embezzlement scheme.
Emilio Zebadúa claims that weekly meetings were held to plot the diversion of public funds.
Zebadúa also told the FGR that Robles and former Sedesol chief Ramón Sosamontes personally received cash that shell companies had received from public universities that were awarded government contracts.
The former official said that Sedesol and the Ministry of Agrarian Development and Urban Planning, which Robles headed up in the second half of the previous government’s term, diverted more than 1.2 billion pesos.
Zebadúa said Robles told him that Videgaray had explained to her that Sedesol needed to divert resources to pay for debts incurred and arrangements made during Peña Nieto’s 2012 presidential campaign. Videgaray was the ex-president’s campaign manager.
Former Pemex CEO Emilio Lozoya, who also worked on Peña Nieto’s campaign, has accused the former finance minister of striking corrupt agreements with Odebrecht in order to obtain millions of dollars in funding for the 2012 presidential bid.
“I deeply regret that Rosario Robles is baselessly choosing to accuse me to try to get out of her legal situation,” he said in a statement posted to his Twitter account.
Videgaray said that he understands the “extraordinarily difficult” situation Robles is in but asserted that “desperation cannot be justification for lying and incriminating innocent people.”
“That mustn’t be the path to obtain her freedom,” he wrote.
“Rosario Robles can say many things but what she won’t be able to do is prove lies. I didn’t have any participation, direct or indirect, in the so-called Master Fraud,” Videgaray said.
“As a public servant I always acted within the legal framework and the only evidence that has emerged against me with respect to the alleged diversion of public resources are statements of people [Robles and Lozoya] who want to evade responsibility,” he wrote.
“I was never the boss of Rosario Robles. As cabinet colleagues we were equals – there was never a relationship of subordination between us. Neither her nor her co-workers received instructions from me.”
Despite his denials, government officials who spoke with the newspaper Milenio say the FGR already has sufficient evidence against Videgaray for him to go to jail. Information to be provided by Robles is only expected to strengthen the Attorney General’s Office’s case.
President López Obrador said earlier this month that the FGR had sought an arrest warrant for Videgaray in connection with the Odebrecht case but was blocked by a judge. It is currently preparing a new warrant request for the former cabinet minister, who – according to the statement he issued Tuesday – remains in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he is a lecturer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
However, it is not currently seeking to arrest the former president. There is a possibility that the FGR could seek to do so if a majority of citizens vote in favor of putting past presidents on trial for alleged wrongdoings at a referendum planned for next year.
Crosses are set out in memory of women who have disappeared in México state.
A senior federal cabinet minister called Wednesday for an end to violence against girls and women in Mexico, saying that an increase in gender violence during the pandemic has shone a harsh light on the country’s historic problems with the issue.
“The current pandemic has shown us that even in a crisis situation violence doesn’t stop and tends to increase … The data shows us that undeniably Mexico is confronting a major problem of violence against women and girls,” Interior Minister Olga Sánchez Cordero said at the presidential press conference Wednesday, which was the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women.
From January to October, there have been 801 murders of women in Mexico. In July, the executive secretariat of the National Public Security System reported that crimes against women between January and June were up 9.2% from the same period in 2019.
Sánchez also called upon the government to take responsibility for years of systemic indifference toward crimes against women and said that Mexico has a “historic debt” to women, especially to victims of violence.
“We can no longer permit impunity, nor will we do so; the corruption and impunity are part of structural violence, and the state must take responsibility for that.”
Sánchez: Mexico has a historic debt to women.
Karla Quintana, chief of the National Search Commission, told reporters that of the 12,026 girls and women reported missing since the current administration’s term began, 8,473 have been found alive.
The two officials’ appearance was also meant to highlight Mexico’s participation in the United Nations’ 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence campaign, which started today and ends on December 10, the International Day of Human Rights.
Sánchez stressed that preventing violence against girls and women is a great challenge that impacts every area of Mexican society —at home, in the workplace and in general social interactions. She cited figures from the national statistics institute Inegi showing that six out of 10 women in Mexico have experienced some form of violence.
Eight out of 10 women are afraid of physical violence or being verbally harassed on the streets. Every day, 32 girls between 10 and 14 become mothers due to sexual assault. Even in the field of education, she said, one out of every four women has suffered violence.
“It is time to say ‘enough.’ Enough femicides, enough political gender violence toward women, enough of daily aggressions, enough of disappearances and the sexual abuse of girls and women; and let’s say ‘yes’ to equality.”
Quintana acknowledged that missing-persons cases involving women are frequently not taken seriously enough by law enforcement, despite the fact that Mexico has a nationwide law enforcement protocol for how police should treat such cases. The federal guidelines legally require authorities to open an investigation as soon as a person is reported missing.
“The disappearance of women is required to be investigated immediately as a crime; immediately, an investigative file must be opened, a crime has to be assumed,” Quintana said. “[Mexico] is the only place in the world in which a case has to be opened from the first minute.”
Latin America’s biggest shipyard will be built in Progreso, Yucatán, the Italian shipbuilder Fincantieri announced.
The company said it signed a letter of intent on Tuesday with the Yucatán Ministry of Economic Development and Labor to participate in designing and building a new ship repair, conversions and maintenance yard in the port city located on the Gulf of Mexico about 40 kilometers north of the state capital Mérida.
“Fincantieri will be granted a 40-year concession for the exclusive management of the new yard,” the company said in a statement.
Construction of the shipyard, which will include two dry docks on a 40-hectare site, is expected to cost between US $300 million and $500 million.
Fincantieri said the shipyard will be able to handle ships up to 400 meters in length, “particularly cruise ships, large cargo and oil and gas vessels, which need complex operations.”
It also said the yard will have “a lifting platform for units up to 150 meters in length” as well as “cranes, workshops, special equipment, offices, and warehouses.”
The yard is slated to start operations in 2024 but the project is not expected to be finished entirely until 2027.
“Initially, the creation of the yard will be carried out by the government of the state of Yucatán,” Fincantieri said, adding that the project will start in the first half of 2021.
“Indeed, the government will directly manage initial works through a special purpose company that will handle the dredging and the construction of infrastructure and [the] main plants,” the company said.
“Fincantieri is to provide advice from the very beginning,” the firm said, adding that it will build the yard’s “advanced facilities” with other partners.
Fincantieri, one of the world’s largest shipbuilders, also said it will be involved in the training of staff that will be employed at the facility. Prospective employees will undertake training before the shipyard begins operations “locally and in Italy at higher education institutes and at Fincantieri Academy,” it said.
The newspaper El Financiero reported that the Yucatán government will open a tendering process in early 2021 to find companies to work on the initial construction.
State Economic Development and Labor Minister Ernesto Herrera Novelo said in an interview that two companies set to benefit are Grupo Millet, a window manufacturer that has recently increased its production capacity in the Yucatán municipality of Baca, and Niplito, a Mérida-based construction supplies firm.
The new Progreso shipyard will have the same capacity to build and repair vessels as yards located in Houston, Texas, and Panama, Herrera said.
The minister said legal certainty in Yucatán was a crucial factor in attracting investment from Fincantieri. He added that the positive impact of the investment will be comparable to that generated by Grupo Modelo’s opening of a new brewery near Mérida in 2017.
Fincantieri said that once the Progreso shipyard reaches full operational capacity, it will employ an estimated 700 full-time workers, “and supply a downstream network involving up to 2,500 workers during peak times.”
Mexicans’ proficiency in the English language is so low that it ranks near the bottom of a list of 100 countries, a factor that is holding up economic development, says a language training company.
Education First, a Switzerland-based firm with programs worldwide, ranked Mexico in 82nd place, which is second-to-last in English proficiency among 19 Latin American countries, beating only Ecuador.
It’s a problematic situation that is affecting Mexico’s economic success and putting the brakes on its growth in a range of areas, including economic and technological development, Tannia Domenzain of Education First told the newspaper El Financiero.
A nation’s overall English proficiency is an important X factor in its overall development, she said.
“There’s a correlation between the level of English in a country with other factors of development and competitiveness, like innovation, adoption of technology and connectivity. Limited language abilities amplify people’s inequality and lack of social mobility,” she said.
The company says it sees a clear correlation between a country’s gross national income (GNI) and its language proficiency rating. For example, Mexico’s GNI for 2019, according to the World Bank, was US $9,430 per capita, whereas the Netherlands, which ranked No. 1 on Education First’s list, had a GNI of US $53,200.
Mexico ranks high in unequal distribution of wealth as well, doing slightly worse than Haiti and better than only a few Latin American countries such as Nicaragua, Paraguay and Venezuela and a few African nations.
Of further concern, Domenzain said, is that Mexico’s ranking fell significantly from its previous ranking of 67, dropping to the “low” category to “very low.” As well, her company has noticed a “disinterest in English” in Mexico’s education policies in recent years.
Comprehensive language preparation in a nation’s schools is crucial to its success in English-dominated fields like biosciences and information technology, Domenzain said.
President López Obrador announced details of the new train during an inspection of the Mexico City-Toluca interurban train, which is now 87% complete.
The federal government has formally announced that it will build a passenger rail project to link three México state municipalities to the east of Mexico City.
Announced by President López Obrador, the 27.9-billion-peso (US $1.5-billion) project will connect Chalco, México state, to the Santa Martha Metro station in the Mexico City borough of Iztapalapa.
Slated to begin operations in 2024, the 15.5-kilometer, electrically-powered railroad will likely have seven stations including the two terminals and run via the municipalities of Valle de Chalco and Ixtapaluca. A ticket is to cost 10 pesos.
The project is similar to one announced by the former federal government that never got off the ground. It planned to extend line A of the Metro to Chalco from its southern terminus in La Paz, México state.
The project was forecast to cost 11.6 billion pesos but was never allocated the resources. The newspaper El Universal reported that the former government instead decided to build the Mexicable cable car system in the México state municipality of Ecatepec.
Route of the new train, expected to be in operation by 2024.
The current government has already allocated resources in its 2021 budget to begin construction of the new project. A cost-benefit analysis conducted by a private firm was delivered to the government at the end of last year.
The rail project would not only benefit residents of Chalco, Valle de Chalco and Ixtapaluca but also people living in other densely populated México state municipalities that are part of greater Mexico City’s southeastern sprawl. They include La Paz, Chimalhuacán and Chicoloapan.
It is predicted that almost 138,000 passengers will use the rail service per day in its first year of operation and that demand will increase to just over 168,000 in 2025.
The government has several other rail projects on its hands.
It intends to complete the Mexico City-Toluca intercity railroad, which was left incomplete by the Peña Nieto administration, and extend the Mexico City suburban rail line to the new Santa Lucía airport that is currently under construction.
In addition, the government is building the Maya Train in the country’s southeast and plans to upgrade the rail link across the Isthmus of Tehuantepec between Salina Cruz, Oaxaca, and Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz.
Security forces have arrested a Chihuahua gang leader for the 2019 murder of the nine women and children belonging to the LeBaron family, an extended clan of Mexican American Mormon families who live in rural Sonora and Chihuahua.
Authorities arrested Roberto González Montes, 32, and two other suspects on Monday.
On November 4 last year, members of the family were traveling in a convoy of SUVs through the Sierra Madre mountains in Sonora when they were ambushed by armed civilians widely suspected to be cartel hitmen. The gunmen opened fire on the vehicles, leaving only some of the children alive.
In an area rife with frequent violence, much of it over turf wars between two rival cartels, the attack made news in both Mexico and the U.S. because of its seemingly senseless brutality. According to LeBaron children who survived the attack, one of the women got out of her vehicle to show the gunmen that they were women and children and was immediately shot dead.
Adrian Le Baron, whose daughter Rhonita Miller and her 8-month-old twins were killed in the attack, described the arrest in a tweet this week as “a step toward knowing the truth about who killed my children.”
LeBaron identified González as a leader of the La Línea, a gang based in Nuevo Casas Grandes, Chihuahua, located near the U.S. border.
La Línea is the armed wing of the Juárez Cartel, based in Ciudad Juárez. The group is known to run extortion rackets and other criminal activity in the region. It has been engaged in turf wars in Sonora with Los Salazar Cartel near the town of La Mora. Los Salazar Cartel is believed to be affiliated with the Sinaloa Cartel.