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Yucatán museum celebrates traditional clothing from all over Mexico

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The Yucatán museum dedicated to traditional dress.
The Valladolid museum dedicated to traditional dress.

Thanks to the efforts of an American woman with Mexican roots, the city of Valladolid, Yucatán, has a museum exclusively dedicated to the traditional clothing of the entire country, the Museo de Ropa Étnica de México (the Ethnic Clothing Museum of Mexico, or Murem).

The museum is the work of Tey Mariana Stiteler, who decided to retire in Mexico after a career at the Carnegie Museum of Art, and moved to Valladolid in 2009, wrote Necee Regis last week in The Washington Post.

Like so many foreigners living in Mexico, she was bitten by the handcrafts collecting bug, with a particular interest in traditional attire of all types. She began traveling all over Mexico to meet and talk to clothing makers.

Stiteler admits that when she started she bought items because she thought they were pretty. This changed on a trip to Chiapas where she bought some white-on-white embroidery and brocade weaving which is traditional in mountain villages. But she also noticed that it was not visible in all towns in the area. Here she realized that clothing preferences change, even in Mexico’s most traditional states, and concluded there was a need to preserve and document clothing styles.

The purpose of Stiteler’s museum is to highlight Mexico’s many cultures through their dress, along with preserving and documenting clothing styles in danger of being lost. Generally, creating a museum with its accompanying non-profit organization is a very slow process, but Stiteler managed to do it in six months, officially opening the doors in April of 2018.

On display are 90 complete outfits representing 25 ethnic groups from 16 states.
On display are 90 complete outfits representing 25 ethnic groups from 16 states.

Creating a museum was not in her plans when she moved to Valladolid.  “I was planning a one-time exhibition,” she said.

With such a large collection herself, someone commented that she should start a museum and she decided to take the plunge. The museum’s collection includes more than 90 complete outfits representing 25 ethnic groups from 16 states. It includes three types of garments: traditional (mestizo), indigenous and contemporary, organized by region. Only 65 are on view, along with individual hats, shoes, aprons and more.

When possible, similar garments from different time periods are displayed to show how elements remain or change over time such as neck openings, embroidery styles and the like. One change was the introduction of machine embroidery to the Yucatán peninsula. An antique foot-pedal Singer machine references its introduction to the area in the 1950s. Stiteler says that while most tourists are turned off by the idea of machine embroidery, well done pieces are truly works of art.

Even though there is still work to do with the collection, Murem has begun other activities. One is an educational program with public schools from preschool to secondary.

The documentation and promotion of the stories and culture behind the garments is seen as important. According to Stiteler, “It’s important to catalogue. I give it one or two generations until the daily use attached to traditions and rituals is gone. It will become a modernized version of something. The truth of it will be lost.”

Stiteler has supported the museum so far with her own funds, but the next goal is to become self-sustaining so government authorization to accept donations is expected soon. She does not want to take government money, but rather work with NGOs and other private entities.

In the next three years, Stiteler hopes to move the museum to a larger space. She says it needs at least four exhibition halls, along with storage areas and an office.

Source: The Washington Post (sp)

No damage reported after earthquake in Oaxaca

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The epicenter of a 5.2-magnitude earthquake Friday morning in Oaxaca.
The epicenter of a 5.2-magnitude earthquake Friday morning in Oaxaca.

Officials in Oaxaca report there was no damage after a 5.2-magnitude earthquake struck near the coast early Friday morning.

The epicenter of the quake, recorded at 4:47am, was 22 kilometers northeast of Puerto Escondido and had a depth of 10 kilometers.

After activating the seismic alert system, the state Civil Protection office began its monitoring protocol to search for damages in all regions of the state, confirming at 6:00am that despite having been felt in several parts of Oaxaca, the quake did not cause any damage.

The Interior Secretariat declared a state of emergency in the towns of San Pedro Comitancillo and Ciudad Ixtepec, in Oaxaca’s Isthmus of Tehuantepec region, after a 5.3-magnitude tremor struck the region on January 16.

The quake damaged buildings in nine municipalities and caused nervous breakdowns among more than 400 people. Many residents are still haunted by the memory of the September 2017 quake that cause extensive damage in the area.

A natural disaster declaration issued by Oaxaca Governor Alejandro Murat is currently being reviewed in order to request funds from the Natural Disaster Fund (Fonden) to attend to damages in seven municipalities.

A 5.9-magnitude quake struck on January 19 near Huajuapan de León, in the Mixteca region, but there was no damage reported.

Oaxaca has seen the majority of the earthquakes registered in the country so far this year. Of the 2,752 quakes recorded as of January 24, the epicenters of 1,421 were in Oaxaca.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Mexico’s Alondra de la Parra to conduct Vienna orchestra

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De la Parra will make her debut in Vienna on Monday.
De la Parra will make her debut in Vienna on Monday.

Mexican conductor Alondra de la Parra will conduct the Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra in the prestigious Wiener Koncerthaus concert hall on January 27.

“It is an honor for me to be able to present for the first time in my career in Vienna, a city full of music and home of my most beloved composers. It fills me with excitement to work with the [Austrian Broadcasting Company] in a program that celebrates innovation as the unifying thread of the composers that comprise it,” she said.

The 39-year-old de la Parra, born in the United States but raised in Mexico, is one of eight official cultural ambassadors of Mexico and the country’s first woman to have conducted over 100 orchestras in 20 countries around the world.

She began studying piano in Mexico City at the age of 7 and developed an interest in conducting at the age of 13.

She is currently music director of the Queensland (Australia) Symphony Orchestra, a position she has held since 2015.

De la Parra’s concert in Austria will be her debut in Vienna, a city with a rich cultural history, especially with respect to classical music.

Her repertoire will include the contemporary compositions of Mexico’s Arturo Márquez as well as works by Brazilian Héctor Villa-Lobos, Ukrainian Sergei Prokofiev and Austrian Georg Friedrich Haas.

Celebrated percussionist Christoph Sietzen, currently featured as the concert hall’s “Great Talent,” will be among the performers that de la Parra will lead.

Founded in 1969, the Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra (RSO Wien) is the orchestra of the Austrian Broadcasting Company (ORF) radio station and the only radio orchestra in the country.

Unlike the majority of other orchestras in Austria, the RSO Wien puts substantial focus on contemporary classical music. It is also committed to transmitting happiness through music, awakening interest in the classical genre and inspiring children and young people to play music.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Mexico registers improvement on corruption index, ranking 130th

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corruption perceptions index
The darker the color, the more corrupt the country.

Corruption is less of a problem in Mexico today than it was a year ago, according to the organization Transparency International.

Mexico rose eight places on the Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) 2019 to rank 130th out of 180 countries, sharing its position with Guinea, Laos, the Maldives, Mali, Myanmar and Togo.

Mexico’s score on the CPI scale in which 100 is very clean and 0 is highly corrupt improved one point to 29 but is still well short of the global and Americas average, which was 43 in both cases.

Still, the higher ranking is welcome news after Mexico plummeted 33 places during the six-year term of former president Enrique Peña Nieto.

Eduardo Bohórquez, executive director of the Mexican chapter of Transparency International, said the change of government in December 2018, the creation of a legally autonomous federal Attorney General’s Office and the progress made in the implementation of the National Anti-Corruption System all contributed to Mexico’s improved score and resulting rise in the rankings.

However, the main factor was the anti-corruption work of the government’s Financial Intelligence Unit (UIF), he said.

Headed by Santiago Nieto, the UIF has taken a leading role in the fight against corruption initiated by the administration of President López Obrador, including investigations into high-profile figures of the former government such as ex-cabinet secretary Rosario Robles and former Pemex chief Emilio Lozoya.

Celebrating the improvement in the rankings on Thursday, Public Administration Secretary Irma Sandoval declared that the federal government is combating corruption in a “structural way.”

She said the scourge reached an “inflection point” in the first year of López Obrador’s rule and predicted that Mexico’s CPI ranking will continue to rise.

Sandoval noted that Transparency International only considered anti-corruption measures implemented by the government up until August and therefore didn’t take into account “public policies of great importance in our country such as the Republican Austerity Law that incorporates Transparency International recommendations.”

Later Thursday, Security Secretary Alfonso Durazo also made reference to Mexico’s improved standing.

“Today we recovered eight places and due to the great commitment of President López Obrador, we’re sure that we’ll continue to make progress . . . until we’ve regained a country and a government that has completely done away with corruption,” he said.

There is certainly a lot of room for improvement: Mexico was the lowest ranked among the 36 OECD countries and lagged 58 points behind Denmark and New Zealand, which both ranked first with 87 points. Finland ranked third followed by Singapore, Sweden and Switzerland, which shared fourth place.

In the Americas, Mexico ranked below the majority of the 32 countries assessed including Canada (12th), Uruguay (21st), the United States (23rd), Chile (26th), Costa Rica (44th), Ecuador (93rd), Brazil (106th) and El Salvador (113th).

The lowest ranked country in the Americas was Venezuela (173rd), while Somalia ranked dead last ahead of South Sudan, Syria and Yemen.

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

Security concerns trigger violent protest in Amozoc, Puebla

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A vehicle burns during Thursday's protest in Amozoc.
A vehicle burns during Thursday's protest in Amozoc.

Angry residents of Amozoc, Puebla, clashed with security forces and burned vehicles Thursday in protest against insecurity and a shortage of basic services.

The conflict began when a group of citizens used semitrailers, tanker trucks and taxis to block the Puebla-Tehuacán highway to draw attention to their demand that Mayor Mario de la Rosa Romero be removed from office.

The blockade ended around 2:00pm thanks to dialogue between officials and the protesters, but at the same time another group of citizens attempted to storm the municipal palace.

Despite security forces using tear gas and firing their weapons into the air to disperse the angry crowd, people continued to demand the removal of de la Rosa and threw rocks at the National Guard and state police officers, forcing them to take cover in a nearby building.

They also burned a police patrol car and a government vehicle.

After a police officer told protesters that they had reached an agreement on the highway they refrained from further action while awaiting the arrival of a state official to continue talks.

No arrests were made nor did Mayor de la Rosa make an appearance.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Authorities seek to salvage 68,000 abandoned houses in Jalisco

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The Lomas del Mirador housing project was abandoned 10 years ago.
The Lomas del Mirador housing project was abandoned 10 years ago.

A municipality in the metropolitan area of Guadalajara has signed an agreement with the federal government to salvage 68,000 abandoned homes.

Authorities in Tlajomulco de Zúñiga, Jalisco, reached the deal with the National Workers Housing Fund (Infonavit) and the Secretariat of Urban Development and Urban Planning.

Authorities plan to sell the finished homes either to individual buyers or in bulk to companies that would then seek buyers for the properties.

Mayor Salvador Zamora told the newspaper Milenio that if all 68,000 homes are occupied, 100 million pesos (US$5.3 million) in property taxes will flow into the municipal coffers each year. The money would help pay for basic services that the city government provides to residential estates that lack water and other essentials.

The first stage of the rehabilitation project will focus on the incomplete Lomas del Mirador housing estate, which was abandoned more than a decade ago.

Milenio reported that authorities in Tlajomulco are also seeking an agreement with Infonavit in order to secure a loan to purchase 1,000 of the rehabilitated homes to be used as public housing.

The municipality has received 500 requests for such housing in recent months but the applicants remain on a waiting list because there are no properties available.

Source: Milenio (sp) 

400-strong walk for truth, justice and peace sets out from Cuernavaca

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Marchers for peace en route to Mexico City.
Marchers for peace en route to Mexico City.

More than 400 people left Cuernavaca, Morelos, on Thursday morning to walk and bus to Mexico City while calling for peace and a change to the federal government’s security and law enforcement strategy.

Led by poet and anti-violence activist Javier Sicilia, the “Walk for Truth, Justice and Peace” departed the Dove of Peace monument in the Morelos capital at 9:30am.

Accompanied by family members of missing people and members of Mexican-American Mormon families who lost nine members to an attack in Sonora in November, Sicilia said that he was hopeful that President López Obrador would listen to their message.

“With our walk and our words, we’re calling on him to unite the nation and to build with all of us a solid state policy based on truth and justice,” he said.

Sicilia stressed that he wanted the president to understand that the participants in the march are not his enemies, “but rather enemies of violence.”

However, announcing the peace walk at the start of this month, the activist said that he and others believed that the government’s peace and justice policy is “wrong.”

He claimed today that the government and organized crime remain in cahoots although López Obrador claims that his administration has put an end to the complicity seen in the past.

“The victims, the blood, the horror, the misery, the streets taken by organized crime, the state taken and co-opted by organized crime is not a show, it’s the country’s reality,” Sicilia said.

Julian LeBarón, also an outspoken anti-violence activist, said that he hoped the walk to Mexico City would serve as an “embryo” – in other words grow into a larger movement for peace.

He and other members of the LeBarón and Miller families plan to walk one kilometer of the journey barefoot to pay homage to Mackenzie, a 9-year-old girl who survived the November 4 ambush that killed three women and six children and walked miles without shoes to look for help.

Jay Ray, who lost his daughter and two grandsons in the attack, said that he and other members of his family were taking part in the walk to encourage other people to join the movement for peace and to call for an end for impunity.

The participants were expected to reach a town in the Morelos municipality of Huitzilac on Friday before returning to Cuernavaca by bus to spend the night.

They will set out from Tres Marías on Friday morning to arrive in southern Mexico City in the afternoon. The peace activists will participate in an event at the Estela de Luz monument outside Chapultepec Park on Saturday, while on Sunday they will complete their walk with a march to the National Palace in the capital’s historic center.

Sicilia, who lost his son to violence, also organized a peace march in 2011 when former president Felipe Calderón was in office.

Soon after he took office in 2006, Calderón launched a militarized war on drug cartels that was continued by his successor, Enrique Peña Nieto. Mexico’s homicide rate skyrocketed as the armed forces engaged in violent clashes with criminal groups.

López Obrador has pledged to bring peace to Mexico by addressing the root causes of violence rather than through the use of force but is coming under increasing pressure to change his strategy amid high levels of ongoing violence.

Statistics published Monday showed that 2019 was Mexico’s most violent year on record, with more than 34,000 homicides.

Source: Milenio (sp), Reforma (sp), La Jornada (sp), Infobae (sp) 

Morena lawmakers silence senior party member at odds on migrants’ policy

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Muñoz Ledo accuses party of fearing the truth.
Muñoz Ledo accuses party of fearing the truth.

Lawmakers with the ruling Morena party prevented one of the party’s senior members from speaking out against the government’s migration policy at a Congress session on Wednesday.

Porfirio Muñoz Ledo asked the president of the Senate to be included on a list of speakers at a session of the Permanent Commission of Congress at which National Human Rights Commission Chief Rosario Piedra Ibarra presented her annual report.

Morena lawmaker Mónica Fernández told Muñoz, an 86-year-old deputy who co-founded the left-wing Democratic Revolution Party and served as a cabinet secretary in the 1970s, that the speaking schedule for the session was approved prior to the session but agreed to put his request to a vote.

Opposition lawmakers voted in favor of the veteran politician being given the opportunity to speak but Morena party members rejected Muñoz’s request.

The deputy countered that he had spoken with Piedra Ibarra and that she agreed that he should be allowed to present evidence of what he called the “savage repression against migrants” when the National Guard used tear gas and batons on Monday to repel a large number of Central Americans.

Fernández responded that “the president of the National Human Rights Commission is not in charge of this Permanent Commission,” adding “things are decided here by the plenary of the commission . . . and they’ve voted not to break the rules that were approved.”

At that point, opposition lawmakers interjected with shouts of “let Porfirio speak!” and “no to censorship!” the newspaper El Universal reported.

Fernández asserted that it wasn’t a matter of censorship but rather compliance with the rules and schedule that were set for the Permanent Commission session.

“There’s no censorship, you agreed to the rules, you agreed to the times [that were set] . . .The majority has voted to respect the rules that were approved . . .” she said.

Muñoz later told reporters that by preventing him from speaking, his Morena party colleagues had succeeded in taking Mexico back “20 or 30 years” to the times of authoritarian rule by the Institutional Revolutionary Party.

“I don’t know where the instruction came from, it was very painful to see my friends voting so aggressively [against me] . . .What happened here is that there was fear of the truth . . .” he said.

The lawmaker explained that his intention was to show footage of children crying as they and their parents were confronted by members of the National Guard on the Mexican side of the Suchiate River.

Muñoz claimed that the guardsmen beat migrants up, contradicting President López Obrador who said that they acted with constraint even after they came under attack with sticks and stones.

He stressed that the increased enforcement against migrants is to appease the United States, claiming that the government could have responded differently to U.S. President Donald Trump’s threat to imposes tariffs on Mexican imports if it didn’t do more to halt arrivals to Mexico’s northern border.

Muñoz told El Universal on Wednesday night that he would seek a meeting with López Obrador (Morena’s founder) about migration policy and his silencing in the Congress, asserting that he and the president “have agreed on everything” in the past and have a “telepathic connection.”

The deputy added that his Morena party colleagues “profoundly disappointed” him and caused him “immense pain” by preventing him from speaking.

“They’re living in panic, they all voted against me mechanically, it’s incredible,” Muñoz said.

“. . . What happened today makes me think . . .that we’re not a democratic party. What are they afraid of?”

Source: El Universal (sp) 

Feds to invest 9.7 billion pesos in Oaxaca port upgrade

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The Salina Cruz refinery in Oaxaca.
The Salina Cruz refinery in Oaxaca.

The petroleum and commercial port at Salina Cruz, Oaxaca, will receive a 9.7-billion-peso (US $515-million) upgrade after 40 years of operating with “temporary” installations.

A cost-benefit analysis conducted by the Secretariat of Communications and Transportation (SCT) found that the project will help transport fuel to all of Mexico’s Pacific coast more efficiently, more affordably and with less risk than the current “provisional” system.

“The port operations in these preliminary and slightly precarious conditions have been more costly and less efficient, and with heightened risks both to the environment and the workers involved,” says the study.

The document emphasizes that Salina Cruz is a strategic point for the logistic and commercial plans that the state oil company Pemex has for the coming years related to the interoceanic corridor the federal government is developing in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec.

Pemex’s maritime operations are most important along the country’s Pacific Coast, and Salina Cruz supplies a large part of the gasoline, diesel, jet fuel and fuel oil consumed on that coast.

The SCT report said that with the increase of oil production, as well as with the supply of fuel from the refineries at Salina Cruz, Minatitlán, Veracrúz, and the one currently under construction at Dos Bocas, Tabasco, the current loading-unloading system will need to be improved significantly.

The project is expected to bring new business opportunities to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec through the creation of  a new export route for crude oil and natural gas, such as one from the United States to Asia.

“Negotiations are underway for the provision of a transisthmus transportation service from the Laguna de Pajaritos Port [in Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz] to Salina Cruz via a pipeline,” reads the SCT report.

“This route could compete with the current one which consists of going around the entire American continent or the African continent in large ships.”

The analysis foresees quantifiable benefits of 12.4 billion pesos (US $660 million) resulting from reductions in tanker delays, investments and operation and maintenance costs, as well as from revenue generated by tariffs and increased capacity.

“The abandonment of Pemex by past administrations was reflected in the lack of interest in investments that did not have large rates of return such as the extraction of crude oil, regardless of the fact that [such investments] were necessary to maintain balance, safety and adequate efficiency levels in the entire production chain,” says the analysis.

The primary risk the SCT sees for the project is that Pemex will not be able to make the necessary investments for storage, pipelines and pumps.

It also fears that the oil terminal will not be able to supply the total volume of petroleum products demanded by the Pacific coast of Mexico due to lack of product.

The planned upgrade includes the construction of a missing section of breakwaters and a petroleum loading and unloading dock, among other work.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Hospital chief to be investigated over cancer drug shortage: AMLO

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Police scuffle with parents protesting a shortage of cancer drugs.
Police scuffle with parents protesting a shortage of cancer drugs.

The director of the Federico Gómez Children’s Hospital in Mexico City will be investigated over a long-running cancer drug shortage, President López Obrador said on Thursday.

Speaking at his morning news conference, López Obrador said that there is a “hypothesis” that Jaime Nieto Zermeño and other high-ranking hospital officials are responsible for the shortfalls that have plagued the facility since last year.

“The hypothesis is that they’re causing this chaos due to the contracts they have with the company PiSA, which used to supply [the hospital],” he said.

“. . . They want to continue having control of these kinds of medicines [cancer drugs], that’s why the SFP [Secretariat of Public Administration] is going to open an investigation against the director of the Children’s Hospital.”

The federal government implemented a new centralized and consolidated purchasing model last year that it said would allow medicines to be obtained at cheaper prices, but López Obrador claimed that there is still “complicity” between pharmaceutical companies and hospital directors doing “juicy business” with public money.

“. . . This is the case with the medicines for children with cancer, just one company was supplying and unfortunately, that’s why all this is happening,” he said.

López Obrador’s remarks came a day after parents of young cancer victims protested against the shortage of medicines outside the Federico Gómez hospital and at the Mexico City airport.

Parents blocked access to Terminal 1 for more than four hours Wednesday afternoon and clashed with police who attempted to move them on.

“The police hit us, pulled our hair and don’t bother to see that we have children with us,” one mother told the newspaper Milenio.

“It’s as if we were a terrible threat to the government,” Israel Rivas said in a radio interview.

In turn, the Mexico City Secretariat of Citizens Security said in a statement that the protesters had acted aggressively toward police.

Hospital director Nieto and others accused of doing 'juicy business' with drug contracts.
Hospital director Nieto and others accused of doing ‘juicy business’ with drug contracts.

The parents, who also protested at the airport in August last year,  said they decided to demonstrate on Wednesday because they have not received a written response from the government to their questions about the cancer drug shortages.

Later Wednesday, the director of the National Institute of Health for Well-Being (Insabi), a newly created public health department, told the government news agency Notimex that the Federico Gómez hospital now has an adequate supply of cancer medications including vincristine, a chemotherapy drug.

“The medicine is in the hospital . . . There’s no need for them to adopt this attitude,” said Juan Antonio Ferrer, referring to the airport protest.

Hospital director Nieto echoed Ferrer’s statement, saying the hospital had sufficient supplies for one month. He attributed the shortage to problems on the part of a distributor and that legal action was being taken against it.

He denied having any contact with the pharmaceutical company PiSA.

Insabi’s national coordinator for medicine supply said there is currently scant global production of some cancer drugs but rejected any claim that there was a crisis in Mexico.

There is sufficient supply of vincristine, methotrexate and ciprofloxacin, said Alejandro Calderón Alipi, adding that “the priority is taking care of the children.”

Similarly, López Obrador pledged that “there will never be a shortage of medicines, even if we have to buy them in other countries of the world.”

“. . . We have enough funds . . . so that supply is not lacking. The parents wanted a statement from the president about the guarantee of supply, I’ll express it now . . .the president undertakes that medicines for children will not be lacking.”

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