Home Blog Page 1784

No more English instruction in Oaxaca schools, only indigenous languages

0
oaxaca students
English not spoken.

The Oaxaca local of the CNTE teachers’ union has announced that it will implement an alternative education plan in the state that eliminates English language instruction.

Section 22 leader Eloy López Hernández and spokesman Wilbert Santiago explained that the CNTE’s curriculum stipulates the teaching of indigenous languages rather than English and puts an end to teachers’ grading of students, who will instead evaluate their own educational progress and that of their peers.

The plan also proposes that two teachers work with each class – one who provides academic instruction and another who teaches extracurricular courses.

López and Santiago said that copies of the CNTE curriculum will be distributed to 13,500 public schools in all 570 municipalities in Oaxaca.

The education plan is supported by alternative textbooks developed by the CNTE, which have been criticized because of their strong leftist ideological bent.

Santiago said that schools in Oaxaca will take delivery of the official texts developed and distributed by the National Commission of Free Textbooks but their use won’t be a priority.

“We’ll distribute our own materials in photocopies . . .” he said.

López, meanwhile, rejected reports that the CNTE has taken back control of the allocation of teaching positions in Oaxaca.

“We didn’t take or regain control of [teaching] positions . . .We’ve demanded that the state have responsibility,” he said.

López said the CNTE will be watchful of the processes used to allocate those positions and that the union meets regularly with Oaxaca and federal education authorities but said “that doesn’t mean having control.”

Source: Milenio (sp), Quadratin (sp) 

As political powerhouse seeks to recover, accusations fly at debate

0
PRI leadership candidates Piñon, Moreno and Ortega.
PRI leadership candidates Piñon, Moreno and Ortega.

A year after the crushing election defeat of the once omnipotent Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), three candidates vying to be its national leader engaged in a lively and sometimes hostile debate last night in front of a vocal crowd.

Ivonne Ortega, a former governor of Yucatán, quickly went on the attack against her main rival, Alejandro Moreno, who took leave as governor of Campeche in June to contest this Sunday’s ballot.

“You put 35,000 more families in poverty and at the same time as that was happening, you built a house, a 46-million-peso white house, by the way,” Ortega said, seeking to paint a picture of Moreno as an inept and corrupt governor.

“Actions speak much louder than words,” she declared.

The ex-governor said that Moreno must clarify where the resources to purchase his property came from and charged that corrupt members must be expelled from the party to help the PRI shed its corrupt image.

Some of Ortega’s supporters joined in the attack, shouting at Moreno that he was “corrupt” and a “thief.”

The ex-Yucatán governor continued her verbal assault:

“A small group of leaders hijacked the party and took decisions that led the PRI to where it is [today],” Ortega said, referring to its poor performance at the polls last year, when it was reduced to a weakened third force on the national political stage.

“I want to ask you, candidate of the upper echelon . . . Do you want to be remembered as the candidate who aspired to the PRI [leadership] but with force and by force expelled people if they thought differently? Do you want to be remembered as the PRI candidate that with force wanted to impose his will?”

In response, Moreno urged Ortega not to “generate more division” in the party and not to lie to PRI members as part of a ploy for her own personal gain.

As his supporters broke into chants calling for party unity, he said party members have to work together to become a strong opposition that stands up to the government of President López Obrador.

“Mexico is living today the most important challenge and vital moment in its political history. Do we want a Mexico in development or to go backward 50 years?” Moreno said.

“We have a government without a compass . . . We need to build a party that is critical . . . never again [can we be] a mute party that doesn’t call out the big mistakes of this government,” he added.

The third and least  known candidate, Lorena Piñón, called for Ortega and Moreno to put their differences and slanderous remarks aside in order to build a united party that “together combats the errors of the government of López Obrador.”

Despite that advice, the former director of the Veracruz Youth Institute later changed her tone and accused Ortega of nepotism while she was governor of Yucatán between 2007 and 2012.

At the national level, the PRI held power uninterruptedly for over 70 years until the National Action Party took office in 2000.

Enrique Peña Nieto led the party back to power with a victory at the 2012 election but his six-year administration was plagued by corruption scandals that most analysts agree were the main factor that caused its 2018 presidential candidate, José Antonio Meade, to attract the support of just 16% of voters.

Priistas, as PRI lawmakers, members and supporters are called, are hopeful that the party can resurrect itself and once again return to the hallowed halls of power.

But if its collapse in support and the internal division that was openly on show at last night’s debate are any indication, the road back to electoral triumph – if possible at all – will be a very long and bumpy one.

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

Guanajuato priest arrested for sexually abusing child

0
Templo de la Soledad in Irapuato.
Templo de la Soledad in Irapuato.

Police arrested a priest in Irapuato, Guanajuato, on Monday for sexually abusing a young girl.

Luis Esteban, 32, was preparing the child for her first communion when her parents discovered that the priest regularly sent messages to her phone late at night. Later, they found out she had been abused.

Esteban was ordained as a priest in 2016 and presided over services at the Templo de La Soledad in Irapuato.

The diocese of Irapuato lamented the “unexpected situation” in a statement and said it had full confidence in authorities and the legal process.

“With great pain we accept the facts and ask forgiveness to all those who have been wronged in this case. We affirm our willingness to accept responsibility for all the corresponding offences.”

Yesterday, a criminal court judge ordered preventative prison for Esteban, ordering him to be held in the Irapuato penitentiary, the same institution where Jorge Raúl Villegas, the former spokesperson for the archdiocese of León, Guanajuato, is serving a 90-year sentence for abusing five minors at an all-girls’ private school.

Esteban will appear in court on Sunday. If found guilty, he could face up to 25 years in prison.

In February, the Catholic Church in Mexico revealed that 152 priests have been suspended over the past nine years for child sex abuse. However, the church did not disclose the number of victims.

Source: El Universal (sp), La Jornada (sp)

Work to start on airport aqueduct but NGOs warn it lacks environmental permit

0
Senator Galvez: indigenous communities need water.
Senator Gálvez: indigenous communities need water.

The Santa Lucía airport faces a new obstacle after two non-governmental organizations and a senator warned that an aqueduct to supply water to the airport doesn’t have environmental approval and the communities that will be affected haven’t been consulted.

The National Water Commission (Conagua) has indicated that it will start work without delay on an aqueduct that will carry water from the Mezquital valley in Hidalgo to the México state air force base site where the Defense Secretariat will build the new US $4.8-billion airport.

The Environment Secretariat granted conditional approval for construction of the airport late last month but the Mexican Center for Environmental Law and the Mexican Academy on Environmental Impact say the aqueduct project doesn’t have the environmental authorization it requires.

The two groups charge that the environmental impact of the project hasn’t even been considered, while National Action Party Senator Xóchitl Gálvez says that the indigenous communities in the Mezquital valley haven’t been consulted as required by the International Labor Organization’s Indigenous and Tribal People’s Convention.

“The new project . . . can’t be started without first consulting the people and communities . . .” she said.

The senator charged that the project is not viable because the communities in the area, located around 100 kilometers north of the airport site, are already suffering from a shortage of water.

“If Conagua guarantees that there is a surplus of water, they should send it first to the communities . . .” Gálvez said, adding that she will file a formal request in Congress to ask the water commission to present its technical studies for the project.

The Santa Lucía airport also faces staunch opposition, most notably from the #NoMásDerroches (No More Waste) Collective, which has obtained several injunctions against the project.

Just how many injunctions, or amparos, there are came up yesterday during the president’s morning press conference.

“Do you know how many injunctions there are now to detain Santa Lucía? 80. That’s excessive! . . . they’re only to stop us, to put the brakes on us.”

Source: Milenio (sp) 

5 cops held hostage in Chiapas released after 21 days

0
Flanked by masked socialist front members, police are set free.
Flanked by masked socialist front members, police are set free.

Five Chiapas police officers held hostage for three weeks were released Wednesday by the National Front for Socialism (FNLS), even though its demands have not been met.

The officers were detained on July 18 as they were driving past Río Florido, Ocosingo. Members of the FNLS confiscated their weapons and burned their vehicles.

At a release ceremony yesterday in Río Florido, where FNLS members kept their faces covered, a spokesman reaffirmed their demands for the “demilitarization” of Chiapas and the release of jailed FNLS member Javier González Díaz, who is accused of stealing a car.

“The freeing of these five police officers is to demonstrate the goodwill of the FNLS, and the inability of the state government to negotiate,” he said.

The spokesman accused the state of conducting a campaign of political persecution against the organization.

One of the officers said he and his colleagues were not involved in the conflict between the FNLS and the state government.

“We always drove on this highway, we’ve never offended the communities, we didn’t do anything wrong . . .” he said.

Gonzalo Ituarte, a Catholic priest who helped negotiate the officers’ release, said the decision to release them will help resolve the conflict.

The FNLS originally said they would release the hostages in exchange for the release of González, but they did hang on to the confiscated weapons.

Meanwhile, Chiapas prosecutors said earlier this week they would request arrest warrants against members of the FNLS for the theft and arson of 24 police vehicles and delivery trucks belonging to the companies Lala, Grupo Modelo, Pepsi and Sabritas.

Chiapas Attorney General Jorge Luis Llaven Abarca said his office has 113 criminal investigations open into members of the FNLS for crimes including homicide, theft and assault, including the July 26 theft of an armored truck carrying almost 11 billion pesos (US $565 million).

Source: El Universal (sp)

After 4 years on the run, US murder suspect arrested in Puebla

0
Murder suspect Peter Chadwick.
Murder suspect Peter Chadwick.

A British-born millionaire suspected of murdering his wife was apprehended in Atlixco, Puebla, on Sunday after four years on the run. Authorities say a true-crime podcast was instrumental in his capture.

Peter Chadwick, 55, a naturalized United States citizen, vanished in 2015 after failing to appear in court for a hearing for the murder of his wife of 17 years, Quee Choo, in their home in Newport Beach, California, in 2012. Chadwick initially told police that a handyman had killed his wife and taken him hostage, forcing him to drive and dump his his wife’s body at a location near the Mexican border.

However, police found bite and scratch marks on Chadwick’s body and blood under his nails and placed him under arrest. A week later, investigators found Quee Choo’s body in a dumpster on a rural road in eastern San Diego County.

However, the suspect had no previous criminal record so the presiding judge determined that he was not a flight risk and released him on US $1 million bail. After he failed to make his court date in 2015, Chadwick became the focus of an international manhunt and was later added to the U.S. Marshals’ 15 most wanted list.

The search was also the subject of a true-crime podcast called Coundown to Capture, which led to hundreds of tips as to the whereabouts of the murder suspect, said Newport Beach Police Chief Jon Lewis.

Finally, investigators received a tip that pinpointed Chadwick’s location in Atlixco, where he was detained by police officers immigration agents, who turned him over to U.S. authorities.

Police said that Chadwick drained his bank accounts before making his escape to Mexico. During his years as a fugitive, Chadwick used aliases and false IDs and even learned Spanish to evade authorities.

Chadwick appeared before a judge on Wednesday, who denied bail.

Source: Milenio (sp), BBC (en), CBS News (en)

19 bodies left on boulevard in Uruapan, Michoacán, as gang war flares

0
Bodies hang from an overpass this morning with a narco-banner signed by the Jalisco New Generation Cartel.
Bodies hang from an overpass this morning with a narco-banner signed by the Jalisco New Generation Cartel.

The Jalisco New Generation Cartel has claimed responsibility for killing 19 people whose bodies were found along a boulevard in Uruapan, Michoacán, Thursday morning, apparent victims of the conflict between the cartel and the gang known as Los Viagras.

Michoacán Attorney General Adrián López Solís told a press conference that the bodies of seven men and two women were found hanging from an overpass on Bulevar Industrial around 5:30am.

Soon after, the bodies of another six men and one woman were found under a pedestrian overpass on the same boulevard. Police later found more bodies in the Ampliación Revolución neighborhood. Many of the bodies had been dismembered.

All the victims had been killed by gunshots.

In a written message left with the bodies, the Jalisco cartel took responsibility for the killings and threatened their rivals, including the Viagras gang, which is a branch of the Nueva Familia Michoacana cartel.

“We want to make clear that whoever helps La Chatarra, Ronal, Ratón, Moto, Mono Verde, Maniaco or Filos will end up like this,” the message read. “Kind people, go on with your routine. Be patriotic, and kill a Viagra.”

Michoacán officials announced plans to increase the presence of security forces and asked the federal government to deploy more National Guardsmen and improve coordination between state and federal forces. The National Guard has been deployed in Michoacán since June.

Uruapan is the state’s second-largest city and one of the top-50 most violent municipalities in Mexico.

Source: Mi Morelia (sp), Sin Embargo (sp), Aristegui Noticias (sp)

3 arrested for roadside murder of US couple in Chiapas

0
Chiapas murder victims Faunt and Zárate.
Chiapas murder victims Faunt and Zárate.

Three men have been arrested in Chiapas for the murder last month of two Americans, a doctor and a biologist.

According to police, 74-year-old Renato José Zárate and 71-year-old Lauren Green Faunt had parked their Toyota Matrix on the Tuxtla Gutiérrez-San Cristobal de las Casas highway on July 27 to get out and collect insects.

When the three suspects came along and saw the parked vehicle they tried to rob the scientists. But when the couple resisted, their attackers beat them with metal pipes and shot and killed them.

The thieves took the vehicle to the village of Mumuntik in the municipality of Chamula, where it was later found by police.

Police also found a flashlight belonging to the victims near where the robbery had taken place, and it bore the fingerprints of one of the suspects.

The couple lived in San Cristóbal de las Casas where they owned a restaurant and a hotel. Zárate was a medical doctor while Faunt was a biologist. Both were specialists in entomology, and they often traveled to collect insects. They were also recognized environmental activists who worked to preserve mountain wetlands around San Cristóbal.

Police identified those arrested as Eduardo “N,” Raúl “N,” and Benito “N.” They were detained in the community of La Traya, in the municipality of Ixtapa, and will be held in the Amate Prison as they await trial.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Farmers’ groups conduct nationwide blockades protesting lack of funding

0
'Listen to us AMLO,' reads the sign on a farm vehicle at one of today's blockades.
'Listen to us AMLO,' reads the sign on a farm vehicle at one of today's blockades.

One million farmers were predicted to participate in nationwide blockades and protests Wednesday and Thursday to demand the delivery of agricultural sector funding and a meeting with President López Obrador.

Members of four farmers’ groups that together make up the Authentic Front of the Countryside (FAC) will take part in the protest action.

Álvaro López Ríos, leader of the National Union of Agricultural Workers, told the newspaper El Universal that blockades would be set up on major highways from 8:00am today in all 32 states.

He said the protest camp set up on July 22 in front of the National Palace in Mexico City will be “reinforced” and that farmers will demonstrate outside the Interior Secretariat, the federal Senate and the Mexican Stock Exchange.

Members of the four FAC organizations will also participate in a march Wednesday morning from the Angel of Independence on Reforma avenue to the Monument to the Revolution.

López predicted that one million farmers across the country will join the two-day demonstrations.

By 10:30am CDT today there were reports of snarled traffic in several locations around the country.

The aim of the protests is to “create spaces for dialogue” with the president in order to discuss the problems faced by farmers and agree on solutions, he said.

The union leader said that López Obrador has refused to meet with the farmers’ groups and completely cut off their funding, a move he described as a “mistake.”

“How unfortunate that a government that arose from fighting these problems of a lack of dialogue between government and society has assumed [the position] that it criticized,” López said.

He explained that farmers want greater transparency in the allocation of resources for the agricultural sector.

According to the Secretariat of Agriculture and Rural Development (Sader), 90% of the 2019 budget for the sector has been used but the farmers’ groups disagree.

“Farmers haven’t seen that money, we don’t know where it is,” López said.

Francisco Chew, a member of the FAC and leader of a group called Social Movement for the Land, also said that many farmers haven’t received the government financial support they were promised.

“. . . They haven’t received the [stored value] cards and they haven’t been supported by [Sader’s] Production for Wellbeing Program . . .” he said.

Speaking at his morning press conference today, López Obrador said the farmers’ groups are upset because the government is allocating resources directly to producers rather than to them as occurred in the past.

“They don’t want to accept it and they think that with the protest, we’re going to back down. It’s a decision we’ve taken, all the support goes directly to the farmers, not to the organizations, not to intermediaries because we have proof that the money that the organizations received didn’t arrive. In other words, it didn’t get to the beneficiaries, it didn’t get to the farmers,” he said.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

7 suspected kidnappers rounded up and lynched in Puebla

0
A kidnapping suspect hangs from a tree in the central square in Cohuecan
A kidnapping suspect hangs from a tree in the central square in Cohuecan. The bodies of other victims were left nearby.

Seven suspected kidnappers were killed by residents of the Puebla municipalities of Cohuecan and Tepexco on Wednesday.

According to police reports, the incident started on Wednesday morning when two subjects kidnapped a man identified as Armando Pérez Contreras, a landowner in Tepexco, as he was driving in a pickup truck.

As they were fleeing, the kidnappers met up with two other accomplices and stole a second truck, killing its driver in the process. After they arrived in Cohuecan, a crowd was able to stop the truck and capture two of the kidnappers, whom they killed by hanging them from a tree.

The other two kidnappers were able to escape the crowd and were arrested by municipal police. But the crowd, which had swelled to as many as 180, determined where the suspects were being held and forced the police to turn them over. After the two captives were forced to give up the name of their boss, they were beaten to death.

The mob then found the alleged boss, and beat him to death too.

[wpgmza id=”226″]

But the lynching wasn’t over yet.

Several hours later, angry citizens attacked a police station, removed two people who were suspected of being involved in the kidnapping gang and hanged them.

One of the seven victims has been identified as a 16-year-old.

Puebla Government Secretary Fernando Manzanilla condemned the events, telling a press conference there will be an investigation into the killings and that those responsible will be punished.

“No one can take justice into their own hands,” he said. “These actions are not justifiable, and we ask that the public have trust in our institutions.”

Manzanilla added that the National Guard, the army and state police will remain deployed in the area as authorities take back control.

“The government has decided that state and federal forces will remain in the region with the goal of maintaining peace,” he said.

There have been 180 attempted lynchings in the state this year. Sixteen people have been killed and 209 rescued.

Source: El Universal (sp), El Sol de Puebla (sp), Animal Político (sp)