Thursday, October 9, 2025

Sinkholes swallow trucks after heavy rain in Ciudad Juárez

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A very deep sinkhole in Juárez.
A very deep sinkhole in Juárez.

Four and a half hours of torrential rain in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, early yesterday was too much for two stretches of road. Sinkholes opened up and swallowed two trucks, one of which was almost completely buried.

Neighbors in Complejo Roma rescued the woman who was driving a pickup that almost disappeared in the hole, which quickly filled with water.

In the Salvárcar neighborhood a gas truck met the same fate.

No one was hurt in either incident.

More than 20 families were evacuated in Riberas del Bravo after an irrigation canal overflowed its banks, causing severe damage to nearby homes.

Highest rainfall was 39 millimeters recorded in the eastern part of the city, the Civil Protection agency said.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Highway tolls raised between 1% and 6%

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highway toll booths
Motorists are paying more today.

Automobile tolls went up between 1% and 6% today on most of Mexico’s principal highways.

Capufe, the federal highways and bridges operator, said one of the highest increases is on the heavily used highway between Mexico City and Puebla, where tolls went up by 5.7% to 165 pesos.

On the Mexico City-Querétaro highway, also a busy route, the toll went up by 1.2% to 166 pesos.

Although the Mazatlán-Durango highway has proved costly to maintain, motorists will pay only 1.5% more with the new toll of 601 pesos.

Travelers between Monterrey, Nuevo León, and Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, started paying 253 pesos today, up 4.1%.

The fee on the highway connecting the Veracruz cities of Córdoba and Veracruz rose by 3.5%, to 206 pesos, while in Tamaulipas motorists driving between Reynosa and Matamoros will pay 77 pesos, 2.6% more.

The only route where tolls remain unchanged is Mexico City-Acapulco, one of the most heavily used highways. The price is still 530 pesos.

Capufe is a branch of the federal Secretariat of Communications and Transportation and operates a network of 42 highways and 32 bridges, 12 of which are international.

The last time highway tolls went up was in January.

Source: Milenio (sp)

4 officers killed, 6 wounded after police convoy ambushed in Chihuahua

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One of the patrol vehicles attacked last night.
One of the patrol vehicles attacked last night.

A large group of armed civilians ambushed a state police convoy in the Sierra Tarahumara of Chihuahua last night, killing four officers and wounding six others. At least one officer is missing.

The attack took place about 8:30pm at El Nogal, located between the communities of San Juanito and San Pedro in the municipality of Bocoyna.

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The attackers, believed to belong to the crime gang called La Línea, launched grenades and Molotov cocktails at the convoy before opening fire with assault rifles.

The officers were returning to their operations base after arresting three armed individuals in San Juanito and turning them over to authorities in the city of Cuauhtémoc, the state Attorney General said.

State and federal security forces responded to the attack with a land and air deployment of police to locate the missing officer and search for the attackers.

Source: Milenio (sp), El Diario (sp)

166 skulls and other remains exhumed from hidden graves in Veracruz

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Searching for human remains in Veracruz.
Searching for human remains in Veracruz.

Authorities in Veracruz have exhumed at least 166 skulls and other human remains from 32 hidden graves located on a property in the center of the state.

Veracruz Attorney General Jorge Winckler Ortiz told a press conference yesterday that during a 30-day search, investigators also found 200 articles of clothing, 144 ID cards and other personal belongings.

He said that he wouldn’t disclose the exact location of the site for security reasons.

Analysis of the human remains shows that the bodies were buried at least two years ago, Winckler said.

Authorities have requested the assistance of the scientific division of the Federal Police to identify the remains and asked families of missing persons in the state to provide DNA samples or any other information that could aid the identification process.

The clandestine graves were first located on August 8 after state authorities received information from an unidentified person about a location where hundreds of bodies were buried.

The site was inspected using drones, probes and ground-penetrating radar and the human remains were found over an area spanning 300 square meters. Another grave is still to be inspected and Winckler didn’t rule out finding more bodies.

In June, members of a group dedicated to searching for missing persons in Veracruz said that more than 300 bodies have been exhumed from hidden graves in the state over the past two years. The latest discovery increases that figure by more than 50%.

Violence in Veracruz rose sharply during the 2010-2016 administration of former governor Javier Duarte, who is now in jail awaiting trial on corruption charges and links to organized crime.

Four former high-ranking security officials and 15 police officers are accused of using death squad tactics to forcibly disappear at least 15 people during Duarte’s governorship.

The discovery of the 166 skulls is one of the largest mass grave finds in Mexico.

It’s not the first time that an anonymous tip has revealed the location of clandestine graves containing hundreds of bodies.

In 2016 and 2017, Veracruz investigators found 253 skulls and bodies in burial pits near the state capital of Xalapa, and 195 bodies were exhumed from a mass grave in San Fernando, Tamaulipas in 2011.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Restructuring military considered to address ‘national emergency’

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They're probably not going away any time soon.
They're probably not going away any time soon.

The incoming government appears to be backing off plans to withdraw the military from performing public security functions.

The prospective public security secretary in the new federal government yesterday described the security situation in Mexico as a “national emergency” which merits the use of the military in public security tasks.

“We are experiencing a period of national emergency, which on one hand obliges us to see the participation of the army in support of public security as responsible and necessary, always at the express request of civil authorities and subordinated to and coordinated by civil authorities,” Alfonso Durazo said.

“On the other hand, we’re a country that has security problems but not international conflicts, in other words wars, and that favors the possibility of proposing that the army support security tasks,” he added.

The comments contrast with remarks Durazo made shortly after president-elect Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s landslide victory in the July 1 election when he said that the incoming government planned to gradually withdraw the military from public security duties on the nation’s streets.

Durazo added yesterday that he supports president-elect Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s plan to “restructure” the armed forces.

López Obrador said Tuesday that “we are going to use the army and the navy in another way, what I mean is that we’re going to restructure these institutions and instead of being for national defense, they’ll be institutions for interior defense and public security.”

The president-elect also said last month that military forces will continue to carry out public security duties on the nation’s streets for the foreseeable future because neither state nor municipal police are functioning properly in the fight against violence and crime and Federal Police are not ready to replace them.

Durazo explained that López Obrador’s restructuring plan involves moving towards having all the military forces under a single command, adding that the president-elect’s proposal to create a National Guard will be considered at a later date but is not a priority.

“. . . Optimizing the resources that the Mexican state has for security is our priority . . . However, we are still working and forming different scenarios with respect to the [national] guard . . . At another stage, it’s probable that we’ll present an initiative,” he said.

Durazo also said the creation of a new Secretariat of Public Security (SSP) independent of the Secretariat of the Interior is an immediate goal.

López Obrador has pledged that the new secretariat will be in place when he is sworn in on December 1.

Durazo said he discussed the final details of the legal process to create the SSP with López Obrador yesterday, adding that good progress has been made so far.

Source: Milenio (sp)

New pact corrects 22 years of mistakes by Mexico: economy secretary

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Guajardo: pact corrects errors.
Guajardo: pact corrects errors.

The new bilateral trade agreement with the United States corrects past mistakes made by Mexico and is the result of “intelligent leadership” from President Enrique Peña Nieto, Economy Secretary Ildefonso Guajardo said yesterday.

Speaking at an event attended by 300 of Mexico’s most influential leaders, Guajardo said the pact announced last week by United States President Donald Trump “corrects the errors Mexico made in the last 22 years,” explaining that while NAFTA had benefited workers in the automotive, industrial and business sectors, there were also “losers” who didn’t reap any rewards.

Guajardo said that when Trump took office in January 2017 he sought to “look after his electoral base” who felt that they had been defrauded by the North American Free Trade Agreement.

The U.S. president has openly cultivated and courted that sentiment, describing NAFTA as “the worst trade deal maybe ever signed anywhere” and blaming the pact for the loss of American jobs and industry to Mexico.

Guajardo said that on April 26, 2017, he received a telephone call from Foreign Affairs Secretary Luis Videgaray who told him that there was a document on the U.S. president’s desk that if signed would notify Mexico and Canada of the United States’ intention to withdraw from NAFTA.

The economy secretary said the call served as a catalyst for the government to join forces with the private sector in an attempt to maintain the agreement.

“Today, almost a year and a half after that incident, we have an understanding with the United States that preserves the fundamental framework of our trade relationship with that country and adds new elements that strengthens [it to face] the reality that the world and North America live today,” he said.

The role Peña Nieto played in reaching the accord was pivotal, Guajardo declared.

“There is no technical negotiating team in the world that can give results if the leadership of the country doesn’t have a clear vision about how to manage its relationship with the leader of the neighboring country,” he said.

“In that sense, the intelligent leadership of President Peña in this process cannot be denied. He painted where the line of national dignity is but didn’t get roped into shows of bravado that could have placed the wellbeing of the country in danger. In that the only credit goes to Enrique Peña Nieto.”

However, Guajardo also said that the transition team of president-elect Andrés Manuel López Obrador had played a crucial role in “reviving a negotiation that seemed dead” and praised the current and incoming governments for presenting a united front that “sent a message of certainty and [shared] vision” to its trade partners.

Mexico’s new understanding with its northern neighbor “could motivate other global actors, like the European Union and Japan, to find a new balance with the United States,” he said.

Negotiations to bring Canada into the agreement are continuing in Washington D.C. this week after four days of negotiations last week failed to yield a trilateral deal.

Guajardo this week rejected that Mexico had betrayed Canada by reaching a separate bilateral deal with the U.S. and said that he was hopeful that a Canada-United States pact would be reached by tomorrow.

Source: Milenio (sp)

At Hacienda El Carmen you can step back into the Mexico of the 1700s

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Hacienda El Carmen, historical monument and more.
Hacienda El Carmen, historical monument and more.

El Carmen is one of western Mexico’s most venerable old haciendas, located 50 kilometers due west of Guadalajara and 10 kilometers from Jalisco’s famed Guachimontones circular pyramids.

I am a guest here today because my wife was invited to inventory all the birds that can be seen on the grounds — and she kindly invited me to accompany her.

At this moment I am writing these words on a comfortable sofa inside one of the magnificent arched porticos surrounding the courtyard. Hundreds of turtle doves, great kiskadees, grackles and robins are singing in the huge rubber tree shading this space, while the soothing melodies of Antonio Bribiesca’s guitar play in the background.

In recent years this old hacienda has been transformed into a hotel, a spa, a gourmet restaurant and a historical monument all in one. This morning we had the pleasure of breakfasting with one of the owners, Mónica Baeza, who grew up in the hacienda and in 1996 took charge of running it.

We were, of course, curious about the history of the place. When we asked Mónica about it, her eyes lit up.

“Would you believe that this hacienda was built by Carmelite monks? It dates back to the 16th century when the Spanish crown bequeathed the land to one Francisco Merodio de Velasco. It stayed in the family for generations until around 1705, when Francisca Figueroa, a widow with no children, decided to give it to the monks who, in fact, are the ones who constructed the main buildings and that beautiful courtyard out there.

“The prior, however, did not want to turn it into a monastery. Instead, he sent the earnings from the cattle and crops to Guadalajara to finance the construction of the famous Convento del Carmen. Back in those days, this finca [farm] was huge. It had 22,000 hectares on which they produced corn, wheat, oats, sugar cane, mezcal and sorghum, just to name a few things.

“Now, along came Benito Juárez and the Reforma. As a result, the Carmelites were expelled around 1856. The Ley Juárez relieved the Catholic church of all its properties. So the Convento del Carmen suddenly became the Ex-Convento del Carmen as it is known today and our hacienda fell into the hands of people who were rich and powerful back in the days of Juárez. After that, it had many owners until it suffered from neglect and was auctioned off.

“In 1964 my mother fell in love with the old place and our family bought it and developed it as a country house. So this is where I grew up, where I played with my friends. Then, in 1996, when my father became ill, we held a family meeting to decide what to do about the hacienda. Well, I ended up in charge of the place, because I raised my hand and said, ‘I’ll do it’.”

Today Hacienda el Carmen has “only” 160 hectares of farmland where they raise sugar cane and corn, but recently Baeza had a huge, modern greenhouse constructed on the property and today, using hydroponics, it supplies all the vegetables served in the restaurant.

Mónica Baeza’s degree is in industrial relations and her principal hobby has long been cooking. When asked how she feels about being a farmer, she sighed. “Agriculture,” she stated, shaking her head, “has more variables than any other business.”

In fact, she decided to transform the hacienda into a hotel in order to help balance things out economically. As for running a hotel-spa, Baeza discovered that “La hotelería is the business of perfection. Everything must be done perfectly from the very first contact with the client until the moment you wish your parting guest a safe journey — you can’t push the rewind button.”

“In the end,” she adds, “our hacienda has become una fábrica de amigos, a place that generates friends.”

Indeed, the extraordinary friendliness of every soul we met at Hacienda El Carmen, whether owner, waitress, gardener or gatekeeper, made us feel completely at home. Human warmth is perhaps Mexico’s most important attraction, but it is not always encountered in hotels.

This hacienda, however, is filled with good vibrations and we even made friends with the ducks and the horses. Truly, “una fábrica de amigos.”

What can you do at the hacienda? Plenty. Just start wandering and you’ll come across cool, shady courtyards with bubbling fountains, wide, wide, stretches of green (including a six-hole golf course), the remains of a long, graceful aqueduct and a small lake where you can go swimming and bathing with the ducks or try sneaking up on the iguanas sunning themselves along the shore.

Wherever you go, whatever corner you turn, you’ll run into relics of the hacienda’s long history, now tastefully transformed into objets d’art, whether old wagon wheels, brightly colored ceramics, ancient paintings or even a life-size wooden statue of St. Francis of Assisi, dating back to the days when brown-robed monks glided along the corridors.

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And if you spend the night here, you will enjoy an orchestra of chirping crickets under a huge night sky with unimaginably bright stars, the kind of sky you can only find far away from the hustle and bustle of the city.

And then there’s the food. It is simply perfect. Even if you can’t stay overnight, it would be well worth it just to come for one of these gourmet meals. On top of that, they even have their own “house tequila” called Alebrijes, which is aged right on the grounds.

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To me, the most surprising thing about Hacienda El Carmen is that they are not charging a fortune as are so many other haciendas and if you just want to stroll around the place and imagine you are back in the 18th century that, too, can be arranged.

The driving time from Guadalajara to Hacienda El Carmen is about 90 minutes.

• Visit the website photo gallery

Hacienda El Carmen Jalisco Mexico.wmv
Video of the hacienda taken by the author in 2011.

 

The writer has lived near Guadalajara, Jalisco, for more than 30 years and is the author of A Guide to West Mexico’s Guachimontones and Surrounding Area and co-author of Outdoors in Western Mexico. More of his writing can be found on his website.

11-month-old baby found a week after she disappeared in San Luis Potosí

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Mya Fernanada in the arms of a police officer after her rescue yesterday.
Mya Fernanada in the arms of a police officer after her rescue yesterday.

An 11-month-old baby who disappeared a week ago was found alive and well yesterday amid litter and construction garbage on a vacant lot in San Luis Potosí.

Federal Police officers on patrol heard an infant crying on a property next to the Río Verde-San Luis Potosí highway.

There they found Mya Fernanda Parra sitting on a blanket and wearing only a light dress despite the cold.

She was taken to the Hospital for Children and Women, given a clean bill of health and reunited with her parents.

Mya Fernanda disappeared on August 30 while her grandmother was taking her to a daycare center. The woman was found dead later the same day in El Zapote. She had been wounded in the thorax and the abdomen and had bled to death.

But there was no sign of the baby.

The San Luis Potosí Attorney General’s office continues to investigate the circumstances surrounding the woman’s death and the apparent kidnapping of the young girl.

Source: Milenio (sp), Código San Luis (sp)

One year later, earthquake recovery continues to be a long, slow process

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There is still earthquake rubble in the streets of Juchitán, Oaxaca.
There is still earthquake rubble in the streets of Juchitán, Oaxaca.

Tomorrow will mark the first anniversary of the powerful 8.2-magnitude earthquake that struck off the coast of Chiapas, causing widespread damage and killing about 100 people.

But despite the passing of an entire year, thousands of people whose homes collapsed completely or were severely damaged are still waiting for reconstruction or repair work to be completed or, in some cases, to begin.

Some victims received federal aid money but found that the amount they were allocated was woefully inadequate to meet their reconstruction or repair needs, while others handed over the resources they received to unscrupulous construction companies, who took their money and ran without completing any or all of the work they committed to.

Most victims of last September’s first major earthquake are in the states of Chiapas and Oaxaca, which together bore the brunt of the strong seismic activity at 11 minutes to midnight on September 7.

Romelia Pérez Cruz and Félix González Estrada, a couple both aged in their mid-90s and residents of the Cuauhtémoc ejido (community land) in Chiapas, are among the thousands of victims who continue to suffer from the ramifications of that fateful night.

Pérez and González lost their old adobe home but only received 25,000 pesos (US $1,300) with which to build a new one.

With the limited funds, the best the couple’s son Nevy González Pérez could do was build a six-by-six-meter makeshift shed, which is unsuitable for the region’s hot weather but which they have no choice but to call home.

Hundreds of other families living on the same ejido only received between 15,000 and 30,000 pesos (US $775 – US $1,550) in aid money, which wasn’t enough for them to buy all the construction materials they needed or pay the labor costs to allow them to finish their homes.

That’s the situation of Belisario López Gómez and his family, whose home sustained “total damage” in the quake.

However, instead of receiving the 120,000 pesos (US $6,200 at today’s exchange rate) they should have been entitled to, all they got was 15,000 pesos.

For the past year, López, his wife and two daughters had no choice but to live with his mother-in-law as he seeks out loans from alternative sources to complete the reconstruction work.

While he has been approved for a 50,000-peso bank loan, López told the newspaper El Universal that he still needs another 40,000 pesos to finish the family’s new home, which is currently without a roof and doors among other shortcomings.

In other parts of the state and Oaxaca — especially the Isthmus of Tehuantepec region — many more are in similar situations.

Oaxaca Governor Alejandro Murat said this week that 60% of quake-damaged homes have been repaired or rebuilt over the past 12 months, although federal authorities say the figure is lower.

He blamed municipal governments for the delays, charging that they had been slow to grant approval for a lot of the construction work.

Murat added that the state Attorney General’s office is investigating the cases in which construction companies are alleged to have defrauded earthquake victims who handed over their government financial aid to them.

Two hundred residents of Juchitán, the Isthmus region’s commercial hub, have complained to municipal authorities that they were duped by unscrupulous builders.

Murat also said that all the stored-value financial aid bank cards the state received were distributed to quake victims.

With regard to a report that 500 families didn’t receive the aid money they were entitled to, the governor said that “in many cases” people were unable to be found.

Murat also said that his government is working hard so that “gigantic steps” can be taken on the still outstanding reconstruction work, which includes the repair of damaged hospitals.

Almost 3,000 schools were also damaged in the state but four out of 10 are still awaiting repairs, statistics show.

According to information in President Enrique Peña Nieto’s sixth and final government report, Oaxaca received 7.36 billion pesos (US $376 million) in federal funding and aid following the earthquake — more than any other state affected by the two major September earthquakes — while Chiapas received 5.32 billion pesos (US $275 million), the third highest amount.

But despite the large injection of funds, the southern states which are two of the poorest in Mexico are suffering from the slowest rebuilding process in the country.

The federal government report said that both Oaxaca and Chiapas have completed less than 40% of the reconstruction and repair work required and distributed less than 40% of the federal money they have received.

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

Johnnie Walker acknowledges Wixáritari with special-edition whisky

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One of the limited-edition bottles and materials used to produce the design.
One of the limited-edition bottles and materials used to produce the design.

Johnnie Walker Blue Label scotch whisky has launched a special edition to pay tribute to the Wixáritari, or Huichol, people and their culture during September, the month of Mexico’s independence celebrations.

The 50 bottles with distinct motifs were decorated by Mexican artists from Menchaca Studio, which specializes in arts and handicrafts, using chaquiras, or small plastic beads, traditionally used by the Wixárika to create intricate designs.

“This edition shows the parallelism between Huichol design and the craft of whisky-making: unmatched talent and a remarkable history behind them. The best raw materials are required along with exemplary patience and passion, as well as excellence achieved through constant experimentation,” said beverage firm Diageo, owner of the Johnnie Walker brand.

The distiller explained that each of the 50 bottles has a unique design, with a special lot number etched on to it.

Menchaca Studio founding director César Menchaca explained that the limited-edition bottles drew inspiration from the Wixárika’s passion for art, life and culture, bringing to life mystical characteristics like peyote, a cactus with psychoactive alkaloids, particularly mescaline, deemed as a sacred fruit and bearer of wisdom; a blue deer representing the light of life; and snakes and scorpions, considered to be guardians of wisdom.

The special edition scotch will be sold exclusively by Loma Linda restaurants in Mexico City for 11,000 pesos a bottle (US $570), a portion of which will be donated to the Wixáritari people.

According to the market research firm Euromonitor International, Mexico’s whisky market was worth US $2.8 billion in 2016, and is expected to reach $3.7 billion by 2021.

Johnnie Walker dominates the domestic market with a 25% share, followed by Pernod Ricard’s Passport with 13.1% and Diageo’s Buchanan’s with 9.8%.

Source: Milenio (sp)