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Shake Shack’s first Mexican restaurant opens this summer

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A Shake Shack burger, coming soon to Mexico City.
A Shake Shack burger, coming soon to Mexico City.

There will be a new option for lovers of hamburgers and creamy milkshakes this summer in Mexico City when the country’s first Shake Shack location opens.

The New York chain of casual restaurants will be on Paseo de la Reforma in front of one of Mexico City’s most iconic landmarks — the Ángel de la Independencia.

Shake Shack vice-president Michael Kark said the restaurant’s fans in Latin America had asked for a Shake Shack for many years.

Mexican restaurant operator Grupo Toks will operate the new outlet, whose exterior will be adorned with a mural by celebrated Mexican artist Claudio Limón.

Toks general manager Juan Carlos Valverde Losada said last fall that the company plans to open 30 Shake Shack locations in Mexico. Santa Fe, Bosques de las Lomas and Polanco in Mexico City and the airports at Cancún and Los Cabos are among them.

Known for its fresh and mostly local ingredients, Shake Shack was born as a hot dog cart in 2004 in Manhattan, New York, and has expanded to 26 American states with 220 locations, and to more than 70 international location such as Hong Kong, Istanbul, Dubai, Moscow and now Mexico.

In addition to the chain’s classic burgers, fries, milkshakes and custards, Shake Shack’s Mexican location will also offer organic wines from La Lomita winery in Baja California, as well as a special menu for dogs.

Source: El Financiero (sp), Chilango (sp), Forbes (sp)

Lucrative business of transporting tourists at heart of Uber-taxi dispute

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A protest by taxi drivers last year in La Paz.
A protest by taxi drivers last year in La Paz.

The lucrative tourist market is at the heart of a dispute between taxi drivers and Uber chauffeurs in Baja California Sur as the state Congress considers the approval of a new transportation law.

Taxi drivers in the tourism-oriented state have protested against the legislative proposal that seeks to regulate Uber and other ride-sharing services and allow them to operate legally.

Uber already operates without formal authorization in Baja California Sur but taxi drivers fear that if it is given the go ahead to do so legally, it will further diminish their share of the tourism transportation market, which is worth tens of millions of dollars annually.

Governor Carlos Mendoza Davis yesterday urged lawmakers to pass the new law, which was presented to Congress more than seven months ago.

“We have no more time to lose, because in the absence of this law, confrontations that affect all of us have been provoked,” he wrote on Twitter.

“Our state lives from tourism. I call on the Congress of Baja California Sur . . . to approve the law as soon as possible.”

While the governor pressures Congress to pass the law, taxi drivers in destinations such as La Paz and Los Cabos vow to do all they can to stop it.

“It’s very clear that to provide a [transportation] service, a concession, a license and a series of [other] things are needed . . . The private service doesn’t have those things, it’s illegal. We’re going to fight because the wealth of each one of us [is at stake],” said Pedro Enrique López, leader of the taxi drivers’ association in La Paz.

However, it is not just taxi drivers who are prepared to fight for their livelihoods.

Hundreds of Uber drivers and their supporters protested in Cabo San Lucas Sunday to demand authorities take action to stop the acts of aggression against people who only want to earn an honest living.

Other transportation industry stakeholders argue that approval of the new law would help to put an end to corruption in the taxi industry.

“A large number of [taxi] concessions are in the hands of politicians. The consolation prize for every previous state administration that finished up . . . was transportation concessions,” said Celestino Atienzo, representative of a tourism transportation association in Los Cabos.

Jesús Robles, director of the state transportation department, agreed with that assessment and explained that concessions can be leased for as much as US $100,000.

If Uber is given the green light, more protests are likely to follow, warned Ramón Ceseña, municipal director of transportation in Los Cabos, a taxi driver and allegedly an instigator of operations against Uber drivers.

“Deregulating transportation would be dangerous due to the social problems that could arise. There could be protests,” he said.

Consumers might be tempted to protest as well. The newspaper Milenio reported that the fare from the airport to Cabo San Lucas is 900 pesos in a taxi. The Uber fare is 486 pesos.

Source: Milenio (sp) 

Health service chief quits, cites interference by Finance Secretariat

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Martínez has resigned as head of IMSS after less than six months on the job.
Martínez has resigned as head of IMSS after less than six months on the job.

The chief of the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS) announced his resignation today, citing budget and staffing cuts at the agency and other “pernicious interference” by the Secretariat of Finance (SHCP).

In a letter directed to the technical council of IMSS, Germán Martínez said that meddling by the SHCP posed a risk to the institute’s capacity to provide health services.

“I want to say it as clear as I can and as I must: some officials from the Secretariat of Finance have a pernicious interference in IMSS and place at risk the egalitarian vocation . . . of providing health services,” he wrote.

“The president of the government of Mexico proclaimed the end of neoliberalism but at IMSS some interferences from the Finance Secretariat are of a neoliberal essence: savings and more savings, staff cuts and more staff cuts . . .” the letter continued.

“Excessive savings and controls in health spending are inhumane,” the official wrote, adding that the country’s poor are most affected by them.

Martínez said that IMSS needs a “great legal reform” in order to integrate it into a universal health care system but charged that “some finance officials are attempting a cosmetic restructuring.”

While discussions about the restructuring of IMSS takes place, many of the institute’s employees have no job security and staff vacancies are on the rise, Martínez said, adding that delays in health infrastructure projects are “brutal” and the supplies of medicine “precarious.”

Martínez, a former national president of the National Action Party (PAN), is the first cabinet-level official to resign in the government of President López Obrador.

IMSS, which manages public hospitals in Mexico and is also responsible for paying pensions and running other social programs, is one of the government’s biggest spending departments.

The president, whose administration has implemented cost-cutting measures across a range of departments, told reporters that he regretted Martínez’s decision to step down but added “fortunately, there are very good public servants in the team and we’re going to replace him.”

López Obrador defended the cost-cutting measures at IMSS and asserted that the provision of its medical services is not at any risk.

“The Secretariat of Finance has to take care that there is no deficit . . . that the finances are healthy, that’s its role and I support that policy . . . [IMSS] is an institution that works and it’s going to continue working without any problem . . .”

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

30 chefs will participate in 20th annual Querétaro paella festival

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Paella is on the menu this weekend in Querétaro.
Paella is on the menu this weekend in Querétaro.

Foodies across central Mexico and beyond should prepare their palates for an explosion of flavor at the 20th edition of Querétaro’s paella festival.

More than 30 chefs of national and international renown will descend upon the Finca Sala Vivé winery in Ezequiel Montes on May 25 and 26 to dazzle visitors’ taste buds with both traditional and original takes on Spain’s famous rice dish.

Cooks will compete for first place and the opportunity to represent Mexico in Spain at the Swedish International Valencian Paella Contest.

Chef Israel Soriano Rodríguez told the news agency Notimex that paella has been a dish key to historic cultural and gastronomic exchange between Spain and Mexico.

“Mexico and Spain have a very strong relationship. Perhaps Mexican cuisine would not have become as transcendent as it has without the fusion of cultures.”

Soriano Rodríguez, himself a former winner of the competition, said this year he expects the winning paella to be prepared entirely from ingredients found in Querétaro.

Another main attraction will be a gigantic paella, prepared by 20 cooks using 100 kilograms of rice, 250 kilograms of meat and 150 kilograms of vegetables and spices.

To accompany the main dish in traditional fashion, festival-goers will also have the opportunity to sample a large selection of different varieties of wine, some of which are produced locally.

Other cultural and artistic activities will be available to tourists, including flamenco presentations, a special kids’ zone and a bazaar featuring designs and crafts by local artists.

Source: AM Querétaro (sp), Notimex (sp)

Environmental group criticizes use of heavy machinery to remove sargassum

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A backhoe removes sargassun from a Quintana Roo beach.
A backhoe removes sargassum from a Quintana Roo beach.

Efforts to clean up sargassum from beaches on the Caribbean coast are causing environmental damage, according to the Mayab Environmental Group (GEMA).

The organization has reported the use of heavy machinery to collect sargassum, which is prohibited under Mexican law, on Gaviota Azul beach in Playa Cancún.

GEMA President Aracely Domínguez told El Universal that the Benito Juárez municipality (which includes the city of Cancún) brought heavy machinery to the beach yesterday, which she says can damage beaches by compacting sand. The use of heavy machinery can also harm sea turtle nests.

“We demand the Benito Juárez municipality be fair to the environment and follow the regulations that govern the management of sargassum, especially with regard to protecting sea turtles,” she said.

Domínguez said that regulations allow light machinery to be used for collecting sargassum, but not heavy machinery like the backhoes that have been used on Cancún beaches.

Owners of small hotels in nearby Punta Maroma also reported seeing large hotels use heavy machinery to remove sargassum.

Domínguez added that the environmental protection agency Profepa has not fulfilled its obligation to monitor sargassum removal.

“Profepa should be making sure the navy collects sargassum and does it in a way that doesn’t hurt marine fauna, but they haven’t said anything about this,” she said.

As warming oceans promote the reproduction of sargassum, large quantities of the macroalgae have been washing up on beaches in the Mexican Caribbean since 2014. In addition to affecting the tourism industry, the weed is harmful to coastal ecosystems.

The wave of sargassum that has been hitting the Mexican Caribbean since last week is one of the largest in history. The total quantity is not known, but over the weekend the navy reported collecting 10 tonnes of sargassum from beaches between Cancún and Tulum.

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

Businesses question inaction by police over Mazatlán looting

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Broken windows in Mazatlán on the weekend.
Broken windows in Mazatlán on the weekend.

The failure of police to make any arrests during a looting spree in Mazatlán, Sinaloa, on Saturday has been questioned by the city’s business community.

In the early hours of Saturday morning, thieves broke into and ransacked six businesses in the center of Mazatlán including a pharmacy, a pawn shop, a convenience store and a Telcel mobile phone distributor. Three homes were also looted.

Jesús Sandoval Gaxiola, president of the Mazatlán Chamber of Commerce, said it was worrying that authorities appeared to have taken no concrete action to respond to a wave of violent crime that has afflicted the city in recent weeks.

Thieves smashed store windows and broke locks during a similar looting rampage at the Alameda shopping center last month, he explained.

Sandoval said the private sector has contributed to security efforts in the city and even donated two police cars. However, he claimed that the municipal Secretariat of Public Security hasn’t shown the same level of commitment to combating crime.

The business leader said that the Chamber of Commerce has written to Security Secretary Ramiro Lizárraga Medina to demand the development of new strategies to tackle insecurity in Mazatlán.

Municipal secretary José de Jesús Flores de Segura said he has asked Lizárraga to meet with members of the business community to jointly draw up a security plan for the city with a particular focus on the downtown area.

The official said that rising insecurity is the result of a lack of municipal police officers and that authorities have been forced to ask the state police and the army for assistance.

On Sunday, the Sinaloa public security secretary announced that the government planned to send 400 state police officers, including 100 members of its elite force, to Mazatlán.

Cristobal Castañeda Camarilla also said that construction of a new state police base and barracks in the resort city will commence in the coming months.

The additional deployment of state police will bolster security in the south of Sinaloa and in the industrial corridor between Mazatlán and Durango, the secretary explained.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

Forensic services overwhelmed in Veracruz: too many bodies

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An abandoned morgue used to store bodies, with neither refrigeration nor permission.
An abandoned morgue used to store bodies, with neither refrigeration nor permission.

The discovery of scores of clandestine graves in Veracruz in recent years, high levels of violent crime and the closure of several morgues have overwhelmed the state’s forensic services, forcing authorities to acquire another refrigerated container to store unidentified bodies.

From Poza Rica, a municipality in the central north region of the state, to Coatzacoalcos in the south, morgues have been shut down and abandoned, according to a report in the newspaper Milenio.

Among the morgues closed by state authorities between 2014 and 2016 despite rising levels of violence were those in Ciudad Isla, Acayucan, Oluta, Las Choapas, Agua Dulce, Nanchital, Minatitlán and Tierra Blanca.

Since the latter year, high numbers of hidden graves have been found in the Gulf coast state including 76 in the first five and a half months of the new federal government.

The remains of at least 350 bodies have been exhumed, according to collectives made up of family members of missing persons.

Edna López, a former morgue employee, said that before the facility in Ciudad Isla shut down in 2016 – the final year of the six-year administration of now-imprisoned former Veracruz governor Javier Duarte – the situation she and other workers endured was appalling.

“Things started to get bad because we filled up with bodies and they [the state government] didn’t send us resources, not even for soap. There was no money to repair the refrigeration room . . . At times, we had to buy, out of our own pockets, cloths and scourers to clean the tables, and even lab coats and aprons,” she said.

The morgue received so many bodies that it ran out of space to store them, López added.

“We didn’t have anywhere to store the bodies . . . sometimes they were on the floor and they stayed there for days . . .” she said.

López and other employees who lost their jobs at the shuttered morgues are still owed up to three months of unpaid wages, Milenio said.

Even though they were formally closed years ago, some of the morgues are still used intermittently by funeral parlors and regional prosecutor’s offices that are unable to transport bodies to the state capital, Xalapa, or the port city of Veracruz due to a lack of resources.

In a video report, Milenio showed shocking images of decomposing bodies in abandoned morgues that don’t have refrigeration facilities and are not equipped with the materials and instruments needed to examine and identify corpses.

At the end of Duarte’s administration, the Veracruz government purchased a refrigerated container with space for 300 bodies and in September last year another with double that capacity was acquired following the discovery of a mass grave in the fishing village of Arbolillo.

In February this year, the new state government rented or purchased another refrigerated trailer, which is currently located at the Xalapa morgue. However, authorities haven’t provided any information about the number of bodies stored in it or whether they were found in clandestine graves.

Lenit Enríquez, a member of a Coatzacoalcos collective of family members of missing persons, criticized authorities for not disclosing such information.

“They have the information but they don’t want to reveal it,” she said. “Nor have they told us the number of missing persons [in the state].”

Enríquez, whose sister disappeared in 2015 – allegedly after she was abducted by police and marines – added:

“When we make a discovery [of a hidden grave] they tell us that there are no reagents to identify the bodies or that they have to send them somewhere else, or that they’re in a poor state, or that there are no people to process them. It’s torture.”

The lack of morgue capacity is not a problem unique to Veracruz.

At least two trailers were used in Guadalajara, Jalisco, last year to store unclaimed bodies including one that was shuffled around the city’s metropolitan area, drawing the ire of residents who complained of fetid odors.

Authorities in Guerrero and Baja California, among other states, have also resorted to the use of refrigerated trailers as high levels of violent crime caused unidentified bodies to pile up.

Oaxaca Attorney General Rubén Vasconcelos said yesterday that forensic services across the nation are in crisis due to the large number of unidentified bodies that have either been exhumed from clandestine graves or are victims of the record homicide rates currently plaguing the country.

“There is a serious problem, there is a crisis on this issue in Mexico. The [nation’s] attorney general’s offices have to confront it by strengthening our technical capacities,” he said.

Source: Milenio (sp), Al Calor Político (sp) 

Vehicles, real estate, jewelry on block to aid poor communities, addiction centers

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2007 Lamborghini Murciélago.
2007 Lamborghini Murciélago.

It is probably the first time since President López Obrador took office in December that luxury vehicles have been seen in the parking area in front of Los Pinos, the former presidential residence. But they won’t be there long.

The parking lot contains 68 luxury vehicles of all kinds, including Porsches, Corvettes, a Shelby Mustang and a silver Lamborghini Murciélago with scissor doors, all of which will be the first items to be auctioned by the new Institute to Return Stolen Goods to the People.

In his morning press conference today, President López Obrador announced that the cars will be auctioned this Sunday, May 26, and that the money raised will be used to support the two poorest municipalities in Mexico, both of which are in the state of Oaxaca.

Ricardo Rodríguez Vargas, director of the new institute, said that of the 68 vehicles, 26 had belonged to the president’s office while the other 42 were seized from criminal gangs. The total of starting prices is 28 million pesos (US $1.4 million), but Rodríguez estimates that the cars will sell at 50% more than that.

“We want this to turn into public works, hospitals, things that benefit marginalized areas of the country,” he said.

1977 Ford Mustang
1977 Ford Mustang.

The in-person auction will be open to anyone who wishes to participate.

Rodríguez said next month the government will auction houses and apartments that have been confiscated, including an apartment seized from anti-human trafficking activist Rosi Orozco in the ritzy Mexico City neighborhood of Bosques de las Lomas, and valued at 22 million pesos.

Another, more valuable apartment that had been given to Orozco’s husband will also be included in the auction, although Rodríguez did not say how much it is worth.

The Orozco couple is under investigation for misuse of government funds.

The auction will also include two houses in the Jardines del Pedregal neighborhood, valued at 34 million and 78 million pesos.

The proceeds from the real estate auction will be used to fund addiction recovery programs.

 

2016 Ford Shelby F-150.
2016 Ford Shelby F-150.

Rodríguez added that in a third auction, the institute will sell off jewelry that has been confiscated from organized crime. The proceeds from that auction will be used to support poor communities in the Montaña region of Guerrero.

“The government used to be like a reverse Robin Hood, they stole from the people and gave to the rich,” said Rodríguez. “But not anymore: now we’re going to give back to the people, transparently. It’s an honor to be able to participate.”

Source: Reforma (sp), El Financiero (sp), Infobae (sp), Sin Embargo (sp)

Woman to stand trial for beating that left neighbor a paraplegic in Playa del Carmen

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González, victim of a beating that left him a paraplegic, at yesterday's hearing.
González, victim of a beating that left him a paraplegic, at yesterday's hearing.

Two years after the fact, María Fernanda Salcedo Medrano faced a judge yesterday for the first time to answer for a beating that left a neighbor a paraplegic.

Both Salcedo and her husband, Rodrigo Galán, are alleged to have beaten Roberto González in 2017 in a residential neighborhood of Playa del Carmen, Quintana Roo, an incident that was captured on tape by video surveillance cameras.

Salcedo did not make a statement at yesterday’s hearing but family members of the victim said they will produce sufficient evidence to link her to the attack.

González also attended the audience to testify, arriving in an ambulance accompanied by friends and family.

The victim’s wife, Blanca Rosalía Pérez Andrade, said she hoped the trial resulted in justice and the payment of damages for her husband’s injury. She also blamed the new justice system for the slow pace of the investigation.

“As Roberto’s family, from day one we have insisted and followed up on our denouncements, court dates, audiences and rulings. We have fully cooperated with the investigation and we have very strong evidence. Unfortunately, the new justice system heavily supports criminals, and until absolute guilt is demonstrated they are not going to do anything.”

Salcedo had been subpoenaed several times before but was excused on account of medical problems, although witnesses said she has been in good health.

Salcedo’s husband has not yet appeared before a judge due to an official complaint he filed against the proceedings, but the victim’s lawyers expressed confidence that this barrier will soon be tossed out.

In August of last year, the newspaper El Universal reported that Galán, if found guilty, could face more than 19 years in prison for his role in the beating, according to a statement by the Attorney General’s Office.

The victim was allegedly attacked by Galán after he complained to Salcedo about the couple’s dog, which had been attacking passersby.

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

Big Pacific swell causes minor flooding in Acapulco

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Pacific swell floods a street in Acapulco.
Pacific swell floods a street in Acapulco.

A big swell on Mexico’s Pacific coast caused minor flooding in Acapulco, Guerrero, yesterday afternoon.

The state Civil Protection office said sea water flooded El Morro beach and in a matter of minutes poured on to Juan de la Cosa street, between the Emporio and Playa Suites hotels in the city’s Golden zone.

Municipal police and firefighters responded and assisted residents and employees of the nearby hotels to remove at least five vehicles from the flooded area. No losses or damages were reported.

The swell — mar de fondo in Spanish — has been impacting Acapulco and other areas of the Pacific coast for the last few days, particularly at Santa Lucía bay.

Civil Protection warned that conditions will remain unchanged at least through today.

Source: Reforma (sp), Milenio (sp)