Sunday, August 17, 2025

Rising suicides expose mental health toll of living with extreme violence

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New suicide data indicates that years of record bloodshed have traumatized residents
New suicide data indicates that years of record bloodshed have traumatized residents in places where the violence is most concentrated. Reuters/Jorge Lopez

Mexico has suffered one of the world’s highest murder rates for over a decade, a consequence of the government’s aggressive, 12-year-long battle against drug trafficking organizations and other criminal groups, which has led lethal violence to escalate across the country.

Almost 30,000 Mexicans were murdered in 2017. May 2018 was Mexico’s most violent month in 20 years, with an average of 90 killings a day, according to the secretary of the interior.

Prominent victims of Mexico’s conflict include 136 politicians and political operatives assassinated while campaigning for the July 2018 general election, 43 student teachers who disappeared in the southern state of Guerrero in 2014 and the eight Mexican journalists killed so far this year.

In places where the violence has been highly concentrated, residents have spent the past decade taking precautions, coping with fear and processing tragedy.

Now, new data from the northern Mexican state of Chihuahua reveals the dangerous mental health toll of living with extreme, chronic violence: suicides.

Violence researchers like myself once considered Chihuahua, which shares a border with Texas, to be a Mexican success story in decreasing lethal violence.

Its biggest city, Ciudad Juárez, which sits just across the U.S.-Mexico border from El Paso, used to be one of the world’s most dangerous places. Its 2010 murder rate of 229 killings per 100,000 people was 14 times higher than the Latin American average and 38 times the global homicide rate. An average of 70 Ciudad Juárez residents were killed every week.

By 2015, thanks in large part to a pioneering public-private anti-violence initiative called Todos Somos Juárez, or We Are All Juárez, the city’s murder rate had dropped to 32 murders per 100,000 residents.

These days, violence is slowly rising again. Depending on the year, Juárez ranks among Mexico’s most dangerous cities.

But even when homicides were dropping in Juárez, suicides were steadily rising.

A recent survey by the Autonomous University of Juárez City and the Centro Familiar de Integración y Crecimiento, a group that helps grieving families, found that 33 city residents over the age of 18 attempt suicide every day. Another 43 Juárez residents daily will think about suicide without attempting the act.

The city’s 2017 suicide rate, 8.9 per 100,000, was nearly twice what it was in 2010. Last year, nearly 12,000 people – 1.3% of Juárez’s total population – tried to kill themselves.

Juárez’s mental health crisis reflects a state-wide trend. According to government data from 2016, Chihuahua state had the highest and fastest-growing suicide rate in Mexico.

In 2010, fewer than seven of every 100,000 people in the state committed suicide. By 2015, the figure had reached 11.4. Last year, Chihuahua saw 12.3 suicides per 100,000 residents.

That’s more than twice the Mexican national average and just shy of the United States’ alarming rate of 13.8 suicides per 100,000 people.

Young people in Chihuahua struggle the most. Among residents aged 15 to 29, approximately 16 in every 100,000 will commit suicide – double the national average for that age group.

Why are so many in Chihuahua driven to take their own lives?

Local researchers believe that chronic exposure to traumatic events causes the kind of severe mental distress that can lead to suicidal behavior.

Last year, the Autonomous University of Juárez City conducted research with 315 students on campus. It found that living in one of the world’s most violent cities had triggered paranoid thoughts.

Few of the students interviewed had been victims of Juárez’s brutal violence. But all had heard about kidnapped women, beheadings and other crimes – some equally gruesome – from friends and family or on the news. As a result, they had an unshakable feeling that their lives were in danger.

Researchers also conducted a similar study on student mental health in 2014. It determined that 35% of students struggled with depression and almost 38% reported anxiety. Nearly one-third showed signs of post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, including always feeling on guard, trouble sleeping and difficulty concentrating.

Surveys by the World Health Organization and the International Consortium of Psychiatric Epidemiology across nine developing countries, including Mexico, estimate the average rate of PTSD at 2.3%. Anxiety affects about 6% of respondents.

Research on high school students in Ciudad Juárez has likewise found a higher-than-usual incidence of depression, paranoia and PTSD.

These results are consistent with mental health surveys in other conflict zones.

A 2011 study of people displaced during Colombia’s civil war found evidence of PTSD in 88% of participants. Forty per cent suffered from depression.

Researchers interviewed 1,011 students in Afghanistan in 2006, five years into the U.S.-led war against the Taliban. Almost a quarter had flashbacks and anxiety, both signs of PTSD.

Such results have contributed to the World Health Organization’s classification of disaster, war and conflict as suicide risk factors.

Research on the mental health impacts of Mexico’s drug war is in very early stages.

I cannot conclude with certainty that chronic violence in Ciudad Juárez is driving the sharp uptick in suicides in Chihuahua state.

But Chihuahua’s suicide crisis may well indicate a simmering public health emergency in other Mexican states with high murder rates, including Michoacán and Guerrero – not to mention in neighboring countries like El Salvador and Honduras that remain far more violent than Mexico.

The ConversationWith 2018 on track to be another year of record murders in Mexico and president-elect Andrés Manuel López Obrador taking office in December, this is the moment for Mexico to begin grappling with the hidden, longer-term costs of its bloody drug war.

Cecilia Farfán-Méndez is a postdoctoral scholar at the Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies at the University of California San Diego. This article was originally published on The Conversation.

Mexico accepts inclusion of automotive wages in NAFTA talks

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Automotive wages are now on the table at NAFTA talks.
Their wages are now on the table.

Mexico has publicly accepted for the first time the United States’ proposal to include set minimum wages for the automotive industry as part of a modernized North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

“. . . What we’re talking about now is that a percentage of vehicles made in North America be made in a high-wage area,” Economy Secretary Ildefonso Guajardo said in a radio interview.

“What does that mean? . . . Of 100% of cars made in NAFTA [countries], it could be around 35% or 40% are made in a high-wage area . . .” he added.

In order to qualify for tariff-free status in the North American market, the United States is pushing for 40% of the content of cars and 45% of the content of pickup trucks to be made by workers who are paid at least US $16 per hour.

That’s more than five times the US $3 per hour that many auto sector workers in Mexico currently earn.

Mexican and Canadian officials said today that Mexico and the United States are getting closer to reaching a deal on rules of origin for the auto sector.

Guillermo Malpica, head of the trade and NAFTA office for the Mexican government, told an automotive sector conference in Michigan that the United States “started showing more flexibility last week” on content and other contentious issues.

Canadian trade negotiator Colin Bird, who appeared alongside Malpica, also said that negotiators are making headway on automotive content rules.

The United States is asking that cars made in NAFTA countries have at least 75% local content in order to be exempt from duties while Mexico has offered to raise locals content levels to 70%. The current rate is 62.5%.

With regard to steel, aluminum and glass content, Guajardo ruled out that a 70% North American content rule could be applied — as proposed by U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer — but suggested that bonuses could be offered to manufacturers who met those levels.

Bird also said that “harnessing the power of trade agreements to promote higher wages is the kind of policy all three countries can get behind.”

Both officials said they are optimistic that a new NAFTA deal will be reached although they cautioned that the outstanding contentious issues are challenging.

Nevertheless, they are hopeful that progress will be made at ministerial talks scheduled for later this week.

The so-called sunset clause pushed by the United States that would see NAFTA automatically expire if an updated agreement is not negotiated after five years remains a sticking point, with both Mexico and Canada opposed to its inclusion.

Malpica said that Mexico has instead suggested that the trade pact be “reviewed” every five years while Bird said that “any one country being able to hold the agreement hostage every five years does not provide the certainty” businesses need to invest.

The Mexican peso spiked 0.2% today on the latest NAFTA news but later dipped.

Some analysts predict that if a new deal is made the peso could strengthen to below 18 per dollar from its current mark of around 18.6 to the greenback.

NAFTA renegotiation talks started in August last year and were initially scheduled to conclude by the end of 2017 but dragged on due to a lack of consensus on key issues.

The United States’ decision to impose metal tariffs on its neighbors further complicated the process while United States President Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened to terminate the agreement and more recently said that separate deals with Mexico and Canada could be sought.

However, President Enrique Peña Nieto said last week he was optimistic that an updated NAFTA could be reached in August after Mexican and United States officials agreed to step up talks.

Source: El Economista (sp), Reuters (sp)

Joint Mexico-US exploration project searches for ships sunk by Cortés

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Divers search the sea bed for signs of Cortés's ships.
Divers search the seabed for signs of Cortés's ships.

Archaeologists from Mexico and the United States have begun exploring the depths of the Gulf of Mexico to search for ships sunk by Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés five centuries ago.

Led by Dr. Roberto Junco, head of the Underwater Archaeology Department at the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH), the binational team is combing a 10-square-kilometer area of seabed off the coast of Actopan, Veracruz.

In 1519, historians say, Cortés scuttled 10 of the 11 ships that arrived in Mexico to ensure that the men under his charge would have no way to return to Cuba and would follow him on his expedition inland.

The 11th ship was sent back to Spain to relay news of Cortés’ plans.

The area being explored lies off the coast of Playa Villa Rica, a beach located about 75 kilometers north of the port city of Veracruz.

Junco explained that the team is using a magnetometer and a side-scan sonar, among other technologies, to aid the search project, which was made possible through a grant from the National Geographic Society.

“The function of the magnetometer is to detect variations in the earth’s magnetic field in the area we are surveying. The intensity and distribution of those variations allow us to create a map and define sites of high potential, where we later dive and dig,” he said.

Underwater archaeologists Frederick Hanselmann from the University of Miami and Christopher Horrel of the United States Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement are also participating in the project.

The archaeologists say that metal artifacts such as nails, clips, anchors and other iron objects could be detected under the water and be indicative of where a ship was located.

“We know from documents, such as [Cortés’s] letters of relation [to Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor] and other sources like [conquistador] Bernal Díaz del Castillo’s account that Cortés didn’t burn his ships,” Junco said.

“That’s a myth created from references to ancient Greece. Rather he took everything from them that could be useful to him and then he punctured their hulls to sink them and eliminate the possibility that some of his troops might mutiny.”

In the past five centuries, only 19th-century historian Francisco del Paso y Troncoso has scoured the ocean floor to look for the sunken fleet but he didn’t locate any of Cortés’s vessels, which played a key role in the Spanish conquest of Mexico.

Source: EFE (sp)

Pemex inaugurates its new image at a station in México state

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Pemex's new look at a station in Atizapán.
Pemex's new look at a station in Atizapán.

The state oil company has adopted a new look, one that is intended to reflect a new Pemex.

The new gas station design was officially inaugurated today at a station in Atizapán Santa Cruz in México state.

The head of the company’s industrial transformation division said the new design will be incorporated at 45 stations this year, eight new ones and 37 that will be renovated.

Carlos Murrieta Cummings said the new concept was intended to maintain the franchise’s leadership in the domestic market.

“The new image breaks with the conventional and projects a new Pemex: a highly competitive business in an open market.”

The company said in a statement that the new design reflects an eagle in flight, “a leader, strong and agile, with its wings extended towards new challenges.”

Murrieta also said the company’s objective is to provide the highest standards of customer service, offering its clients experience, reliability, modernity and innovation.

The general manager of the Pemex franchise holder that operates the station said its sales have doubled since the new design was incorporated in mid-June.

Mexico News Daily

10-centavo coins are not worth much but they’re costly little numbers

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Mexican coins, from the 10-centavo piece to 10 pesos, and the cost of making each one.
Mexican coins, from the 10-centavo piece to 10 pesos, and the cost of making each one. el financiero

The lowest denomination of Mexican currency is the 10-centavo coin, a very small silver coin that is rarely used. But for the Bank of México (Banxico) it’s a costly coin to make.

Rising costs have pushed up the price of minting a single one of the coins to 19 centavos.

That’s up from nine centavos in 2012. The central bank’s production costs have risen 40%, even after opting for cheaper minting processes.

During the first six months of the year nearly 4.6 million pesos (just over US $246,000) was spent minting 24.1 million 10-centavo coins, while 100 million pesos has been spent making them since 2014.

A financial studies expert at the National Autonomous University (UNAM) explained that coin production costs depend on factors such as metal prices, production of the coin dies, distribution and salaries.

The cost of low-denomination coins has led many countries to phase them out, Miguel Ibarra said.

But if Banxico were to stop producing the 10-centavo coins, prices would instantly rise due to rounding up: if something has a price of 10.60 pesos but there are no 10 or 20-centavo coins, the price would automatically be rounded up to 11 pesos, he said.

Less expensive to produce are 20-centavo coins, which now cost 16 centavos, and the 50-centavo denomination, whose cost is 16 centavos.

Source: El Financiero (sp)

López Obrador announces 10 billion pesos to repair unfinished hospitals

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Abandoned hospital in Veracruz is one of 12 left unfinished by former governor Javier Duarte.
Abandoned hospital in Veracruz is one of 12 left unfinished by former governor Javier Duarte.

The new government’s investment in health care infrastructure will begin with a 10-billion-peso (US $537.5-million) investment in repairs to more than 50 hospitals left unfinished by previous administrations.

Located in the poorest regions of the country, the hospitals will be managed by the Health Secretariat and IMSS, the Mexican Social Security Institute.

“Millions of pesos were spent building these hospitals that were never finished,” Andrés Manuel López Obrador said outside his transition headquarters in Mexico City.

Once up and running, the facilities will make preventive medical care a priority and will be fully supplied with medications.

“Health care policies are going to change, there’s going to be good health care now,” said the president-elect.

“All of this will be part of of the state welfare policy . . . there are countries in Europe in which the right to health is guaranteed,” he remarked.

López Obrador also addressed corruption in the health sector, explaining that putting a stop to irregularities in the purchase of medications could “release a lot of funds.”

Part of his plan to thwart corrupt practices is to centralize the purchase of medications. The process will be overseen by citizen observers and a United Nations transparency agency.

“That’s why I am confident that we will make ends meet with our budget,” he said.

Source: Crónica (sp)

Residents lynch suspected extortionist in Morelos

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The lynch mob yesterday in Morelos.
The lynch mob yesterday in Morelos.

A lynch mob in Tetela del Volcán, Morelos, hanged a Colombian citizen yesterday based on rumors of his alleged involvement with a gang of extortionists.

Residents of Tlacotepec in the neighboring municipality of Zacualpan de Amilpas accused Ricardo Alonso Lozano Rivas and two companions of collecting extortion payments from local store owners.

Lozano fled town but his pursuers caught up with him in Tetela del Volcán. His companions escaped but Lozano was not so fortunate.

He was beaten and dragged to the town’s zócalo where he was tied to a flagpole and later hanged, said the state Attorney General.

Participants in the lynching prevented state police from intervening and stopped reporters from recording the incident.

The mob also burned the vehicle in which Lozano had been traveling.

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Two signs were placed on Lozano’s body with a message directed at Governor Graco Ramírez.

“Graco, these are the results of your government,” and “This is what’s going to happen to all extortionists.” The message was signed by the “United peoples of Morelos.”

Four people claiming to be Lozano’s relatives attempted to retrieve the body, explaining that he was not an extortionist but a money-lender, but they were deterred from doing so by the mob.

The body was recovered later by state police.

Increased violence in the region has triggered the formation of self-defense forces in several municipalities, where residents have complained of inaction by the state.

Said one resident of Tetela and a participant in the lynching: “The government does nothing. They left us no other way out . . . . The government does not care what happens to us, as long as they are fine . . . We’re fed up,” he said between expletives.

The state Attorney General’s office condemned the lynching and said it was working on dismantling the criminal organizations.

Source: Milenio (sp), El Sur (sp)

Mexico to Trump: homicide numbers fueled by American guns

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Navarrete: stop the flow of weapons.
Navarrete: stop the flow of weapons.

Violence in Mexico is largely fueled by the illegal entry of weapons from the United States, Interior Secretary Alfonso Navarrete Prida said yesterday.

The secretary’s assertion came in response to United States President Donald Trump’s use of new homicide statistics as justification for better border security.

Trump wrote in a tweet yesterday morning that “one of the reasons we need Great Border Security is that Mexico’s murder rate in 2017 increased by 27% to 31, 174 people killed, a record!”

At a later press conference, Navarrete Prida said that “if the United States shielded its border to stop the illegal entry of weapons and illicit money to Mexico, we would immediately see a dramatic fall in intentional homicides.”

He charged that criminal organizations in Mexico acquire the bulk of their weapons from north of the border and that the proceeds of crime they receive from the same source allow them to build up their arsenals.

“I agree that we have to protect the borders and above all, his [Trump’s] border so that neither weapons nor cash come into Mexico,” Navarrete Prida said.

He added that he asked for the United States’ support to stop the illegal flow of weapons into Mexico during a meeting in Washington D.C. Monday with U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen.

The interior secretary argued that the United States has to see gun possession as a border security issue rather than through the prism of the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, contending that if that doesn’t occur “it’s going to be very difficult for us to be able to contain the phenomenon of rising crime in a coordinated way.”

Navarrete Prida also proposed that United States authorities publicly announce on a weekly basis the measures that they are carrying out to combat binational arms trafficking.

The Interior Secretariat said in a statement that during Monday’s meeting, Navarrete Prida and Nielsen reached five agreements for bilateral cooperation that included the sharing of information aimed at stopping human trafficking and the exploration of ways to promote development in the region and to address the root causes of migration.

In a letter sent to Trump earlier this month, president-elect Andrés Manuel López Obrador also proposed that the migration problem be addressed “in a comprehensive manner through a development plan that includes Central American countries.”

Source: El Universal (sp)

US consulate issues security alert for three cities in Sonora

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Scene of Sunday morning's shooting in Guaymas.
Scene of Sunday morning's shooting in Guaymas.

The United States Consulate General in Hermosillo, Sonora, has issued a security alert for three cities in the state due to heightened criminal activity.

Issued yesterday, the alert refers to the cities of San Carlos, Guaymas and Empalme, warning of “recent violent criminal activity and ongoing police action.”

U.S. government personnel are prohibited from traveling to the three locations and all points south of Hermosillo via federal highway No. 15 in Sonora.

The consulate said the alert would be evaluated in 10 days’ time.

U.S. citizens are advised to avoid the area, monitor local media for updates and be aware of their surroundings.

Four people have been assassinated recently in the region and at least seven people are reported missing. On Sunday morning armed civilians opened fire with assault rifles on houses and vehicles in the San Vicente neighborhood of Guaymas.

No one was hurt but 11 vehicles were damaged.

Mexico News Daily

‘I feel blessed and grateful to God:’ passengers relate story of plane crash

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It was a terrifying experience but a lucky escape for passengers on board Aeroméxico flight 2431 yesterday when it crashed shortly after taking off from the Guadalupe Victoria Airport in Durango.

There were no fatalities among the 99 passengers and four crew on board the plane, which was bound for Mexico City, but officials said 85 people were injured and today 21 people remain hospitalized including the pilot and a two-year-old girl. Durango Governor José Rosas Aispuro said they are in a serious but stable condition.

Yaquelín Flores, a Mexican national who lives in Colombia and was traveling with her daughter, told reporters yesterday that it had been raining heavily prior to takeoff.

“The plane accelerated to take off and it got off the ground but we went into a very strong storm and it fell. Then we hit [the ground and] the plane slid forward. I remembered the protocol of putting my chest over my knees and my daughter did as well,” she said.

Flores said fire broke out immediately after the plane came to a stop. She turned around and saw a hole in the fuselage near one of the wings.

“We undid our seatbelts and I told my daughter that we had to go out there and we jumped. There were children leaving the plane and crying . . . We managed to get out through the hole but there were flames. I was afraid of being burned but we jumped without thinking or taking anything with us,” she said.

“I feel blessed and grateful to God.”

Another passenger who was traveling in first class said after the plane hit the ground it slid for a long distance before coming to a halt.

He said that he and other passengers in first class were able to leave the aircraft quickly but others took longer, adding that three or four minutes after the plane hit the ground it began to “explode.”

Another woman on board assured reporters that the plane had taken off and was briefly airborne before crashing.

“Yes, we took off but there was a lot of rain,” she said, adding that she believed the pilot had tried to slow down the plane after it made impact with the ground.

Inside the cabin, she said, “it was chaos because people were in shock and didn’t know what to do.” Luggage was strewn across the aisle, making it even more difficult to exit as the cabin was engulfed in flames and filled with smoke.

Ramin Parsa told the BBC that “shortly after the plane took off, I knew something was wrong.”

He said the plane hit the ground and “started bouncing, shaking and sliding” before hitting trees and coming to a stop in a ditch.

“All the lights went off and then there was smoke inside the cabin, people were panicking and screaming,” Parsa said, adding it was “a miracle of God we survived.”

Rómulo Campuzano, a National Action Party (PAN) politician, said he had been “very lucky because I was able to get out by the main door” using a torn-off door as a ramp to safety.

“I walked away from the plane, turning around to see if the other passengers were getting out, too. It started raining very hard and I think that helped put out the flames,” he said.

Some other passengers claimed the plane had been hit by lightning.

Once outside the aircraft, passengers walked to the perimeter of the airport to seek medical assistance and local media reported that wire cutters were used to cut a mesh fence to allow them to get out.

Flores said paramedics took about 20 minutes to arrive and explained that she lost all her personal belongings including her passport in the crash.

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

Video of the flight’s takeoff shot by passenger Ramiro Parsa