Friday, June 20, 2025

1965 Ford Mustang among lots at Sunday’s government auction

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This Mustang is among cars that will be auctioned Sunday.
This Mustang is among 188 cars that will be auctioned.

A 1965 Ford Mustang will be among almost 300 lots on the block at the government’s next auction of assets seized from organized crime.

The Institute to Return Stolen Goods to the People (Indep) announced Tuesday that 288 lots will be up for grabs at the ninth “narco-auction,” which will be held in Mexico City on Sunday at Los Pinos, the former official residence of the president.

A total of 188 cars, including several classic cars, will go under the hammer as will six speedboats, trucks and forklifts among other seized assets.

The combined starting price for the lots is just over 13 million pesos (US $642,000). Proceeds of the auction will go toward funding the government’s social programs.

In addition to the Mustang, which has a starting price of just under 330,000 pesos (US $16,300), other notable vehicles to be auctioned include a 2016 GM Sierra Denali pickup truck and a 2014 Ford F-150 pickup. Both vehicles have a starting price of about 250,000 pesos (US $12,400).

A full list of the assets to be auctioned off is available on the Indep website (Spanish only). Entry to the auction will be limited to 150 people to ensure that social distancing recommendations can be observed.

All people who wish to attend must register by November 20. There will be no opportunities to bid for assets by telephone.

The government has already auctioned off a wide range of assets seized from organized crime including jewelry, boats, luxury vehicles, airplanes and real estate.

The former home of famed Mexican drug lord Amado Carrillo Fuentes was sold in May, while a mansion owned by accused drug trafficker Zhenli Ye Gon was purchased at an auction last year.

Indep has distributed millions of pesos in auction proceeds to other government departments since it was created by the federal government last year.

But the fledgling institute is apparently not squeaky clean. Announcing his resignation as Indep chief in a letter to President López Obrador in September, Jaime Cárdenas said that the institute is plagued by corruption, asserting that officials stole jewelry in the agency’s possession and manipulated the auctions it held.

Source: Sin Embargo (sp) 

Searching for hidden graves yields remains of 83 in Acapulco

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A gravesite found by searchers in Acapulco.
A gravesite found by searchers in Acapulco.

Relatives of missing persons in Acapulco began their eighth search on Tuesday for loved ones’ remains in the Alta Cuauhtémoc neighborhood, this time finding human bones in El Veladero National Park.

It brings to a total of 83 bodies found in makeshift graves all around the port city this year by the Families of the Disappeared and Murdered Collective. President Guadalupe Rodríguez said the search and recovery operation, like the other seven, was undertaken without official assistance.

“No one has looked for our disappeared relatives, and the highest levels of the federal government have made us give up all hope of finding them. They have all the information they need, but to date they have not dealt with the families, and we so cannot identify [our loved ones],” Rodríguez said.

She said nothing has been done with genetic samples the families have supplied to authorities for uploading to a database in order that DNA of discovered remains can be matched to the missing.

The relatives are basically on their own, she said, which has been the same experience reported by other, similar search collectives around the country.

“They halted the roundtable meetings with our federal prosecutor’s office to review the progress of all the investigations,” she said. “They also stopped assistance to help the orphaned children [of the disappeared], who are dying of hunger.”

In addition, she said, the group had meetings scheduled for November 25 with the Executive Commission for Attention to Victims (CEAV) and the Minister of the Interior, but they had been canceled without explanation.

In the past, Rodríguez said, relatives would have been helped financially with the costs of travel to the digging sites and with transport of the remains, but that source dried up when the government eliminated more than 100 public trusts last month.

She did acknowledge that the group had been informed that members would receive financial support from the Federal Tax Administration (SAT) but the families did not have any sense of when that money would be forthcoming.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Authorities now estimate 900,000 affected by flooding in Tabasco

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Aid is delivered by boat to flood victims in Tabasco.
Aid is delivered by boat to flood victims in Tabasco.

Civil Protection authorities estimate that about 900,000 people have been affected by flooding in Tabasco, a figure significantly higher than previously thought.

The affected citizens live in 1,305 communities across the state, according to the Tabasco government.

Federal Civil Protection authorities said on the weekend that more than 300,000 people and 899 communities had been affected by flooding that was caused by rain brought by two cold fronts and a tropical storm and exacerbated by the release of water from the Peñitas dam in Chiapas. Severe flooding also affected parts of Tabasco last month.

The state government said in reports to lawmakers that they still don’t have an estimate of the economic damage the most recent flooding caused because no census or official damage assessment has yet been conducted.

However, the bill is likely to be in the tens of billions of pesos considering that comparable flooding in 2007 caused economic losses of some 33.2 billion pesos.

The director of the insurance company association AMIS said Tuesday that the majority of the people affected don’t have coverage for their homes, vehicles and small businesses.

“There is a lot of damage … but unfortunately a significant number of people don’t have insurance,” Recaredo Arias told a press conference.

He said that payouts were expected to be lower than in 2007 when insurance companies paid out US $407 million in Tabasco.

Arias said is was “sad” that the insurance sector can’t make a greater contribution to the recovery efforts because so many people don’t have coverage.

Meanwhile, five air force planes carrying 43.4 tonnes of supplies departed from the Mexico City airport on Wednesday morning to travel to Tabasco.

The army transported 65 tonnes of aid to the Gulf coast state by land on Tuesday, meaning that a total of 108.4 tonnes of supplies will be available for distribution to affected residents.

Families will be given food packages containing items such as rice, beans, canned tuna, flour, sugar, oil, tomato paste, pasta, cookies, coffee and powered milk.

Many Tabasco residents say that they have been abandoned by the authorities while large quantities of water inundate their communities and homes.

President López Obrador revealed Sunday that federal authorities chose to flood poor areas of Tabasco in order to prevent water from inundating the state capital Villahermosa.

The decision – at odds with the president’s pledge to put the poor first – was criticized by residents of the low-lying areas of Tabasco to which the water was diverted.

Source: Reforma (sp), El Universal (sp), Forbes México (sp) 

Survey finds students are bored by Learn at Home program

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student learning via computer
Many students say the programs are boring.

Just over 50% of elementary school students say they are bored with the learning at home program initiated as a result of Covid-19 school closures.

A survey by the National Commission for the Continued Betterment of Education (Mejoredu), a federal agency, was administered in June to 194,00 elementary students, their parents and teachers. In total, 51.4% of respondents told the commission that students are finding distance education boring.

Depending on where in Mexico they live, k-12 students nationwide have been receiving lessons online, on public television, via radio or through some combination of the three formats since March. Some teachers have resorted to using phone-based social media platforms like WhatsApp to teach when students do not have access to the internet.

The survey also reported more serious issues with the distance education format in Mexico.

  • 69.8% of respondents said students could not count on other family members for assistance with their lessons.
  • 52.8% reported that the lessons being taught required supplemental materials that the students did not possess.
  • 26.8% of teachers surveyed said the lessons and materials they were using were in a different language than their students speak.
  • 20% said that students have not had any school textbooks since the Learn at Home program began.

Overall, said the commission, 46.3% of respondents also told them that in their opinion the Education Ministry’s Learn at Home curriculum was not adequate to allow students to continue advancing educationally.

Source: Reforma (sp)

Oaxaca artisans’ collaboration links them to Louis Vuitton customers

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A Zapotec artist at work on a Vuitton trunk.
A Zapotec artist at work on a Vuitton trunk.

A French design house is continuing to collaborate with Mexican artisans, connecting them with customers.

Louis Vuitton has connected artisans in Oaxaca with buyers who commissioned them to paint their traditional Zapotec designs on Vuitton hard-sided trunks.

The result is “Power Animals,” a series of Vuitton trunks featuring painted animals inspired by the Zapotec calendar.

Like French fashion designer Isabel Marant, who recently apologized for incorporating indigenous designs into her newest clothing collection, the legendary design house has also had to deal with accusations by Mexico of cultural appropriation.

Louis Vuitton himself was questioned in July 2019 by the Ministry of Culture when embroidery on chairs by the designer bore a resemblance to patterns from Tenango de Doria, Hidalgo. The ministry wanted to know if the company had an arrangement with artisans there, and although Vuitton stated that that was the case, the chairs were taken off the market anyway.

'Power Animals' puts artisans in direct contact with clients.
‘Power Animals’ puts artisans in direct contact with clients.

In 2020, the designer has tried to revamp its relationship with Mexican indigenous creators, choosing instead to give credit to the artisans. “Power Animals” is putting artisans in direct contact with clients the company has solicited for them.

In February, the designer unveiled a collection entitled The Colorful Journey LV, which included six Vuitton travel trunks with different artisan designs, painted by the small workshop Taller Casa Don Juan in the community of San Martín Tilcajete and displayed during the Zona Maco art and design event this year in Mexico City.

Vuitton engaged the painters to illustrate likenesses of the state’s signature animal figurines, often called Oaxacan alebrijes.

Whereas the February event was a static exhibit, the newest trunks were created in real time in front of Vuitton customers, who the company brought as a group to the same Oaxacan workshop featured in the February exhibit. At the latest event, Vuitton clients met the artisans who painted their trunks and were able to communicate with them about the nature of the painting.

“In keeping with fair trade practices and out of respect for the art and its creators, the client and the master artisan have an open dialogue about the creation process,” the designer explained to potential clients on its website.

The event was done in accordance with Mexican copyright law and the Law for Safeguarding Knowledge, Identity and Culture of Indigenous Communities, the company said.

Vuitton sells the trunks to its clients but does not see any money from the artisan’s work: the clients paid the artisans directly at the event.

The fanciful paintings included coyotes, geckos, turtles, armadillos, rabbits, butterflies, hummingbirds, and several other animals. The company plans to highlight more of the artisans’ works soon at the Louis Vuitton store in the Palacio de Hierro mall in Mexico City, it said.

Source: Life and Style (sp)

In a surprise move, US agrees to drop charges against ex-defense minister

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Former army chief Salvador Cienfuegos will return to Mexico.
Former army chief Salvador Cienfuegos will return to Mexico.

A month after former defense minister Salvador Cienfuegos was arrested on drug trafficking and money laundering charges, United States and Mexican authorities announced Tuesday that the U.S. Justice Department was seeking dismissal of the charges so that the ex-army chief could be investigated in Mexico.

A federal judge in New York agreed to the request to drop the charges on Wednesday morning, saying there was no evidence or suspicion that Mexico won’t conduct an investigation into Cienfuegos’ alleged crimes.

Announced in a joint statement by United States Attorney General William Bar and his Mexican counterpart Alejandro Gertz Manero, the decision to release Cienfuegos, defense minister in the 2012-2018 government led by former president Enrique Peña Nieto, is both extraordinary and unexpected given that U.S. authorities spent years building a case against the ex-military official and have previously shown little faith in the Mexican justice system.

“In recognition of the strong law enforcement partnership between Mexico and the United States, and in the interests of demonstrating our united front against all forms of criminality, the U.S. Department of Justice has made the decision to seek dismissal of the U.S. criminal charges against former [minister] Cienfuegos, so that he may be investigated and, if appropriate, charged, under Mexican law,” Barr and Gertz Manero said in the statement.

They also said that the U.S. Justice Department has provided evidence in the case to Mexico and “commits to continued cooperation … to support the investigation by Mexican authorities.”

The statement noted that the Mexican Attorney General’s Office (FGR) opened its own investigation after learning of the charges against Cienfuegos but the Mexican government has not committed to trying the former defense minister even though U.S. prosecutors say that the evidence against him is “strong.”

Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard told a press conference Tuesday that Cienfuegos would be returned to Mexico “as a Mexican citizen” and will not be facing any criminal charges. He stressed that the agreement allowing the the 72-year-old former army chief to be investigated in Mexico was not representative of impunity but rather “respect for Mexico and its armed forces.”

Ebrard said it will ultimately be up to the FGR to determine whether Cienfuegos will face trial. He said late last month that Mexico had expressed its “profound discontent” to the United States over not being informed about the plan to arrest the ex-official, and the federal government lobbied the United States to allow him to face justice here.

According to the U.S. indictment, Cienfuegos as defense minister helped the H-2 Cartel, a splinter group of the Beltrán Leyva cartel, operate in Mexico and ship drugs to the United States, and conspired to launder the money he obtained from his involvement in the illicit activities. The case against him was largely based on thousands of incriminating Blackberry smartphone messages intercepted by United States authorities.

Cienfuegos pleaded not guilty to the charges earlier this month.

The decision to release the former army chief and allow him to return to Mexico “appeared to be an attempt to repair a growing breach in relations over Cienfuegos’s arrest,” The Washington Post said. 

Cienfuegos and his former boss, Enrique Peña Nieto.
Cienfuegos and his former boss, Enrique Peña Nieto.

The arrest of the former defense minister was deeply embarrassing for the Mexican government, which holds the military up as one of the country’s most trustworthy institutions. It upset a bilateral relationship that has been punctuated with episodes of acrimony since United States President Donald Trump took office in early 2017.

President López Obrador, who is relying on the military for a wide range of tasks including public security and infrastructure construction, suggested that Cienfuegos might have been arrested “for political or other reasons” and accused the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) of “meddling” in Mexico’s affairs.

The Post reported that prosecutors in the U.S. attorney’s office for the Eastern District of New York attributed the decision to drop charges against Cienfuegos to the Mexican government’s threats to limit the role of the DEA in Mexico. The newspaper said that information came from a law enforcement official familiar with the case, adding that a Mexico official confirmed that the DEA could be barred from entering Mexico. 

For their part, Barr and Gertz Manero said the United States and Mexico remain committed to “bilateral law enforcement cooperation.”

“As the decision today reflects, we are stronger when we work together and respect the sovereignty of our nations and their institutions. This close partnership increases the security of the citizens of both our countries.”

Alejandro Hope, a prominent Mexican security analyst, said that if the United States hadn’t agreed to drop the case against Cienfuegos, “the army would have held off on any kind of cooperation with the U.S. for a decade.”

Mike Vigil, a former DEA chief of international operations, said that the U.S. decision “is nothing more than a gift, a huge gift” from Trump to López Obrador. The two men have developed a warm relationship despite their ideological differences and the former’s history of aggressive and offensive rhetoric toward Mexico.

Vigil also said that “the chances of Cienfuegos being convicted in Mexico are slim to none,” adding that the U.S. decision “sends a very negative message to U.S. law enforcement agencies – that Donald Trump is willing to politically manipulate judicial proceedings.”

The decision represents a radical change of direction given that the United States government has sought to extradite Mexican drug traffickers and try them in its own courtrooms for decades because it believed that they would never be brought to justice in Mexico.

But the Trump administration is apparently willing to put that belief to one side in order not to upset the Mexican government – another radical shift given that the U.S. president is not known for his amiability toward Mexico.

In a filing asking a judge to dismiss the charges against Cienfuegos, U.S. prosecutors acknowledged that the Trump administration had come to the conclusion that preserving the relationship with Mexico was more important than pursuing the case.

“The United States has determined that sensitive and important foreign policy considerations outweigh the government’s interest in pursuing the prosecution of the defendant, under the totality of the circumstances, and therefore require dismissal of the case,” they wrote.

Ebrard rejected any suggestion that the United States’ actions were related to López Obrador’s decision not to congratulate Joe Biden on his election victory over Trump.

At his news conference on Wednesday morning, López Obrador asserted that there would be no impunity in the Cienfuegos case. He also said that Mexico had not committed to giving anything to the U.S. in exchange for it dropping the charges.

“There’s no exchange, we don’t establish commitments that affect our principles. … It doesn’t mean impunity, … an investigation has started, it started when they sent us the evidence,” López Obrador said.

He said the government expressed its anger to the United States about not being informed about the plan to arrest Cienfuegos because the U.S. violated a years-old agreement to provide such information.

The managing editor of InSight Crime, a foundation dedicated to the study of organized crime in Latin America, expressed doubt that Cienfuegos would be tried in a civilian court.

“[AMLO’s] prosecutors are going to have to weigh up what the evidence against Cienfuegos is and whether it is strong enough to warrant a very public trial, against the loyalty of the army and how much he wants to keep the army onside,” Chris Dalby said.

“Cienfuegos has a lot of friends in high places.”

It is also likely that Mexican courts will be unable to try Cienfuegos on much of the evidence collected by U.S. authorities.

The interception of the former defense minister’s telephone communications was not authorized by a Mexican judge and therefore the incriminating Blackberry messages were illegally obtained and will be inadmissible in court, wrote Carlos Marín, a columnist with the newspaper Milenio.

He also said the government could legally detain Cienfuegos in a military prison or place him under house arrest for up to 40 days while an investigation takes place. However, it appears more likely that he will be not be arrested upon arrival in Mexico.

The “possibility that Cienfuegos will remain free, at least for some time,” said The Washington Post, is “a symbol to some of the Mexican government’s ability to play hardball with the United States — and win.”

Source: The Washington Post (en), Milenio (sp), El Universal (sp), The Guardian (en)

State of dams is unknown due to lack of money and personnel

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The Álvaro Obregon dam on the Yaqui River
The Álvaro Obregón dam on the Yaqui River in Sonora was built in 1952.

The inspection frequency of Mexico’s dams doesn’t come close to meeting international standards.

Dams with structural problems or those that haven’t been properly maintained have the potential to leak and/or accidentally discharge large quantities of water that could pose a risk to human life, property and the environment.

The risk in Mexico is even greater because the National Water Commission (Conagua) only carries out about one-sixth the recommended number of dam inspections per year due to a lack of personnel and resources.

The International Commission on Large Dams (ICOLD), an international non-governmental organization dedicated to the sharing of information and knowledge about the design, construction, maintenance, and impact of large dams, recommends that dams be thoroughly inspected at least every five years.

There are 6,256 dams in Mexico’s network, meaning that Conagua would have to complete about 1,250 inspections per year to comply.

But it only completes about 200 inspections annually due to a lack of specialized staff, the newspaper El Universal reported.

In other words, the state of 6,000 dams is unknown by Conagua in any given year and the condition of more than 5,000 is unknown over a five-year period.

Lack of money is another obstacle to complying. The federal government launched a dam assessment program to be managed by Conagua in 2010 but it hasn’t received any funding for years.

Another program known as K111 whose objective is to maintain and modernize dams – some of which were built in colonial times and the 19th century – is set to have its budget cut by almost a third next year. The program was allocated 465.9 million pesos (US $23 million) this year but is slated to receive just 320 million pesos in 2021, a 32.4% cut.

The fact that the recommended number of dam inspections are not being carried out is particularly concerning given that extreme weather events such as hurricanes are becoming more frequent due to climate change.

As a result, Mexico’s dams, especially those in the south and southeast of the country, are coming under intense pressure from torrential rains more frequently.

Conagua has acknowledged that the risk of dam malfunction due to severe weather events is “permanent.” It has also recognized that earthquakes, landslides and vandalism have damaged dams in Mexico.

But without the funding and personnel to inspect a greater number of dams, it is inevitable that some problems won’t be detected.

The state of dams and their management is currently in the spotlight due to severe flooding in Tabasco.

Governor Adán Augusto López Hernández has blamed much of the flooding on the excessive release of water from the Peñitas dam, which was recently inundated with rain brought by two cold fronts and Tropical Storm Eta.

He accused the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) of releasing the water from the dam, which is located on the Grijalva River in Chiapas and used to generate hydroelectric power.

But CFE chief Manuel Bartlett last week denied that the state-owned company is responsible for the flooding, saying that Mexico’s Committee of Large Dams – made up of Conagua officials and university academics – manages dam water.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

5,000 people who signed petition on referendum were actually dead

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'Do you want Salinas, Peña and Calderón to go to jail?' reads the sign seeking signatories for the petition
'Do you want Salinas, Peña and Calderón to go to jail?' reads the sign seeking signatories (dead or alive).

Deceased critics of past presidents aren’t just turning in their graves – they’re also signing petitions.

The National Electoral Institute (INE) reported that 5,530 dead people were listed as signatories on a petition calling for a referendum that would ask citizens if past presidents should face justice for crimes they allegedly committed while in office.

Some of the deceased signatories died as far back as 1999, the INE said in a statement, adding that their names were likely taken from out of date electoral rolls.

The INE said the signatures of more than 400,000 other people were not counted for a range of reasons.

Among them: their electoral registration wasn’t current; they don’t appear on the electoral roll at all; they appeared on the petition twice; their political rights had been suspended because they’re in jail; and/or their personal details were deemed to be irregular.

The INE also said it visited the listed addresses of 850 signatories and was able to speak to 597 of them. Of the latter, 480 people confirmed that they had supported the petition but 117 said they had not.

All told, more than 2.5 million signatures appeared on the petition but only 2.1 million were deemed to be valid.

The latter number nevertheless represented more than 2% of everyone on the electoral roll, giving the petition enough signatures to ensure that the process to hold a referendum will proceed.

President López Obrador sent a request to the Senate in September to approve a national consultation in which citizens would be asked whether the five most recent former presidents should be held legally accountable for crimes they allegedly committed while in office.

Both the upper and lower houses of Congress subsequently approved the request.

The referendum proposal got the green light from the Supreme Court (SCJN) in early October, although it ruled that a consultation question cannot name the past presidents. Instead it must only refer to them as “political actors,” the court said.

Government critics have slammed the move to hold a referendum, saying that if there is evidence of wrongdoing by past presidents they should be prosecuted regardless of public opinion. Many said the SCJN decision serves as evidence that the president has co-opted the nation’s highest court.

Although he frequently blames past presidents for all manner of problems faced by Mexico, López Obrador has said that he won’t personally vote in favor of prosecuting his predecessors because he favors looking to the future rather than dwelling on the past.

By law the national referendum should take place in August but there is speculation that López Obrador will push for it to be run concurrently with the midterm elections next June. If the consultation is held on the same day as the elections, there will be increased focus on government corruption, which the current government says it is eliminating.

That could help López Obrador’s Morena party at the elections, at which citizens will vote for new federal deputies as well as municipal and state representatives.

The president could seek to justify holding the referendum on the same day as the elections by saying that it will save money.

The INE has estimated the vote will cost nearly 1.5 billion pesos, or US $74 million.

Source: Milenio (sp) 

After long weekend crowds, more beach closures possible in Acapulco

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A busy Acapulco beach on the weekend.
A busy Acapulco beach on the weekend.

The mayor of Acapulco has suggested that beaches could be closed for the rest of November after hordes of tourists descended on the resort city over the Revolution Day long weekend.

Adela Román Campo said in an interview that the closure of Acapulco’s beaches was a possibility, explaining that such a move might be needed to ensure that the city can welcome visitors during the Christmas/New Year holiday period.

The mayor said she would personally push for beaches to be closed for the remainder of November but noted that she would have to follow federal and state guidelines.

Román said that many people don’t wear face masks or maintain a healthy distance from each other while on vacation in Acapulco, which leads Guerrero for both confirmed coronavirus cases and Covid-19 deaths.

Plenty of such behavior was on display last weekend as approximately 70,000 tourists from Mexico City and states including Puebla, México state and Morelos let their hair down in the Pacific coast resort city.

Many of Acapulco’s most popular beaches were packed on Saturday and Sunday and hotel occupancy across the city was just below the permitted 50%. Eleven establishments were shut down because they were not following health measures, the newspaper El Universal reported, and authorities intervened to stop a wedding at which 300 guests were expected to be in attendance.

Governor Héctor Astudillo said Monday that visitor numbers in Acapulco over the weekend exceeded authorities’ expectations.

The influx of tourists occurred despite the state’s implementation of stricter coronavirus restrictions at the start of last week.

Announcing 12 new measures to slow the spread of the virus, Astudillo said that if there is a large new outbreak, the state wouldn’t be able to receive tourists over the end of year holiday season – the same concern raised by the Acapulco mayor on Monday.

That would be a big blow for the economy in Guerrero, whose beaches in destinations such as Acapulco and Zihuatanejo are popular with tourists during winter.

The southern state, currently “high” risk orange on the federal government’s coronavirus stoplight map, has recorded 23,030 confirmed coronavirus cases since the start of the pandemic, 44% of which were detected in Acapulco. Guerrero has recorded 2,312 Covid-19 deaths, approximately half of which occurred in the Pacific coast resort city.

Acapulco’s hospitals came under intense pressure earlier in the pandemic, prompting Mayor Román to say that she was “deeply concerned” about the situation and urging people to take the virus seriously.

Meanwhile, the national accumulated case tally increased to 1,009,396 on Monday with 2,874 new cases reported by the federal Health Ministry. The official death toll rose to 98,861 with 319 additional fatalities registered.

Both the case tally and death toll are widely believed to be significant undercounts, mainly due to Mexico’s low testing rate.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

Tanker truck driver not responsible for crash: witness

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Monday's accident scene in Nayarit.
Monday's accident scene in Nayarit.

A witness of the horrific accident in Jala, Nayarit, Monday in which a double tractor-trailer carrying propane gas rolled over and exploded says the accident was not caused by the truck driver, as was reported, but by another driver who cut in front of the tanker.

The explosion killed 14 people, 12 of them instantly while in their vehicles on the Tepic-Guadalajara highway. They were burned beyond recognition.

The body of one victim was found on the highway, presumably ejected from a vehicle, possibly the tanker truck, and later died. Local media reported Tuesday that a 31-year-old woman survived the initial crash but later died at a nearby hospital from burns.

Authorities have not identified the cause of the accident but speculated that brake failure on the part of the tanker truck, which was from Torreón, Coahuila, may have been responsible. They also believe that the truck initially collided with another vehicle on the highway, leading to a chain-reaction accident involving the other two cars.

But Jared Grymaloski, who was driving from Guadalajara at the time of the accident, told Mexico News Daily that he witnessed a car cutting off the tanker truck as it attempted to leave an off-ramp that turned out to be closed. When the car, a small white SUV, tried to re-enter the highway, the tanker truck was unable to stop in time, he said.

Said Grymalowski of the tanker truck driver, “He was just minding his own business.”

According to media reports, the off-ramp to Jala was closed at the time of the accident due to construction.

Just before the accident, Grymaloski said, he and his wife had been traveling behind the SUV and another vehicle. Both had been traveling at about the same speed with them for about 40 kilometers.

Just before the Jala exit the SUV had pulled ahead of the tanker and exited on the off-ramp. But realizing that the ramp was closed the driver tried to re-enter the freeway, Grymaloski said.

“The tanker driver saw what the white SUV was doing and locked his brakes up — a lot of smoke — and tried to swerve to the left but clipped the white SUV and then caught the red car that was trying to cut in front of the truck and literally drove over the top of the right front hood, which flipped the truck onto its passenger-door side,” Grymalowski said.

The tanker truck’s two trailers then began to jackknife and “wrapped around the red car and then burst into flames.”

“We had slowed right down, as we thought we might help the injured,” he added, “and then the fire started toward us; we got out of there pretty fast.”

Mexico News Daily