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Federal agency warns catfish invasion is threat to aquatic ecosystems

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The catfish that is causing problems in Mexico's rivers.

An invasion of catfish in Mexico’s rivers poses a threat to aquatic ecosystems and their consumption can be harmful to human health, a federal biodiversity agency warns.

The National Commission for the Knowledge and Use of Biodiversity (Conabio) warned that the invasive species, whose scientific name is Hypostomus Plecostomus, is reproducing so quickly that there is a risk it will encroach on protected waterways in the Lacandon Jungle.

It already inhabits rivers in northern, central and southern states.

Catfish threaten to reduce the number of or even exterminate native and introduced fish that are economically important to fishermen, according to Conabio.

They prey on the young of other fish and aquatic creatures, and contribute to the erosion of river banks, the commission said.

Catfish chorizo? Watch out for heavy metals.

Ana Isabel González, a deputy director at Conabio, said that “Mexico is completely invaded by catfish.” It is thought that the fish was introduced to Mexico’s waterways by people who purchased them for their home aquariums but later decided they didn’t want them.

Catfish first appeared in Mexico in the Infiernillo (Little Hell) dam on the border of Michoacán and Guerrero and were consequently dubbed pez diablo (devil fish), she said.    

González described catfish as “aquatic cockroaches” because of their ability to thrive even in polluted waterways. She explained that their behavior in Mexico is different from that in their natural habitat, the Amazon River basin.

Whereas catfish in the Amazon only reproduce twice a year, they breed in Mexico year-round, González said.

The species breeds in water with direct sunlight, she said, which is limited in the Amazon as a result of the thick jungle canopy. Direct sunlight is more prevalent in Mexico, which has allowed catfish to quickly reach plague proportions.

The Conabio expert said that catfish have a kind of bony armor that causes the species to accumulate heavy metals in rivers that are polluted with agrochemicals, pesticides and other contaminants.

As people in some parts of the country are eating catfish – its meat has even been used to make chorizo-like sausages at a factory in Campeche – the heavy metals they carry can be dangerous to human health, González said.

She explained that some catfish also have diseases that can cause illness or even death among people who eat them.

Source: La Razón (sp)

Communal landowners free toll plaza as 14-year-old dispute ends

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Landowners collect tolls on the Mazatlán-Durango highway. They relinquished the plaza this week.

Communal landowners in Durango have relinquished control of a toll plaza they occupied for a year and a half to demand compensation for the use of their land to construct the Mazatlán-Durango highway.

The liberation of the Garabitos toll plaza came a day after the landowners from surrounding cooperatives received 33.5 million pesos (US $1.7 million), the first of two payments they will receive from the federal government.

Durango Governor José Rosas Aispuro Torres assured the landowners that another payment of 30.1 million pesos will be made next week.

“Next week, you will receive the remaining part of a total of 60.6 million pesos for compensation for your lands that were affected in the construction of the highway,” he said.

“Let me put on the record my gratitude to President Andrés Manuel López Obrador for his willingness to resolve this matter which affected the communal landowners for over 14 years.”

Aispuro made the announcement at the toll plaza on Wednesday. After, the landowners began breaking down their encampment, taking away their belongings and cleaning the area.

President López Obrador visited the site on August 9, where he announced that the debt would be paid.

“This Monday, we will pay the landowners what they are owed, so that this can come to an end,” he said.

“This puts out a bad image of anarchy, of disorder,” he continued. “Regardless of the fact that their demand is just, we can’t allow them to continue charging a toll here after more than a year.”

Aispuro added that from now on no citizen would be allowed to take over public roads in the area.

Source: Reforma (sp), Milenio (sp)

Genetic proof lost in case of officers’ alleged assault of teen

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Mexico City police have been accused of sexually assaulting a 17-year-old.

The Mexico City Attorney General’s Office (PGJ) said yesterday that prosecutors allowed vital genetic evidence to be lost in the case of a 17-year-old who filed a complaint of sexual assault against Mexico City police.

But the attorney general said today that the circumstances at the crime scene do not coincide with the declaration given by the victim..

She claimed she was raped by four officers while returning home from a party on the night of Friday, August 2.

The victim filed the complaint at 1:30pm on August 3, at which time the medical examiner did not apply the standard testing protocol for sexual assault cases, the newspaper El Universal reported.

At 3:00pm, the girl’s mother and grandfather, who had accompanied her to the police station, took her home to rest.

It wasn’t until August 6 that the family was given an appointment to return to the station for the testing to be performed. The medical examiner took samples from the clothes the victim was wearing on the night of the attack, as well as tissue samples from under her fingernails. Results came back negative.

A spokesman for the Attorney General’s Office told a press conference today that the evidence gathered so far does not coincide with the victim’s declaration.

“With the information that we have at this point, we are able to determine that the timing, circumstances and facts do not coincide with that which the victim declared,” said Ulises Lara López.

He also said that medical and psychological studies were carried out immediately after the victim reported the incident.

Meanwhile, the investigation continues, Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said later.

Source: El Universal (sp), Economía Hoy (sp)

9 states sign on to Oaxaca Pact, seek to narrow gap between north and south

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López Obrador with governors during signing of new pact.

The governors of nine states signed an agreement yesterday that seeks to boost development in the south and southeast of Mexico and to narrow the economic gap with the north of the country.

At a meeting in Oaxaca convened by the Confederation of Industrial Chambers, the governors of Oaxaca, Yucatán, Tabasco, Quintana Roo, Campeche, Chiapas, Guerrero, Veracruz and Puebla inked the so-called Oaxaca Pact.

Under the terms of the agreement, the governments of the southern and southeastern states will work collaboratively with the private and academic sectors to create a more prosperous region.

Oaxaca Governor Alejandro Murat expressed confidence that the pact will help to reactivate the regional economy and contribute to the achievement of equitable development across the nation.

Growth will be sought in the industrial sector, business and tourism, he said, adding that the agreement also stipulates cooperation on education, security and infrastructure.

The federal government is pursuing three large infrastructure projects in the south and southeast – the Maya Train, the Dos Bocas oil refinery and the Isthmus of Tehuantepec trade corridor, which includes modernization of the railway between Salina Cruz, Oaxaca, and Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz.

President López Obrador has said that the projects will act as a trigger for economic and social development.

Mexico’s southern states lag behind the north and center of the country in terms of human development.

A report published by the United Nations in May said that development in certain highly disadvantaged municipalities in Guerrero, Oaxaca, Chiapas and Veracruz is on a par with that in impoverished African countries such as Burundi and Burkina Faso.

As a result of a lack of economic opportunities, the southern-southeastern region has struggled to retain its population because many residents choose to seek employment in other parts of the country or the United States. The region also finds it difficult to attract new residents.

The governors agreed that development in their states has not kept pace with other parts of the country, which has exacerbated the north-south divide. They pointed out that the south and southeast has failed to attract much foreign investment and to tap in to export markets a significant way.

The Zapatistas’ Galeano is not a fan of AMLO’s development plans.

Seven out of 10 workers are employed in the informal sector of the economy and 80% of indigenous residents live in poverty, the governors said.

Some residents of the region are not all that keen about the development plans.

The Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) announced this week that it is planning to hold a music festival to protest against the government’s infrastructure projects.

In a rambling statement, Subcomandante Galeano (formerly Subcomandante Marcos) said the Zapatistas will also demonstrate against the “wall that the supreme government is planning to build on the Isthmus of Tehuantepec to separate us from the people of the north.”

It is unclear exactly what the EZLN member was referring to although some people have likened the deployment of National Guard troops to southern Mexico to ramp up enforcement against undocumented migrants to the construction of a wall.

The EZLN and López Obrador have a strained history although the president expressed his respect for the Zapatistas during a visit to Chiapas last month.  

Source: El Universal (sp), La Neta Noticias (sp)

Suspicions grow after latest report on Puebla helicopter crash: PAN

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The helicopter crash scene last December.

Suspicion is growing that the 2018 helicopter crash that killed the former governor of Puebla and her husband was deliberately provoked, the national president of the National Action Party (PAN) said.

“Without a doubt suspicion is growing that someone provoked the death of Martha Erika Alonso and Rafael Moreno Valle,” Marko Cortés said yesterday after the release of a new federal government report on the accident.

The couple, a political aide and two pilots were all killed after the helicopter in which they were traveling plunged to the ground just outside the city of Puebla on December 24.

Alonso was sworn in as governor just 10 days before the crash. Her victory in last year’s gubernatorial election was disputed by the Morena party, which alleged electoral fraud.

The Civil Aviation Authority (DGAC) said on Tuesday that it had found no evidence that the helicopter sustained a mechanical malfunction, a conclusion that echoed its finding in an investigation update published in June.

Cortés said the new report confirms what the PAN has been saying all along – “If there was good weather, the equipment didn’t fail and the pilots were experts, what happened then? Who was it?”  

The national president charged that “what’s needed is a serious, professional, conclusive investigation by the government,” claiming also that the administration led by President López Obrador “is hiding what happened” and hoping that the crash will be forgotten.

“It’s unfortunate that this government is not interested in finding out what happened,” he said.

“What’s needed is for the government to apply itself [so that] it can give us accurate information. Mexicans need to know the truth about what happened on December 24. The Secretariat of Public Administration [must] take action on the matter and open an investigation with respect to the conduct of the director of the civil aviation agency. That’s our most emphatic demand to the Morena party government . . .”  

Source: El Financiero (sp)

Hospital dismisses 4 after family of deceased baby given empty coffin

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Empty coffin cost four their jobs.

Four employees of a Chiapas hospital have been fired after the family of a deceased newborn got a surprise when they opened the coffin in which they expected to find the child’s body.

It was empty.

The state Health Secretariat said the director of the Palenque general hospital, two security officials and a social worker were dismissed.

Health Secretary José Manuel Cruz Castellanos said the employees did not follow the hospital’s protocol for giving coffins to families.

“These protocols exist in every Chiapas hospital, and they should be applied effectively,” he said. “As the responsible authority, we will make sure that they are followed.”

Cruz noted that the baby did receive proper medical care.

The baby arrived at the hospital in serious condition suffering from neonatal asphyxia and lung collapse. According to the Health Secretariat, the doctors could do nothing to save him and he died on Sunday.

Source: Reforma (sp)

A dozen climbers reach summit of El Popo volcano, enter crater

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An eruption at El Popo sends ash and steam skyward.

Mountain climbers who scaled the Popocatépetl volcano have been called “imprudent” by the chief of the national Civil Protection agency.

A video circulating on social media shows a group of at least five climbers ascending the side of the volcano’s crater, wearing face masks, goggles and helmets, as the volcano emits plumes of smoke.

Civil Protection director David León Romero criticized the climbers, who numbered as many as a dozen, warning that they not only risked their own lives but those of emergency workers.

“Climbing an active volcano shouldn’t be seen as an athletic achievement for mountain climbers, but as an imprudent action,” he said. “The people who do it are not only risking their lives, but also the lives of rescue workers who would need to go help them, and the human and material resources of the Mexican state.”

Climbers are not allowed inside a 12-kilometer restricted zone around the crater.

Located in central Mexico and straddling the borders of the states of México, Puebla and Morelos, Popocatépetl has been active since 1994, and large fragments of molten rock are often ejected several kilometers from the crater.

The video of the climbers was uploaded to Twitter by the volunteer urban search and rescue organization, GORDAS-USAR.

A lawyer for the group defended the climbers and said they had good reason for approaching the crater.

“The people who went to the crater did it to take scientific measurements of altitude, temperature, the velocity of the volcano and other things,” Honorio Hernández said. “Another reason was to accompany members of the community of Santiago Xaliztintla, Puebla, who leave an offering to the volcano every year.”

There have been three other reports of climbers on the summit of the volcano while it was active. Experts said youths who climbed to the top in March were lucky to have survived.

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

Nearly 6,000 migrants seeking asylum are waiting in Ciudad Juárez

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Route of the migrants seeking asylum from Ciudad Juárez.

About 6,000 migrants are stranded in the border city of Ciudad Juárez while waiting to apply for political asylum in the United States.

Chihuahua’s State Population Council (Coespo), which heads the coordination of migrant services in the city, stated that the current wait time to apply for asylum is about 90 days.

The migrant population in Juárez includes people from Cuba, Central America, Mexico, and even Africa.

As of August 13, 5,981 people were on the waiting list administered by Coespo. From this list, migrants are called by the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) to cross into El Paso, Texas, and apply for asylum with an officer.

Once they have applied, migrants are held for a short time in El Paso before being returned to Ciudad Juárez, where they must wait for their cases to be heard. Wait times can be as long as a year in some cases.

Dirvin García, head of Mexico’s Center for Comprehensive Migrant Services (CAIM), stated that there are already cases with wait times that extend well into 2020.

Since October 27, 2018, 18,166 people have been put on the list to apply for asylum, of which 12,185 have been allowed to cross into the U.S. to make the application.

Of the 67 people who arrived at the CAIM facilities on August 10, one was from Cuba.

“It’s a long time to wait,” he said, “and we’re running out of money.”

He said he had relatives in the United States that were helping him financially, but the wait still wasn’t easy.

“Hopefully they can speed up the process so we can cross,” he added.

Instead of waiting, many migrants opt for crossing the Rio Grande to speed up the process. Once in the United States, they are arrested by the Border Patrol. At that point they can apply for asylum.

On Monday, the Border Patrol began holding interviews with migrants after a 10-day moratorium during which no one on CAIM’s list was called to cross into El Paso.

A similar situation occurred at the end of July, when interviews were suspended for 11 days due to overcrowding at CBP facilities.

Source: Reforma (sp)

Zacatecas Congress says no to same-sex marriage

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Opponents and supporters of the bill in the gallery of the state Congress yesterday.

The state of Zacatecas voted not to legalize same-sex marriage on Wednesday, when 13 of the 26 deputies voted no, 11 voted in favor and two abstained.

The Morena party, which has a small plurality in the Congress, supported the bill with the exception of Deputy Armando Perales Gándara. The two-deputy blocks of the Labor Party (PT) and the Social Encounter Party (PES) also split, with one voting for and one against the bill in each party.

Morena Deputy Mónica Borrego Estrada expressed her disappointment after the vote, blaming the outcome on party-line votes by deputies allied with Governor Alejandro Tello, a block made up of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), the National Action Party (PAN), the New Alliance Party (PANAL) and the Green Party (PVEM).

“I’m convinced that the truth won today, but lost to party-line votes, shameful votes by legislators from parties that are allied with Governor Alejandro Tello . . .” she said.

Borrego added that failing to legalize gay marriage puts Zacatecas behind the rest of the country and the world.

“International agreements approved by the General Assembly of the United Nations support the recognition of marriage equality as a mechanism to fight discrimination and intolerance on the planet,” she said.

The outcome of the vote sparked protest from members of the LGBT community who were gathered in the chamber, and applause from the National Family Front, a Catholic Church group that opposes same-sex marriage.

Such marriages were legalized by a 2015 Supreme Court decision. However, in Zacatecas and the 11 other states that have laws defining marriage as a union between a man and a woman, same-sex couples must obtain an injunction from a federal court in order to be able to legally marry.

In the state’s municipalities of Zacatecas, Cuauhtémoc and Villanueva same-sex couples may get married without obtaining an injunction.

Zacatecas joins Yucatán and Sinaloa as states that have voted down proposals to legalize the practice this year.

Source: Milenio (sp), El Financiero (sp), Infobae (sp)

Presumed cartel leader accuses Jalisco governor of links to organized crime

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A frame from the video supposedly made by the Jalisco New Generation Cartel.
A frame from the video supposedly made by the Jalisco New Generation Cartel.

The Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) has accused Jalisco Governor Enrique Alfaro of links to organized crime in a video posted to social media.

Surrounded by more than 20 heavily armed and masked men dressed in military attire, a man who identifies himself as CJNG leader Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes accused Alfaro of breaking a pact that gave the Jalisco cartel criminal control of the state.

He charged that the governor instead plans to give the “plaza” to Martín Coronel, a man known as “El Águila” (The Eagle), and Esteban “El Güerito” Rodríguez Olivera.

Coronel, nephew of a former close associate of Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, is believed to be the leader of the Sinaloa Cartel in Jalisco.

“Alfaro made arrangements to remove us from Jalisco, thinking that he could do it overnight . . . Governor Alfaro was a very good friend of [Ignacio] Nacho Coronel and that’s why he has this relationship with his nephew ‘El Águila’ and ‘El Güerito,’ a close friend of ‘El Águila’ Coronel,” the presumed CJNG leader said.  

“The governor did a deal with me, Mencho Oseguera, with which he didn’t comply at all. All of you know that before the new government led by Enrique Alfaro came in everything here in Jalisco was very calm and now with his rule, violence started in the whole state.”  

The masked man who claimed to be “El Mencho” denied that the CJNG has anything to do with safe houses where dead bodies and bound captives have been found.        

Dozens of bodies were found last year inside abandoned houses in the Guadalajara metropolitan area, while dozens more were retrieved from clandestine graves in May of this year.

“Governor Enrique Alfaro is the only person who can tell you who owns those safe houses and [who is responsible] for those dead people since, in reality, they’re houses that are property of Martín Coronel . . . and Esteban Rodriguez Olivera . . . both [of whom are] directly protected by the governor,” the speaker said.

“El Mencho” – who according to a DEA agent is hiding out in the mountains of western Mexico – also denied that the CJNG is responsible for crimes committed in Puebla, Mexico City, Oaxaca, Chiapas, México state, Cuernavaca and Chihuahua.

“. . . We don’t kidnap, we don’t rob people, we don’t charge extortion,” he said.

Jalisco Governor Alfaro.

The suspected CJNG leader called on President López Obrador to launch an investigation into bank accounts that Alfaro allegedly holds in the names of prestanombres, or front men, in Switzerland and the Cayman Islands.

The governor uses the accounts to “move the money he receives from Martín Coronel and Esteban Rodríguez in exchange for agreements with them,” he claimed.  

The masked man, who remains seated throughout the almost six-minute video, also claimed that Alfaro has a personal grudge against the CJNG because his “current woman” had a relationship with a high-ranking cartel member.

“. . . The hate and the personal problems that the governor has against our company are personal and because of that he preferred to give his support” to Coronel and Rodríguez, the man said.

The Jalisco government declared that all the accusations made in the video were false.

“For the state government, the fight against violence is a matter of utmost seriousness. That’s why since the beginning of this administration we’ve made it clear that this government doesn’t speak to, nor will it speak to, criminals,” the government said.

“The stunt, put together in a video with false assertions, contains lies that have the sole and clear intention to defame, intimidate, misinform and generate fear among citizens. For these reasons, it doesn’t deserve more than a single response: the government of Jalisco will continue doing its work and will file the corresponding [criminal] complaint with the federal Attorney General’s Office.”

Source: Reforma (sp), Sin Embargo (sp)