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With 60% of chiles coming from China, NGO promotes domestic ones

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chiles
They might be from China.

There’s no end to recipes for Mexican salsa, and there are endless varieties of chiles with which to make it. But most of the chiles used in Mexico come from China.

According to the World Wildlife Foundation (WWF), 60% of green chiles consumed in Mexico are imported from China; the remainder are produced domestically.

On Monday, the WWF announced the start of the “Dale Chamba” campaign, which will promote the conservation of more than 1,500 varieties of green chile that are fundamental to Mexican cuisine, but have been in decline because of climate change and dependence on imports.

Silvia Cursain, a chef and gastronomy school teacher, told the news agency Efe that the quality of chiles depends not only on the variety, but where they are grown.

“If they don’t get the same nutrients, when you move them, the fruit changes,” she said. “Like how the dried serrano chiles that come from China, they don’t have flavor or aroma.”

Jorge Rickards, director of WWF México, said that diverse chile varieties are an important part of Mexican culture.

“We have a cultural wealth of over 350 languages, 350 sources of traditional knowledge that are translated into cuisines,” he said. “There are more than 1,500 species that still form part of the ingredients of the traditional diets in Mexico.”

Rickards said that “fast food diets” have put traditional crops like heirloom tomatoes, pumpkin seeds, ayocote and vaquita beans at risk, as well as chiles like chilhuacle, pasilla mixe and poblano.

Chef Ricardo Muñoz Zurita said the decline in traditional Mexican products is also related to the fact that they are mostly consumed in certain regions, because of a lack of knowledge of how to use them.

“In local markets in Oaxaca or Yucatán, we see certain products as strange,” he said. “We think that they have been brought from other places, and because we don’t know what they are, we don’t use them. We should revalue and rediscover our traditional cooking, our historical cooking, based on the foundation of corn.”

Source: Milenio (sp)

Work to resume on CDMX-Toluca train; 2022 completion date

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passenger rail car
Some rail cars are ready but the line won't be completed until next year.

The federal government has coughed up funds to resume work on the Mexico City-Toluca passenger train, a project left unfinished and over-budget by the Enrique Peña Nieto administration.

Communications and Transportation Secretary Javier Jiménez Espriú announced the allocation of 500 million pesos (US $25.5 million) toward completion of the second phase of the project, which includes a railroad network stretching from the Metro Observatorio station to the business district of Santa Fe.

In the meantime, Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum announced that the federal government would shoulder all remaining costs of the work.

On June 13, the two officials signed an agreement that went into effect today to resume work on the project within 15 days and that the second phase will be completed no later than December 31 of this year.

They also agreed that weekly advances in the progress of construction and the use of the funds will be provided in a weekly report to overseeing authorities and the Mexico City comptroller’s office. Additionally, the two capped the amount of federal funds permitted to be spent on the project’s administrative costs at 1%.

In his Monday press conference, President López Obrador reaffirmed his promise that the train will be completed in 2020. He added that the federal government will need to spend an additional 30 billion pesos on the project.

“We cannot just abandon this project because, as I have been saying, it has meant an investment and spending from the federal budget, which is the people’s money.”

The 57-kilometer railway, which is expected to cut commute time between Mexico City and Toluca to just 39 minutes, has been delayed by protests, construction problems and legal problems. It was originally scheduled to be completed by December 2017.

Source: Milenio (sp), El Heraldo (sp)

In Oaxaca, the CNTE teachers’ union is back in charge

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CNTE members strike a few blows for education
CNTE members strike a few blows for education at a Oaxaca protest in 2015.

The Oaxaca local of the CNTE teachers’ union has taken advantage of the repeal of the previous government’s educational reform to once again take control of the allocation of teaching positions in the state.

The union is also in charge of teacher transfers and promotions in the southern state for the first since the 2013 educational reform was implemented, according to a report published today in the newspaper El Universal.

As before, participation in union protests is a key requirement if teachers wish to advance.

In order to be appointed to a new position or to be considered for transfer or promotion, the CNTE has announced that teachers must prove that they have participated in 80% of protests, blockades, marches and other union activities.

It also said that teachers who belong or have belonged to the dominant SNTE teachers’ union or other rival groups, or who were appointed or promoted while the previous government’s educational reform was in effect, will not be allowed to apply for appointment, transfer or promotion.

Teachers block a highway with hijacked buses in a 2015 protest.
Teachers block a highway with hijacked buses in a 2015 protest in Oaxaca.

Section 22 spokesman Wilbert Santiago Valdivieso said that teachers need to show evidence of their participation in CNTE activities in order to prove their loyalty to the union.

“Here in Oaxaca we have the spurious [section] 59 [of the SNTE] and SITEM [the Independent Union of Education Workers] . . . I can’t give an application to a comrade who is corrupt . . . who’s in the group of [former SNTE boss] Elba Esther Gordillo or to one who supported the imposition of the educational reform . . .” he said.

“Proof of [CNTE] union participation is ratification of the affiliation of colleagues.”

The CNTE – especially locals in southern states – vehemently opposed the educational reformed implemented by the government of former president Enrique Peña Nieto, and organized countless protests against it.

The current government’s education reform was declared constitutional in May, bringing to an end all provisions in the previous administration’s general teaching service law including controversial teacher evaluations.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

Guadalajara airport expansion still held up by dispute over land

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Landowners march to press for payment of what they claim is owed.
Landowners march to press for payment of what they claim is owed.

The much-needed expansion of the Guadalajara airport continues to be held up by a long-running dispute over the payment of compensation for expropriated land.

The federal government expropriated 307 hectares for the airport in 1951 but almost 70 years later, community landowners of the El Zapote ejido (cooperative) say that full and fair compensation still hasn’t been paid.

To meet growing demand for passenger and freight services, the Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla International Airport needs another runway and other facilities that are slated to be built on 137 hectares of land also owned by the El Zapote ejido.

However, landowners are refusing to cede the land until they are compensated for the 1951 expropriation.

Ejido representative Nicolás Vega Pedroza told the newspaper El Economista that it is time for the government to pay up.

“. . . There is already an appraisal [of the value of the land], everything is ready, there are no more recourses other than to pay the ejido. This week we have a visit to Mexico City and we’re going to see what progress there is with the Secretariat of Communications and Transportation . . .” he said.

Based on an appraisal for which they paid, the landowners have demanded 3.2 billion pesos (US $163.5 million) in compensation but a government appraiser valued the land at less than half that amount.

“The last appraisal that came out is for 1.317 billion pesos [US $67.3 million]. We didn’t agree with how they did it, because of the methodology, but if we reach an agreement and they pay us, we’ll be satisfied with that,” Vega said.

“There are 137 hectares they [want to] use, 51 [hectares] immediately for the second runway and the rest for workshops and other things. The ejido has no problem in reaching an agreement, negotiating, but up to now they haven’t paid us.”

The president of the Guadalajara chapter of the American Chamber of Commerce said that resolving the dispute is a matter of urgency, adding that with the expansion of the airport the region encompassing Jalisco and surrounding states has the potential to become Mexico’s logistics hub.

“There is already a promise from President Andrés Manuel López Obrador for a second runway, to reach agreements with the ejido . . . We’re seeking for that to be achieved so that we have an airport that is a hub, especially for freight,” Francisco Wilson Loaiza said.

Source: El Economista (sp) 

Senate buys surveillance cameras without tenders or transparency

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The Senate is tightening security but without inviting tenders and with a lack of transparency, the newspaper El Financiero reported.

The Senate’s administrative director has arranged to purchase security cameras for the legislature from a company without an invitation for tenders.

Mauricio Farah Gebara said he awarded contracts worth 134 million pesos (US $6.8 million) to Grupo IDSEC without a public invitation for tenders for security reasons, citing the urgent need to protect the “the integrity of goods and persons” within the Senate chambers and the Chamber of Deputies.

The contract for the installation of 600 security cameras in the Senate was awarded directly to the company and signed on June 1. Under the conditions of the contract, the company will provide service for five years, for which the senate paid a 30% advance.

The signing of a contract may have been hastened after a parcel bomb exploded in Senator Citlalli Hernández’s office on May 29. After the attack, Ricardo Monreal, president of the committee for political coordination, called for increased security measures within the legislature.

In both cases, Gebara insisted that he had the right to directly award the contract without tenders because of the urgent need to improve security in the legislature. But El Financiero said he has maintained “an opaque relationship” with the supplier.

In the last two years, Gebara has signed contracts without tenders worth 134.68 million pesos to the same company.

Source: El Financiero (sp)

For executives, AMLO fear factor has created investment paralysis

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amlo
AMLO: which way will he move next?

Fear and uncertainty about the policy agenda of President López Obrador are paralyzing investment, according to high-ranking business executives who spoke to the news agency Bloomberg.

A report published today said that about half a dozen executives who met with Bloomberg in Mexico City last week described navigating the president’s policies and abrupt pronouncements as a struggle.

The most common word that the executives used to describe López Obrador’s decision-making process on issues that affect them was “erratic,” Bloomberg said.

Speaking on the condition of anonymity, most expressed support for the government’s implementation of austerity measures and its crusade against corruption – many said that the scourge spiraled out of control during Enrique Peña Nieto’s presidency – but rejected the decisions to cancel the Texcoco airport project, freeze new energy auctions and take legal action that seeks to annul clauses in natural gas pipelines.

Amid uncertainty about what the president might do next, the executives said they closely watch López Obrador’s daily press conferences for clues.

In that context, no one is investing, they said. Many of the executives said they see the beginning of a downward economic trend for Mexico although their views differed about how steep the slope will be.

In any case, the situation raises a range of questions, Bloomberg said: “Invest now? Wait to invest? Simply keep the business on autopilot or consider selling assets? Put resources toward other countries?”

Gross fixed investment in Mexico fell 7.4% in May, the worst monthly performance in more than two years, while the economy only narrowly avoided entering a technical recession by recording 0.1% growth between April and June after a 0.2% contraction in the first quarter.

Although López Obrador has clung to his forecast of 2% growth in 2019, his own government predicts an expansion of just 1.1%.

The International Monetary Fund slashed its growth outlook for the Mexican economy to 0.9% from 1.6% last month while the Bank of America and Citibanamex cut their forecasts to just 0.5% and 0.2%, respectively.

Bloomberg said that the “mix of AMLO’s austerity drive and the uncertainty among business leaders” is taking a heavy toll on the economy.

The news agency noted that while the president is curtailing government spending in many areas, he has allocated significant funding to Pemex, the beleaguered state oil company.

It questioned the logic of building a new oil refinery on the Tabasco coast when existing refineries are operating at or below 30% capacity.

Considering the president’s track record on canceling and challenging investment projects, Bloomberg said the business community is waiting for “a sign – any sign” that López Obrador can generate an economic and legal environment in which investors have the confidence they need to make decisions.

The news agency noted that the president told its editor-in-chief John Micklethwait in an interview last week that he respects contracts and the need for foreign investment but added that “for the executives, actions speak louder than words.”

Source: Bloomberg (en) 

CJNG issues video of captive, warns it will ‘clean up’ Valle de Santiago

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CJNG hitmen with their captive. He was found later hanging from an overpass.
CJNG hitmen with their captive.

The war between two cartels vying over territory in the state of Guanajuato continued on the weekend with the execution of a high-ranking member of the Santa Rosa de Lima Cartel.

The body of Adolfo “El Michoacano” Mendoza Valencia was found hanging from a highway overpass. Mendoza appeared in a video on social media on the weekend, bound to a chair and surrounded by heavily armed individuals wearing uniforms bearing the Jalisco New Generation Cartel insignia, “CJNG.”

One of them interrogates the semi-nude Mendoza, who admits he sold drugs in Valle de Santiago, where gunmen assaulted a police station on Friday, killing five prisoners and freeing another.

The voice on the video announces that the cartel had arrived in Valle de Santiago.

‘To everyone in the Valle de Santiago, we are the elite group of the four letters . . . We come to clean the municipality of all the plague, extortionists, kidnappers and killers of innocent people. A clear example, here we have the Michoacano, who was the head of the Valle de Santiago turf . . .

“We are coming for you, you filthy Marro, and all of your filthy people, those who entered the Valle de Santiago police station and killed innocent people.”

“Marro” is José Antonio “El Marro” Yépez Ortiz, leader of the Santa Rosa cartel, which is believed to have been behind Friday’s assault on the police station.

On Monday, a court indicted a Guanajuato judge who has been linked to the police station attack.

Police say Julio César Santiago “N,” a judge in the municipality of Valle de Santiago, gave information to the group that attacked the prison.

He was ordered held in preventative custody.

Guanajuato police announced that they have also arrested one of the participants in the assault. Luis Ángel “N” is accused of throwing bombs at the police station.

Source: Reforma (sp), Infobae (sp)

Heavy rain brings flooding in 2 México state municipalities

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Cars stranded by flooded streets in Atizapán.
Cars stranded by flooded streets in Atizapán.

Torrential rains last night brought flooding in two municipalities in México state, damaging property and leaving vehicles under water.

Intense rains accompanied by hail began at 6:00pm in Atizapán de Zaragoza and lasted for an hour and a half, dumping 50 milliliters per hour of water onto the municipality. The deluge caused the Moritas river to spill over its banks, flooding the municipal sports club and Zaragoza Theater, along with several homes.

Elsewhere in the municipality, floodwaters mixed with wastewater and engulfed the ground floor of the Salvador González Herrejón General Hospital. The Atizapán-Nicolás Romero highway was also inundated near the municipality’s warehouse district, submerging vehicles and cutting off traffic.

To minimize the damage brought on by the flooding, the municipal government activated an emergency flood plan supported by 200 government employees, drainage trucks and other heavy equipment.

In Cuautitlán Izcalli, local authorities were forced to carry out a “controlled” release of water from the Ángulo Dam after it reached capacity.

The resulting floodwaters rushed into homes in several neighborhoods and submerged vehicles. In one instance, police came to the rescue of a man and woman whose van was left under water.

No casualties have been reported.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Police seize 47,000 turtle eggs in Oaxaca, arrest 4

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Turtle egg thefts continue in Oaxaca.
Turtle egg thefts continue in Oaxaca.

Authorities have seized 47,000 sea turtle eggs from a building near Mazunte, a popular beach destination between Puerto Escondido and Oaxaca and once the site of a turtle slaughterhouse.

Oaxaca Public Security Secretary Ernesto Salcedo said the seizure is the largest in recent years, and was achieved after an investigation in which the National Guard participated.

Four people were arrested for environmental crimes.

Nereo García, Oaxaca delegate for the environmental protection agency Profepa, said that illegal collection of sea turtle eggs from nests on beaches in Oaxaca is a problem, and that some egg traffickers are protected by municipal authorities.

In recent years the military has actively patrolled Oaxaca’s beaches, where thousands of turtles arrive annual to lay their eggs in the sand.

García added that he thinks a new culture of protection of sea turtles needs to be created.

Federal law states that anyone who illegally captures, injures or kills a sea turtle or marine mammal or any of its products can be punished with a prison term of between one and nine years. If the offense was committed in a protected area or was done for commercial purposes, an extra three years can be added to the sentence.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Victims of 2014 copper mine spill in Sonora claim promises remain unkept

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The clinic built to treat victims is to shut down on Tuesday.
The clinic built to treat victims is to shut down on Tuesday.

Five years after a massive toxic spill into two rivers in Sonora by a Grupo México copper mine, residents of affected communities accuse the company of failing to keep its promises to remedy the environmental damage and build water purification plants.

More than 40,000 cubic meters of toxic substances, particularly copper sulfate acid solution, spilled into the Sonora and Bacanuchi rivers on August 6, 2014, at the Buenavista copper mine in Cananea.

The incident, described by environmental authorities as Mexico’s worst mining disaster, contaminated the local water supply, affecting an estimated 22,000 people in seven municipalities.

Hundreds of people have suffered from serious spill-related health problems.

In affected communities, there are elevated numbers of cases of cancer and hypertension along with increased reports of liver, kidney, pancreas and nervous system issues.

Sonora river after the 2014 spill.
Sonora river after the 2014 spill.

Grupo México, the country’s largest mining corporation, established a 2-billion-peso trust to carry out projects to remedy the damage and pay compensation to victims but it was shut down in February 2017 with only 1.2 billion pesos having been spent.

Affected communities have now initiated legal action in the Supreme Court have the trust reopened until all the promised projects have been completed.

Residents say that many of the water purification plants that were promised have not been built and that Grupo México only completed environmental remediation projects on one of five stretches of river where it committed to doing so.

They also say that a clinic established to treat people suffering from heavy metal poisoning will shut down today as the result of an agreement Grupo México reached with the former government behind their backs.

Luis Miguel Cano, a legal representative for the victims, said the pact violates the law because residents of affected communities were not consulted.

Residents say that if their legal action to reopen the trust is successful, Grupo México will not only have to spend the additional 800 million pesos it pledged but also provide details about the how the 1.2 billion pesos was used.

Irene Moiza, a resident of the town of Bacanuchi, said the last five years have been filled with uncertainty and anxiety because she doesn’t know whether the local water supply and the crops she grows are contaminated.

She said her animals have died without any explanation and charged that Grupo México has not been held responsible for the spill.

Baskut Tuncak, a United Nations special rapporteur on human rights and hazardous substances and wastes, said last year that the company’s failure to remediate the damage caused by its spill was a “shameless and flagrant example of impunity.”

Óscar Encinas, a small-plot farmer in Ures, said the copper mine spill has destroyed people’s lives, explaining that the economy has slumped by 70%. He explained that the squash, alfalfa and wheat grown in the region can’t find a market due to contamination concerns.

As residents continued to fight for justice, a collective of independent journalists made a documentary about the spill that investigates its effect on the environment and local residents.

Called Río Sonora: Impunidad y Olvido (Sonora River: Impunity and Oblivion), the film serves as a counterweight to authorities’ attempts to conceal the consequences of the 2014 environmental disaster, the journalists say.

To mark the fifth anniversary of the acid spill, the documentary premiered yesterday in the Sonora capital, Hermosillo.

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