Friday, April 25, 2025

1 person dead after armed civilians attack Colima politician’s home

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Colima's former tourism secretary addresses a press conference yesterday.
Colima's former tourism secretary addresses a press conference yesterday.

The tourism secretary of Colima resigned yesterday two days after a man was killed in his home during an attack perpetrated by armed civilians.

Efraín Angulo Rodríguez appeared at a press conference with a badly bruised face and said he was leaving his position to concentrate on initiating legal action against those responsible for the crime, and didn’t want the case to be used against the state government.

Angulo said that at about 7:00pm Monday a dozen armed men “looking for money and drugs” entered his Manzanillo home where he was hosting a party for 10 male guests.

“A large number of unknown individuals burst into [my home] with an astonishing quantity of weapons. They tied us up, undressed us, beat us and took multiple photographs and videos of us,” he said.

Angulo added that he and the other guests were tortured for at least three hours and that one of them was taken to a room and strangled to death.

He said he didn’t personally know the man who was killed, explaining that he was a friend of a friend.

“While they were murdering him, two of the guests at my home managed to untie themselves and confront the criminals . . .” the former official said.

One of the armed men shot at the guests, wounding one, before fleeing in a state government vehicle with money and objects of value they removed from Angulo’s home.

Naked photos of the former secretary and his house guests appeared on social media yesterday after which some people claimed that the men were participating in a gay orgy.

Angulo described the “lies” and “homophobic comments” that have surfaced on social media as “regrettable.”

He said that people who made such comments and “insensitive taunts” don’t have any idea of the stress of being a victim of a violent and serious crime.

Angulo also said that he and the other guests had been revictimized by people who said that the crimes committed against them were the result of “their habits, their sexual preferences, their way of dressing and even, now, their friendships.”

He added that it was “categorically false” that the party had been “out of control” because “there was no party.”

Angulo said all of the guests have filed criminal complaints and demanded that the state attorney general’s office locate and arrest those responsible for the attack.

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

López Obrador rejects senators’ initiative to control ratings agencies

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ratings agencies

President López Obrador and the Morena party’s leader in the Senate said today there will be no attempt by the government to control the operations of ratings agencies in Mexico.

“We are open to international scrutiny in our politics and our economy. Mexico is a free country and we do not have anything to hide; we are in favor of transparency. What the ratings agencies do is their job and we respect that — we are not going to limit their ability to function.”

Senator Ricardo Monreal also told reporters that the measure would not be presented and that fellow Morena Senator Salomón Jara, who argued in its favor yesterday, had accepted the decision.

However, Jara told reporters later that he was going ahead with it. “We have rights as senators to present our own initiatives, our proposals.”

The initiative would give the National Banking and Securities Commission (CNBV) authority to revoke ratings agencies’ permission to operate “when evaluations or qualifications do not adhere to the principles of independence, objectivity, rigor, authenticity, truth, integrity and transparency or attack in a deliberate manner the financial stability of the markets or a business . . . .”

It was triggered by Standard & Poor’s credit rating outlook downgrade on Monday for Pemex, the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) and many businesses and financial institutions, and another downgrade of Mexico’s credit outlook last Friday.

The president suggested that the agencies take corruption into account as an important factor in the their ratings.

“I believe it would be a good idea for the ratings to include the corruption levels of governments around the world in their evaluations because it’s a variable that distorts everything. A country could have the best economic model comparatively, but if corruption is allowed to reign unchecked in a country, when everything is said and done the economy will not grow and it will trigger a financial crisis.”

He said he believed that his administration’s anti-corruption measures would generate large savings in the economy over the long term as well as restore confidence for investors, regardless of ratings agencies’ scores.

Source: El Financiero (sp), Publimetro (sp)

Search for Santa Rosa cartel boss goes underground; luxury home seized

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The property believed to be the home of the Guanajuato cartel leader.
The property believed to be the home of the Guanajuato cartel leader.

The search for the suspected leader of the Santa Rosa de Lima Cartel has gone underground: authorities in Guanajuato have discovered escape tunnels allegedly used by the fuel theft capo known as “El Marro.”

Guanajuato Attorney General Carlos Zamarripa Aguirre told a press conference last night that the tunnels were found during searches of properties in Villagrán, the municipality where the cartel is based and José Antonio Yépez Ortiz was thought to be in hiding.

Zamarripa said the tunnels may be connected to other properties in the community of Santa Rosa de Lima where cartel members are known to have met, including one believed to be owned by “El Marro” Yépez.

Asked whether the criminal boss was in the town located east of Salamanca, the attorney general didn’t rule it out.

However, this morning Federal Security Secretary Alfonso Durazo said that Yépez and other cartel leaders had left Villagrán. He added that authorities know where they are and that they would be captured soon.

El Marro: officials predict he will be captured soon.
El Marro: officials predict he will be captured soon.

Since early Monday morning, federal and state security forces have been carrying out an operation against the Santa Rosa Cartel, a gang of fuel thieves believed to be behind much of the violence that made Guanajuato Mexico’s most violent state last year.

Residents have responded to the operation by setting up fiery blockades on highways to repel the state and Federal Police and the military.

Zamarripa said that seven people have been arrested during the operation including one who is believed to have participated in the execution of five people in a tire shop in the municipality of Valle de Santiago. A video of the multi-homicide was posted online, allegedly by the Santa Rosa Cartel.

Yépez’s sister-in-law and her husband, a Federal Police officer, were also among those arrested.

The attorney general said that 31 vehicles have been seized and that authorities have collected a range of evidence that will assist them in their investigations.

Federal Police also searched and secured a large and luxurious property in Santa Rosa de Lima which allegedly belongs to Yépez.

Aquí vivía “El Marro”, líder del huachicol

The approximately 1,000-square-meter property features extensive gardens, a large swimming pool and two stone lion statues. The home is protected by high walls topped with barbed wire.

A video published by the newspaper Milenio shows clothes strewn in the house’s four bedrooms and open drawers, seemingly indicating that the property was abandoned suddenly.

A tanker truck and a dump truck were also found and Milenio said there is a tapped petroleum pipeline that runs through the property.

Many if not most residents of Santa Rosa de Lima, a town with a population of just over 1,000, are believed to be complicit with El Marro’s fuel theft gang.

Attorney General Zamarripa reiterated yesterday that the mayor and municipal police force of Villagrán are also under investigation for failing to support the operation against the cartel.

Mayor Juan Lara Mendoza rejects allegations that he is in cahoots with the Santa Lima criminal organization and denies knowing El Marro.

However, a Federal Police report seen by the newspaper El Universal says that Lara’s brother and three of his nephews are part of Yépez’s inner circle.

According to the report, the four men are among the chief operators of the Santa Rosa de Lima Cartel, which extracts fuel from Pemex pipelines that run through the municipalities of León, Irapuato, Salamanca, Celaya, Apaseo el Grande and Apaseo el Alto.

Guanajuato security official Sophia Huett López said that the state attorney general’s office is investigating whether the Villagrán municipal police force failed to respond to a call for backup on Monday because of negligence, fear or criminal complicity.

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

64% of Mexico City subway system’s surveillance cameras don’t work

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Metro chief Serranía.
Metro chief Serranía.

“Looting” by previous Mexico City governments in the management of the Metro subway system has been blamed for a number of deficiencies, including surveillance cameras that don’t work.

The director general of the system said yesterday a whopping 64% of the cameras are not functional on a transit system with a worsening reputation for insecurity.

Florencia Serranía Soto said Metro staff have found camera control centers that are simply empty shells.

While there are 3,365 cameras installed throughout the subway, only 1,208 are actually functional.

In most cases, the cameras are damaged and are so old that no spare parts are available and must be replaced.

Serranía said 509 new cameras will be purchased this year and installed in 22 subway stations identified as critical.

Three months after taking office, the subway system’s chief explained that several other problems have been identified, most of them caused by a lack of maintenance, omissions and looting.

“We are not going after [former government] officials, we are going after more trains. We don’t have time for a witch hunt,” said Serranía, adding that her main goal is to put more cars on the rails, make the whole system more efficient and work toward its modernization.

“Improvised and unsupervised suppliers were sent here for years; today, those interested in joining the modernization process will be held accountable, and technical capacity, quality and prices will be demanded from them.”

She said the subway system’s budget “has always been there,” and that past administrations could have done much more. Serranía sees her mission as eliminating corruption in order to have a system that operates under optimal conditions.

“We are finishing a 50-year program for the Metro. The system hit rock bottom in terms of abandonment, so we’re going to kickstart a true modernization program that will benefit users,” she said.

This is not the first time Serranía has been at the helm of the subway. She held the same position from 2000 to 2005 when President López Obrador was mayor.

A survey last month found 37% of Metro users had been victims of theft, while 60% said insecurity has increased. Dozens of accounts by women who were victims of kidnapping attempts earlier this year triggered the announcement of a new security strategy.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Just 22 vaquita porpoises remain and illegal gillnets could soon wipe them out

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A vaquita porpoise: time is running out.
A vaquita porpoise: time is running out.

Only 22 vaquita marina porpoises remain in the Gulf of California, a biology professor said yesterday, warning that the species could become extinct within months.

Jorge Urbán Ramírez, a professor at the Autonomous University of Baja California Sur, said that scientists from the International Committee for the Recovery of the Vaquita (CIRVA) will release an official report this weekend about the vaquita population.

The 22 vaquitas were heard over a network of acoustic monitors at the end of the summer, he said.

The remaining population of the species, which is endemic to the northern part of the gulf, is higher than many expected but Urbán warned on Twitter that the vaquita is still highly vulnerable to extinction.

“. . . Unless actions are taken the vaquita could be lost in the coming months or years . . .” he wrote.

The primary threat to the vaquita population are gillnets that are used to catch totoaba, a protected fish whose swim bladders are considered a delicacy in China and yield high prices.

The world’s smallest porpoises often become entangled in the nets and drown.

Although gillnets are banned in the upper gulf, fishermen continue to use them and with the peak of the totoaba season still to come in May, there are fears that the vaquita could be wiped out this spring.

However, the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society says it is doing all it can to prevent that from happening.

Every night, volunteer crew members go out on ships operated by the environmental group to search for and remove hidden gillnets.

But fishermen, for obvious reasons, haven’t welcomed their presence and twice in the last month the Sea Shepherd ship Farley Mowat has been attacked with rocks and firebombs.

“If we stop operations, the vaquita will go extinct,” Sea Shepherd first mate Jack Hutton told the Associated Press.

“. . . If we stop removing them [the gillnets] then there is no hope for the vaquita . . . We know we are going to keep getting attacked. We know we are risking out lives, but if we don’t the vaquita has no chance,” he said.

Marines and Federal Police are also contributing to the efforts to protect the vaquita and fired rubber bullets from the Farley Mowat during the recent attacks.

But according to Richard Ladkani, a filmmaker who made a documentary about the plight of the vaquitas, the marines have been intimidated by fishermen.

While shooting his film – Sea of Shadows – Ladkani accompanied the navy on nighttime patrols that included high-speed chases in which fishermen succeeded on occasions in ramming into naval boats and disabling their engines.

“Why is the navy not using force?” he questioned. “We were on 10 chases and every time the pangas [fishing boats] got away.

Ladkani also offered a theory about why fishermen are becoming so violent and desperate.

He said that because the Sea Shepherd has been successful in removing gillnets, fishermen are going into debt borrowing money from Chinese and Mexican totoaba traffickers to buy new ones at around US $3,000 each.

“This is a vicious circle where people get more indebted,” Ladkani said.

“This one fisherman wound up owing the cartels $54,000 for 18 nets. He tried to get out, he finally came out and said there is no way I can repay the cartel. He was murdered.”

Sunshine Rodríguez, a leader of fishermen in the Baja California town of San Felipe, said that it is a myth that fishermen are getting rich selling totoaba swim bladders.

“I know people who are dedicated 100% to that [totoaba] business and don’t even have $10 to put gas in the tank of their panga,” he said. The Chinese are making the profit, that I can tell you.”

Rodríguez said a fisherman can currently sell a half-kilogram totoaba swim bladder for about US $400 but traffickers are cutting the prices they pay and will continue to do so because they know that the fishermen have no other options to make a living.

Government payments meant to compensate fishermen for lost income as a result of the ban on gillnets haven’t been made in three months, he said.

In compensation payments that the government has made as part of the Endangered Species Conservation Program (Procer), the Federal Auditor’s Office (ASF) has detected a range of irregularities.

The ASF said in a report that 220,000 pesos (US $11,300) had gone to deceased persons and 96,000 pesos to fishermen who don’t live in the upper Gulf of California area.

More than 2.4 million pesos (US $123,000) went to people who don’t have valid fishing licenses and 744,000 pesos was paid to fishermen who didn’t provide documentation that proved their address. A further 3.7 million pesos was spent on duplicate payments, the ASF found.

“This multi-million-peso support has been misused through non-transparent welfare policies,” said Alejandro Olivera, Mexico representative for the Center for Biological Diversity.

“Those who really go out to fish” have received little or no financial support, he added.

With time seemingly running out for the vaquita marina, more than 50 environmental and conservation groups wrote to federal Environment Secretary Josefa González Blanco and Agriculture Secretary Víctor Villalobos last month to urge them to strengthen government programs to protect the species.

“. . . If conservation measures aren’t taken, the law isn’t applied and the decline [in vaquita numbers] continues at its current pace, it’s probable that the vaquita will become extinct during your [six-year] administration,” the groups said.

Ladkani, the filmmaker, was even more pessimistic.

“When it’s totoaba season at the end of May, they may have killed everything by then.”

Source: Milenio (sp), Associated Press (en), Infobae (sp) 

Puebla mine dispute goes to court; decision could make legal history

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The Puebla mine at the center of a court case.
The Puebla mine at the center of a court case.

Indigenous residents of a town in Puebla hope to make legal history this month in a court case against the federal government that involves a Canadian mining company.

A non-governmental organization has filed a complaint on behalf of some residents of Tecoltemi, a Nahua community located in Puebla’s sierra region, against the Secretariat of the Economy (SE), arguing that local water sources have been contaminated by exploration activity on gold and silver deposits.

The case is related to concessions held by Minera Gorrión, a Mexican subsidiary of Canada’s Almaden Minerals.

A lawyer for the complainants told the news agency Reuters that for the first time in Mexico a court will rule whether the federal Mining Law – which prioritizes mining over other kinds of land use – is constitutional.

Itzel Silva of the Fundar Center for Analysis and Research said that previous cases have only recognized indigenous people’s right to consultation before a mining project begins.

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“That’s why this case is so important,” she said. Silva added that a ruling in favor of the residents could set a legal precedent for other cases in which complainants are attempting to overturn the law prioritizing mining activities over other land use.

The case will be heard at a federal court in Puebla.

Federal officials didn’t respond to requests for comment on the case while a spokesman for Minera Gorrión told Reuters that the company has abided by all the rules set by environmental regulators.

The dispute dates back to 2003 when Minera Gavilan, another Mexican subsidiary of Almaden Minerals, was awarded a 27,000-acre parcel of land in Puebla. In 2009, the company was granted a concession for another site of about 7,400 acres.

Both sites, which encroach on land claimed by the Tecoltemi residents, were later transferred to Minera Gorrión.

Víctor Martínez Lobato, an indigenous leader, said that residents were not consulted about the two concessions.

A protest against the mine two years ago.
A protest against the mine two years ago.

“The effects [of mining] on the air, on the water, worry us,” he said.

The Fundar Center sued the Economy Secretariat in 2015 on behalf of the residents and the following year, Minera Gorrión decided to return about 17,000 acres of land to the Mexican government.

The current case has divided Tecoltemi because some residents work for the mining company.

“Employment . . . dictates who is in favor or against the mine,” said Diana Pérez, a lawyer at the Mexican Institute for Community Development.

Those fighting against Minera Gorrión have a 2016 report by PODER, a citizens’ group, to support their claim that water has been contaminated.

“The company carried out water monitoring without due authorizations and made drill holes deeper than allowed, affecting the water table,” said PODER researcher Isabel Clavijo.

Minera Gorrión rejected the reports’ findings and has emphasized the economic benefits that its activities bring to Ixtacamaxtitlan, the municipality in which Tecoltemi is located.

Source: Reuters (en) 

Judge stops controversial fertilizer plant over environmental concerns

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Site of the Sinaloa fertilizer plant.
Site of the Sinaloa fertilizer plant.

A federal judge has ordered that construction of a US $5-billion fertilizer plant in Topolobampo, Sinaloa, must stop due to environmental concerns.

José Francisco Pérez Mier, chief judge at a federal court in Los Mochis, issued a definitive suspension order that was sought by representatives of the El Muellecito ejido (community land), who argued that the 202-hectare plant would cause irreparable damage to the ecosystem of the Santa María, Topolobampo and Ohuira lagoons.

Construction of the plant began in August last year just over a year after the federal Environmental Protection Agency (Profepa) reversed an earlier ruling to shut it down.

In its first stage, the plant was expected to produce 770,000 tonnes of ammonia and 700,000 tonnes of urea per year for state and national markets.

The investment was to come from the Swiss-German engineering, procurement and construction group Proman AG and its Mexican subsidiary, Gas y Petroquímica de Occidente.

The ejido representatives and others, including an organization called Citizen Vigilantes for Transparency in Sinaloa, opposed the plant on the grounds that it would discharge yet more contaminants into the lagoons that are already polluted by discharges from Pemex and Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) plants.

Last month, tourism operators in Topolobampo also expressed concern about the destruction of mangroves in the area where the fertilizer plant was being built and urged authorities to investigate.

In the ruling handed down yesterday, Pérez highlighted the biological and ecological importance of the three lagoons, which together form a wetlands system that has been declared a Ramsar site, a World Heritage Site and a UNESCO biosphere reserve.

Under no circumstance can an industrial development project be permitted to negatively impact on such an important ecosystem, the judge said.

Pérez pointed out that the operation of the plant would have extracted 2,000 cubic meters of water per hour from a popular shrimp breeding area, which had the potential to cause an annual loss of more than 500 tonnes of the crustacean.

Sea lions, bottlenose dolphins, sea turtles, crabs, fish and shrimp are among the marine wildlife that live permanently in the three coastal lagoons while at least 100,000 sea birds nest in the area.

Among the species that frequent the wetlands are the American oystercatcher, the snowy plover and the northern shoveler and northern pintail ducks.

Source: Milenio (sp), Debate (sp) 

Morena senators act against ratings agencies; PAN senator calls it ‘bloody stupid’

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Senator Jara
Senator Jara is proposing that rating agencies be denied permission to operate if they don't meet certain standards.

Ruling party senators are not just unhappy about bad credit ratings they appear to see them as a deliberate attack on financial stability, and today they took a stand.

Morena party Senator Salomón Jara announced a legislative amendment that would give the National Banking and Securities Commission (CNBV) the authority to revoke a rating agency’s authorization to operate.

The change would give the CNBV “the faculty and the obligation” to revoke an agency’s permission to operate “when evaluations or qualifications do not adhere to the principles of independence, objectivity, rigor, authenticity, truth, integrity and transparency or attack in a deliberate manner the financial stability of the markets or a business . . . .”

Introduction of the legislation follows Monday’s downgrade by Standard & Poor’s of the credit outlook for Mexico, Pemex, the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) and a long list of businesses and financial institutions.

Those downgrades and another by Fitch Ratings last month put the agencies in the bad books of President López Obrador, who accused them of saying nothing when Pemex and the CFE “were overrun by corruption.”

He claimed that S&P was punishing Mexico for “neoliberal policies” of the last 36 years.

Senator Jara said agencies such as S&P “have neither shame nor ethics” and accused them of trying “to apply pressure and engage in blackmail.”

He claimed they are not in favor of the government’s efforts to combat corruption, and would instead prefer to see the movement of funds from the public sector to private individuals and friends, or “crony economics.”

The legislative change will be presented to the Senate on Thursday, but the National Action Party head of the Senate Economic Commission declared the idea was “a pendejada,” which in this case would translate as “bloody stupid” or “bullshit.”

Gustavo Madero said the Morena party “hasn’t the remotest idea what they are saying” and warned that the initiative could destabilize markets.

Source: Crónica (sp), El Financiero (sp)

OECD cuts Mexico growth forecast by half a point; AMLO unfazed

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OECD economic outlook

There has been another reduction in Mexico’s growth forecast, this time by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

It cut its forecast by half a point for both this year and next, calling for a 2019 growth rate of 2% and 2.25% in 2020.

The OECD’s Interim Economic Outlook said on a positive note that strong remittances, an increase in the minimum wage and government plans to boost infrastructure investment and revive energy production should lift domestic demand.

Further declines in inflation would offer scope for monetary policy easing, the report said.

The OECD revised growth downwards in almost all G20 economies, citing high policy uncertainty, trade tensions and further erosion of business and consumer confidence.

Speaking on the revised forecast during his morning press conference, President López Obrador repeated his own, confident outlook, observing that macroeconomic figures are looking good and there is financial stability in the country.

“We are growing, jobs are being created, salaries are improving, there is well-being . . . . We are fine and in good shape.”

He said he would offer additional information next Monday.

Mexico News Daily

Hospitality-travel firm says tourists with money are going elsewhere

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Zozaya of Apple Leisure Group.
Zozaya of Apple Leisure Group.

Mexico’s high-end tourism market has taken a hit so far in 2019, according to the CEO of a hospitality-travel firm who predicts that visitor numbers will decline further in coming months.

Alejandro Zozaya, CEO of Apple Leisure Group, estimates that the economic spillover from tourism is down 20% to date this year compared to the same period of 2018.

The problem: not as many wealthy Americans are coming to Mexico to vacation, get married at lavish ceremonies and honeymoon.

“The most important market we have lost is that which leaves the largest economic spillover, the high-end North American,” Zozaya told the news outlet Aristegui Noticias.

“We still have a lot of Americans but the highest segment [of the market] has stopped coming and we’ve replaced them with tourists from other countries and regions who leave a smaller spillover – they spend less at the destination, hotel rates go down,” he said.

The businessman claimed that the main reason well-off tourists are not coming to Mexico is insecurity but added that sargassum on Caribbean coast beaches and a lack of marketing following the government’s decision to disband the Tourism Promotion Council (CPTM) are also factors.

More United States citizens are traveling outside their country than ever before and there is not a decline in the international tourism market, but tourists are deciding to “go to other destinations that are not Mexico,” Zozaya said.

“[Americans] are going to the Dominican Republic, Costa Rica, Jamaica, and Mexico loses market share.”

He said that tourism is declining in Mexico’s most popular destinations at the same as the number of hotel rooms is going up.

“We have 30,000 additional rooms projected for Quintana Roo on top of those in Puerto Vallarta, in Los Cabos and other destinations in Mexico,” Zozaya said.

He stressed that advertising is the best way to attract greater visitor numbers to Mexico and that demand for accommodation and other tourism services must grow at a rate at least equal to supply growth in order to maintain profitability and employment in the sector.

Zozaya’s estimate of a 20% reduction in tourism spending this year is well above the 0.3% decline in air arrivals recorded in January but the businessman warned that “the most complicated” period for the tourism industry “is still to come.”

Contributing to the decline in international air arrivals in January was a reduction in the number of passengers flying into Cancún International Airport, the first year-over-year decrease for any month in almost seven years.

Earlier this year, the Secretariat of Tourism predicted that international visitor numbers could hit 43.6 million in 2019, which would represent a 5.2% increase on last year’s record figures.

Total tourism expenditure is forecast to reach just under US $23.7 billion, which would also be 5.2% higher than in 2018.

Last month, Tourism Secretary Miguel Torruco Marqués said the government is aiming to increase expenditure by tourists in Mexico by focusing more on attracting big spenders.

Among the nationalities that spend the most while visiting Mexico, the Japanese are in first place, spending an average of $2,008, not including airfare.

Source: Aristegui Noticias (sp)