Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Keep the dead alive by remembering them on their special day

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An altar keeps the memories of loved ones alive.
An altar keeps the memories of loved ones alive.

Day of the Dead is by far my favorite holiday in Mexico. My first experience with it was in 2002, when I was here as a university student.

The director of my study abroad program here in Xalapa piled a few of us into his pickup truck and we drove to Naolinco, a picturesque mountain town known for its leather products.

I was immediately enchanted. Altars were all over the place — in people’s homes, in public spaces, in restaurants and stores. As we walked along the street, people invited us into their homes for tamales, bread and homemade wine.

There were carolers at the cemetery. Carolers! With guitars! The brightly colored petals and exquisite smell of cempasúchil (marigolds) were everywhere.

Since then, Day of the Dead has caught on north of the border as well. Even before the popular movie Coco came out, the southern Texas city I return home to was starting to embrace its Mexican heritage in more expansive ways than it ever had before, with altars, decorated skulls and papel picado (colorful tissue paper with intricately cut designs) suddenly appearing alongside Halloween decorations.

Who knew that the dead could bring us together?

Each year in my home we set up our altar with the same enthusiasm with which we decorate the Christmas tree. As the years pass and more people we know and love die, we’ve had to switch to a bigger table, as our collection of dead has grown.

My husband’s grandparents are there, as are my grandmother and my mother. Traditionally, the flower petals are to be sprinkled from the altar to the front door so that the dead can find their way back home from the other side to enjoy the offerings laid out for them.

My grandmother, in life, would not have appreciated her place on the altar. Like many protestants of a certain age, she was suspicious of the “magical” elements mixed in with modern Catholicism.

Day of the Dead is of course a mixture of Catholic and indigenous tradition, one that the Spaniards were only partially successful at co-opting; at least they got to move the dates to the ones they wanted. (I like to think that my grandmother, now on the other side, would be totally cool with it.)

Death is a universal reality, and all cultures have different ways of dealing with it. When I was growing up in central Texas, death was taboo, something no one wanted to talk about; it was sad at best and terrifying at worst.

Halloween was a time not to think about the dead we knew, but to have fun dressing up and getting candy (and subsequent cavities). When I learned later of the history of Halloween from pagan tradition to Catholicism’s version, All Saint’s Day, I felt decidedly more creeped out. Why should we spend any time at all thinking about death? How uncomfortable!

My attitude since has evolved considerably. Now that I’m an adult, death has moved closer and closer to me in the form of the passing of actual people I’ve known and loved, and in the reality and certainty of my own mortality as the years go by.

I’m hopefully still a long way from it, but none of us really knows, do we? For something that’s such a firm fact of life, we sure do avoid thinking about it a lot.

Mexicans don’t (as much), and I think there’s something to be learned from that. We can accept that we’re going to die. We can paint skulls on our faces to remind all of us that life is for the living — that we won’t be around forever, so we’d better get to it!

What does Day of the Dead do for us? It keeps the memories of our loved ones alive. It keeps this culture alive and reminds us of the people we came from. Feel guilty about not thinking enough of your loved ones that have already passed on? Don’t: remembering to do that is built into an annual holiday here.

I am not religious myself. I don’t pretend to know what happens after death, though as an agnostic I fully expect that we simply cease to exist in the way a flame from a candle goes out. As Richard Dawkins has said, we know that consciousness is wrapped up in the brain, and we know that the brain rots, so I have no illusions.

To me, this news is not too disappointing, as I’m fairly certain that, as a dead person, I would not have the consciousness to care. Disappointing would be getting to that point of not existing and not having done anything worthwhile.

That said, I do believe that there is a way to keep our dead alive, and Day of the Dead helps us to do that. Because while they might not still be around, they live on in us, and this holiday helps us remember that in an active way. The ways they shaped us, influenced us, taught us and loved us live on.

Death is sad. We don’t usually wish for it, but learning to accept it and not fear it (at least not too much) is a worthy exercise. Celebrate, remember and love your dead. Sit and chat with them a while.

Share some hot chocolate, some tamales, some pan de muerto, play their favorite music, decorate your face the way their faces look now.

Welcome them back, at least for a couple of days, and celebrate your own beating heart.

Sarah DeVries writes from her home in Xalapa, Veracruz.

Truckers end national strike after talks with government

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Striking truckers park their rigs at the roadside on Tuesday.
Striking truckers park their rigs at the roadside on Tuesday.

A national strike by the truckers’ organization Amotac has come to an end after talks with the government.

The Mexican Alliance of Transportation Organizations declared the strike on Tuesday, threatening to block highways in 32 states.

Interior Secretariat undersecretary Ricardo Peralta, who led the talks with Amotac president Rafael Ortiz, said a permanent table for dialogue was created to allow for the government to work with the truckers.

“All strike actions that could cause roadblocks have been deactivated by the strikers themselves,” Peralta said.

He added that representatives of the truckers and the secretariats of the Interior and Communications and Transportation would begin the first talks on Wednesday.

In order to create a national agenda to attend to the demands that the truckers have had for over 10 years and deal with issues that concern all transportation operators, the country’s six other federal transportation organizations will also be involved in the talks.

Among the truckers’ demands are the prohibition of double-trailer rigs, lower tolls and gasoline prices, more security on the country’s highways and lower tow truck rates.

Tuesday’s protests took place in some 22 states. Some highways were blocked but in many cases the striking drivers parked their trucks and buses at the side of the road.

Sources: Posta (sp), Excélsior (sp)

3 more suspects go free after raid on Mexico City gang bunker

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Police Chief García said operation was not a failure.
Police Chief García said operation was not a failure.

A judge has released three of the five remaining suspects arrested in an October 23 raid on a crime gang bunker in the Mexico City neighborhood of Morelos.

After having released 27 other alleged members of the La Unión de Tepito gang last week, Tuesday’s decision by supervisory judge Jesús Delgadillo Padierna now leaves only two of the original 32 suspects in police custody.

Detained on charges of drug trafficking, money laundering and possession of illegal firearms, the three were released after security and traffic camera footage revealed inconsistencies in the official police reports of the raid and arrests. The footage was authenticated by a Mexico City police officer.

Although most of the suspects have been set free, Mexico City Police Chief Omar García Harfuch doesn’t consider the operation to have been a total failure.

“I don’t consider it a failure at all . . . because now we don’t have police there guarding that drug distribution center,” García said of the gang’s bunker, which was protected by corrupt police officers.

He said his department will respect the judge’s decisions and also carry out an in-depth review of protocols in order to put a stop to imprecision in police reports. He said that strengthening the legal process and guaranteeing precision will be priorities for the police.

“For us the operation was a success. It dismantled one of the biggest centers of criminal operations [in the city and] seized a large quantity of drugs and firearms . . . the fact that those weapons are no longer on the street is a success for us,” he said.

García asked for Mexico City residents’ trust and assured them that through the operation in Tepito more information has turned up about other criminal centers of operation.

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

‘Stop the shooting:’ video reveals capture of Guzmán Jr. in Culiacán

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'No more chaos, please:' Ovidio Guzmán speaks to his brother during his capture in Culiacán.
'No more chaos, please:' Ovidio Guzmán speaks to his brother during his attempted capture.

The federal government presented video footage on Wednesday that shows a son of convicted drug trafficker Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán urging his brother to stop the cartel attacks in Culiacán, Sinaloa, on October 17.

Security forces detained Ovidio Guzmán López but released him hours later to avoid a bloodbath after the operation to arrest him triggered attacks across the city.

In footage filmed by a camera mounted on the helmet of a National Guard member, Guzmán López is seen speaking on a mobile telephone just after he surrendered to security forces.

According to the Secretariat of National Defense, on the other end of the line was his brother Iván Archivaldo Guzmán Salazar, who was coordinating attacks and the establishment of road blockades across the city.

“Stop [the shooting], stop it, I already turned myself in . . . I don’t want there to be any more chaos, please,” Guzmán López says following instructions from security forces who ordered him to ask for an end to the violence.

Así fue la captura del Ovidio Guzmán por la SEDENA

Despite the request, the violence continued in Culiacán for several hours. At least 13 people, including several alleged cartel hitmen, were killed.

National Defense Secretary Luis Cresencio Sandoval told reporters this morning that the arrest of Guzmán López occurred at 3:15pm. In the video footage, security forces are seen in the parking area of a building while gunshots ring out.

“What you hear is the aggression to which military personnel were subjected,” Cresencio said.

The video then shows a woman leaving the house with another man before Guzmán López appears with his hands raised. He tells security personnel that he is unarmed.

Guzmán is then ordered to kneel and place his hands on the wall while the woman argues with the security forces, telling them that there are children inside. The federal forces continue to aim their weapons at the open door leading to the parking lot while urging everyone to stay calm.

The footage then shows the 28-year-old son of former drug lord “El Chapo” Guzmán speaking on the phone. “Be calm, stop everything . . . Tell them to withdraw,” Guzmán says.

Hands raised, Guzmán leaves the house and surrenders to National Guardsmen.
Hands raised, Guzmán leaves the house and surrenders to National Guardsmen.

When the security forces later withdrew from the house in the Tres Ríos neighborhood of Culiacán, they were not accompanied by the suspected Sinaloa Cartel leader, who is wanted in the United States on trafficking charges.

Also at Wednesday’s press conference, Security Secretary Alfonso Durazo again defended the decision taken by the security cabinet to release Guzmán.

“In Culiacán, it would have been easy to resort to a fight to the death, a confrontation without mercy or respect of individual rights and in the end, we would have won. But at what cost?” he said.

“. . . What could have become a scene of war and the shedding of innocent blood was resolved in favor of a return to peace and protecting the public,” Durazo said.

The day after the arrest and release of Guzmán, he and Cresencio admitted that the operation was poorly planned and hastily executed.

However, Durazo said that errors made during the operation didn’t justify a change in the government’s security strategy, which aims to avoid the use of force whenever possible.

President López Obrador has repeatedly defended the security cabinet order to release Guzmán, stating last week that the decision was “very difficult” but “very humane.”

Source: El Financiero (sp), Reuters (en), Milenio (sp) 

Lower house votes to end president’s protection against prosecution

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Deputy Carrillo: step toward an ethical presidency.
Deputy Carrillo: step toward redefining the political system.

The lower house of Congress has passed a bill to end presidential immunity, opening the door for the Mexican head of state to be prosecuted for a number of crimes.

The constitutional reform was passed with 420 votes in favor, 29 against and five abstentions.

The reform establishes that the president can be tried for crimes such as corruption, bribery, abuse of power, intimidation, embezzlement and illicit enrichment, among others.

“With this reform to the constitution we end the impunity that currently protects the president of the republic, which shields the head of state from prosecution and sentencing during the administrative term,” said Morena Deputy Pablo Gómez.

The reform also exposes a sitting president to prosecution for organized crime, genocide, financing terrorist organizations, drug and human trafficking, sexual tourism, homicide, rape, kidnapping and armed robbery and assault.

“Any one of those conducts that have characterized presidential administrations for many terms, that’s what we’re changing,” said Gómez, adding that the reform fulfills a campaign promise by President López Obrador.

Miroslava Carrillo Martínez, chairwoman of the committee on constitutional issues, added that the initiative aims to eliminate the apparatus of impunity that has too long protected the country’s highest public servant.

She and other members of the president’s Morena party agreed that the passage of the reform was an important step toward creating an ethical presidency and completely redefining the Mexican political system.

The bill now goes before the Senate for its consideration.

Source: Infobae (sp)

Ex-Coahuila governor extradited to US for fraud, money laundering

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Ex-governor Torres will attempt to clear his name.
Ex-governor Torres will attempt to clear his name.

A former interim governor of Coahuila was extradited to the United States on Tuesday to face charges of fraud and money laundering.

Federal officials handed over Jorge Torres López to the U.S. Marshals Service in Toluca, México state, where he was flown to Corpus Christi, Texas.

Torres is accused of three financial crimes by U.S. authorities: money laundering, criminal association to commit bank fraud and criminal association to commit electronic remittance fraud, in the amount of around US $8.8 million.

The Federal District Court of the Southern District of Texas claims Torres used Texas banks to launder money stolen from the Coahuila state treasury in 2011. He was arrested in February 2019 in Puerto Vallarta.

Torres declined to apply for federal protection against the extradition in early October, thus clearing the way for his flight north.

One of his lawyers in San Antonio, Texas, Carlos A. Solís, told the Associated Press that Torres had decided to face the charges in the United States in order to clear his name.

In an interview with the newspaper Vanguardia, Torres said he hopes he will be remembered “as a governor that worked in an administration to create a highly-developed Coahuila, one that all of us citizens of Coahuila are enjoying.”

The state government declared its support for the case against Torres, stating that although it has not received any requests for collaboration from either Mexican or U.S. authorities, it is ready and willing to cooperate with the investigation.

Torres was scheduled to appear before a federal tribunal in Corpus Christi on Wednesday.

He was interim governor of Coahuila between January and November 2011 after Humberto Moreira — who has also been accused of corruption but never charged — resigned to become national president of the Institutional Revolutionary Party

Sources: Vanguardia (sp), Uno TV (sp)

Economic paralysis continued into third quarter with just 0.1% growth

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The primary sector grew 3.5% in the third quarter.
The primary sector was the best performer with 3.5% growth.

The economy grew by just 0.1% in the third quarter compared to the previous three-month period, according to preliminary data published Wednesday by the federal statistics agency Inegi.

The year-over-year figure was even worse: Mexico’s GDP shrank 0.4% in the July to September period compared to the third quarter of 2018.

It is the first time since the fourth quarter of 2009 that year-over-year economic data has shown a contraction.

The minuscule growth in the third quarter was 0.1% below the average forecast of analysts consulted by the news agency Bloomberg, and follows an economic contraction of 0.3% in the first quarter of 2019 and 0.0% growth in the second.

The primary sector, including agriculture, expanded 3.5% between July and September compared to the previous quarter but the industrial sector declined 0.1% and service sector activity was unchanged.

The economic contraction on an annual basis was due to a 1.8% decline in industrial activity and zero growth in the service industry. In the first two quarters of the year, the economy grew on an annual basis by 0.1% and 0.3% respectively.

The weak performance of the Mexican economy has led international organizations to downgrade repeatedly their 2019 growth forecasts.

The International Monetary Fund cut its outlook to 0.4% this month from 0.9% while the World Bank slashed its forecast to 0.6% from 1.7%.

The United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean this week reduced its growth prediction to just 0.2% from a previous forecast of 1%.

The Finance Secretariat and Bank of México have also cut their outlook for 2019 growth. The former sees an economic expansion in the range of 0.6% to 1.2% while the latter is predicting growth between 0.2% and 0.7%.

The weak economy is putting the brakes on job creation. Growth in job numbers on an annual basis has fallen to 1.9% from about 4% at the start of this year.

“The decline in the pace of job creation prompts consumers to act with a lot of caution,” economist Enrique Quintana wrote in a column for the newspaper El Financiero. “A lot of people see their employment with uncertainty and prefer not to fall into debt.”

Quintana said that economic stagnation will also create tax revenue problems for the federal government.

“Public revenue assumptions are calculated based on GDP growth of 2%. Secretariat of Finance models establish that for every percentage point of decline or gain in growth, there is a direct impact of about 35 billion pesos in [tax] collection,” he wrote.

If the economy declines, Quintana added, there is an increased possibility that ratings agencies will downgrade the credit rating of both the state oil company Pemex and Mexico.

Source: El Financiero (sp) 

UK court releases ex-governor’s wife on bail of US $193,000

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Macías was seen riding the London subway last year.
Macías was seen reading The New Yorker while riding the London subway last year.

A judge in the United Kingdom has granted bail to Karime Macías, wife of former Veracruz governor Javier Duarte, while she awaits a hearing over extradition to Mexico.

The Mexican government had 60 days from the date of her court appearance yesterday to formalize the extradition based on a warrant issued on May 28 for the diversion of 112 million pesos (US $5.8 million) from the treasury of Veracruz.

Federal authorities said the judge imposed preventative measures intended to guarantee her presence at the hearings in which the legitimacy of the extradition will be determined.

The news agency Notimex said those measures included bail of 150,000 pounds sterling (US $193,000) and remaining in London, where Macías has resided since April 2017 after the arrest of her husband in Guatemala.

No other details of the six-hour hearing have been released.

Mexican authorities said Macías was arrested Tuesday in London, but her attorneys said their client appeared before the judge on her own volition after a summons was issued.

Extradition proceedings were begun in May 2018 when a district court judge in Xalapa, Veracruz, issued an arrest warrant for Macías.

The extradition request was formalized on October 31, 2018, and in August the petition was ratified with a 42-page account of the charges against Macías.

The account charged that as head of the local DIF family services agency from 2010-2016, Macías ordered the signing of contracts with 33 “ghost companies” as a means of diverting funds.

In December 2018, the Secretariat of Finance revealed that it had lodged a complaint against Macías for tax evasion. According to the accusation, she failed to pay 2.4 million pesos (US $125,000) in taxes in 2011 and 2012, derived from credit card purchases of over 7.6 million pesos (US $397,000).

In September 2017, Javier Duarte was sentenced to nine years in prison for money laundering and involvement in organized crime.

Source: El Financiero (sp)

No marijuana law this week; Senate postpones debate on legalization

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Senate halts marijuana discussion.
Senate halts marijuana discussion.

The Senate has postponed debate on the legalization of marijuana, scuttling hopes that a regulatory framework could be in place by the end of the month.

The Political Coordination Board (Jucopo) of the upper house of Congress shut down debate on the legalization bill for a number of reasons.

Among them: a lack of agreement between lawmakers of the ruling Morena party, critical observations about the proposed bill by federal government departments and civil society organizations and pressure from companies that have tried to hasten the legislative process.

Issues related to the production, distribution, commercialization, possession and health risks of marijuana remain contentious and are hindering approval of the legalization bill in its current form, the newspaper El Universal reported.

The Senate health commission is working on an alternative bill that takes into account observations made by the secretariats of the Interior (Segob) and Health and the health regulatory agency Cofepris.

Segob argued that a legalization proposal presented by Interior Secretary Olga Sánchez was not considered by the justice commission in preparing the bill.

Non-government organizations including Mexico United Against Crime – a group that opposes the prohibition of drugs, La Discapacidad Nos Une (Disability Unites Us) and #RegulaciónporlaPaz (Regulation for Peace) claimed that the justice commission bill would benefit multinational companies because it stipulates that Mexican farmers must use foreign seeds to grow marijuana crops.

Regulation for Peace said the bill fails to explain the steps that police and the justice system will take to ensure that people are not harassed, extorted or prosecuted for marijuana possession, while Disability Unites Us said it could “restrict the right to free development of personality” of disabled people and their right to choose to use marijuana because it doesn’t override legislation that states they are incapable of making such a decision.

Mexico United Against Crime proposed six changes to the bill, including the elimination of the requirement to establish a registry of marijuana users and removal of the need to obtain a license to grow plants.

The Supreme Court, which published eight precedents in February on the recreational use of marijuana which determined that prohibition of the drug is unconstitutional, ordered lawmakers to legalize it by October 31.

However, with debate on legalization suspended this week, the Senate has asked the court for an extension.

marijuana joint
Better not light up yet.

Morena Senate leader and Jucopo president Ricardo Monreal said in an interview that debate will be suspended for a “moderate” amount of time.

He said representatives of pharmaceutical and marijuana companies among other lobbyists have approached lawmakers to urge them to legalize the drug promptly.

However, Monreal stressed that the Senate will “set the pace” with which the legislative process moves forward rather than having a timetable imposed on it.

“We’re going to set our own pace because we want to do things well. It’s a very important law,” he said.

Asked whether legalization of marijuana could be put off until next year, the senator responded:

“We’re going to set our own pace but anything could happen. What we want to do is cool down the [legislative] momentum a little bit . . . some people say that [legalizing marijuana] is the solution, that there will be resources, that external debt will be paid off, that jobs will be created, that the economy will get better but they’re magical solutions and I fear that won’t be the case. We’re going to take our time . . .”

In contrast to Monreal’s assertions, opposition senators said there has been no pressure from lobbyists to legalize marijuana.

Miguel Ángel Osorio Chong of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, Mauricio Kuri of the National Action Party and Miguel Ángel Mancera of the Democratic Revolution Party all rejected the claim by the Morena leader.

Osorio and Mancera both acknowledged that there is support for legalization and regulation of marijuana among members of civil society including family members of people who are ill and could benefit from medicinal use of the drug.

Coahuila Governor Manuel Riquelme urged caution, warning senators that organized crime could continue to control marijuana sales in a regulated market that could be worth as much as 50 billion pesos (US $2.6 billion) a year.

“ . . . It’s logical that, through third parties, [organized crime] will want to take control of marijuana sales . . .” he said.

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

600% growth in tourism overwhelms popular Baja beach

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Popular Balandra beach in Baja California Sur
Popular Balandra beach in Baja California Sur

A Baja California Sur beach has been overwhelmed by growth of more than 600% in visitor numbers over the past six years, prompting authorities to prepare a new management plan that includes charging people to access the protected coastal area.

Located 20 kilometers from the state capital La Paz, Balandra has been described as the most beautiful beach in Mexico, and it seems many would agree.

Its promotion by state tourism authorities and travel agencies as well as photos and videos of the beach on social media and popular blogs have caused visitor numbers to explode.

“When we started visiting and studying Balandra 30 years ago, there was no tourism,” the state director of the Natural Protected Areas Commission (Conanp), told the newspaper Milenio.

“. . . In 2013, we had 28,000 visitors . . . and we’ll end this year with 200,000 . . .” Benito Bermúdez Almada predicted, which would be a 614% increase.

The mushroom-shaped rock at Balandra 2.
The mushroom-shaped rock at Balandra 2.

He said that as many as 2,000 people a day visit the beach, four times the recommended maximum.

The massive tourism spike has placed a significant strain on Balandra, the main beach with its own parking lot; Balandra 2, where an iconic mushroom-shaped rock is located; and seven other beaches in the 2,500-hectare protected area.

Garbage left behind by tourists and the resulting contamination of the coastline and sea is the biggest problem the area faces.

According to Conanp, the municipal government collects an average of 12 tonnes of trash per week from Balandra, although a local tourism guide disputes the claim.

“The citizens who work here . . . are tasked with cleaning the area,” Roberto Lomelí said.

“. . . We don’t have trash cans on the beach because they attract flies; besides, rubbish collection services don’t come by regularly,” he added.

 

balandra beach

The presence of fecal matter in the water is also an increasing problem.

Bermúdez said when people go to the beach they take their children and that represents a possible increase in coliform bacteria.

The most recent testing showed that the water was still within recommended standards, he said, but “it’s close to the limit . . . We don’t want to let it get out of hand.”

To mitigate the problem, state and municipal authorities are planning to provide improved washrooms.

Other measures to provide better protection of the beaches will be an increase in the number of park rangers from three to 12, a ban on vendors from entering and a four-hour time limit for beachgoers. Also planned is an admission fee of 36 pesos per person per day to enter the Balandra protected area.

“. . . It’s not about denying entry to anyone; everyone will be able to go to Balandra but in an orderly way. We want to certify it as a clean beach,” he added, explaining that will only be possible through stricter regulation.

Source: Milenio (sp)