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Education conference in Acapulco turns into brawl among teachers

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Chairs fly as teachers' tempers flare in Acapulco.
Chairs and water bottles fly as teachers' tempers flare in Acapulco.

An education forum in Acapulco, Guerrero, was canceled yesterday after a brawl broke out among teachers just before it was due to start.

At approximately 10:00am, around 300 teachers belonging to the Guerrero Education Workers’ Union (CETEG) burst into a conference room at the Acapulco convention center and launched into a boisterous protest against educational reforms and the disappearance of 43 students in 2014.

They also threw objects at the forum attendees, many of whom were members of the SNTE teachers’ union.

The latter, the CETEG claims, has not fought to defend public education in Guerrero or recognized the repression the state’s teachers have suffered.

The SNTE teachers retaliated by throwing bottles of water at the CETEG members as they shouted at them to leave.

The confrontation then turned even uglier as teachers from both unions threw chairs at each other.

All told, the ruckus lasted around 10 minutes during which time a lot of the attendees fled the conference room. There were no reports of injuries.

The Guerrero Attorney General’s office has opened an investigation into the incident.

The forum was organized by the transition team of president-elect López Obrador and future education secretary Esteban Moctezuma Barragán was to have led it.

Instead, he appeared on stage only to announce that the forum was canceled and that it would be rescheduled for a later date.

The 2013 educational reform, intended to improve teaching standards and subject teachers to compulsory evaluations, was met with strong opposition, especially from the dissident CNTE union, to which the CETEG belongs.

There have been hundreds of protests against the reform over the past five years.

López Obrador, who will be sworn in on December 1, has pledged to revoke the reform.

“The educational reform will be canceled and replaced by another reform that will take the point of view of teachers and parents into consideration,” he said in August.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

Pet lion plays rough, sends owner to hospital with serious injuries

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Two of the 'pets' in the Ciudad Juárez home.
Two of the 'pets' in the Ciudad Juárez home.

Don’t drink and mess with your pets when they happen to be lions and tigers.

That would appear to be the moral of a story yesterday in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, where Erick Noé Romero Meraz, 41, lives with two lions and a tiger.

When he arrived at his home in the Rincones de San Marcos neighborhood, allegedly under the influence of alcohol, he shouted at one of the lions, triggering an attack by the animal.

Romero was admitted to the Juárez general hospital in serious condition with deep gashes in his arms, legs and neck.

When police arrived at Romero’s house, his family assured them they had all necessary permits to have the three animals in their home.

As of yesterday, police were keeping the house under guard.

Source: Sin Embargo (sp)

Man confesses to killing 20; body parts found in buckets, freezer bags

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Yesterday's march in Ecatepec.
Yesterday's march in Ecatepec.

A man arrested last week in México state has confessed to killing at least 20 women, sexually abusing some of them and selling their belongings and bones.

Juan Carlos N., 34 and his wife Patricia N., 38, were arrested in the municipality of Ecatepec Thursday after leaving a house with a baby carriage containing human remains.

Authorities had placed the couple under surveillance as part of an investigation into the disappearance of three women and a two-month-old baby in April, July and September this year.

The baby girl, who the couple admitted they sold for 15,000 pesos (US $800), has been found safe and sound and is now being cared for by her grandmother.

At an initial hearing yesterday, state prosecutors said the remains of two women were found in the couple’s home.

More remains were also found at a vacant lot near the couple’s home and at two other addresses in the Ecatepec neighborhood of Jardines de Morelos.

Investigators found body parts in eight buckets filled with cement as well as inside plastic bags in a freezer.

The remains will be subjected to forensic testing for identification purposes.

The prosecutors also said that that both Juan Carlos and Patricia have been subjected to psychiatric testing.

The former was found to have both psychotic and personality disorders while the latter has suffered from mental retardation since birth and also presented signs of delirium.

Both, however, know the difference between right and wrong, the testing determined.

Juan Carlos said that he was driven to commit at least 20 murders over the past six years because of his hatred for women.

His misogyny, the suspect told investigators, was cultivated by the treatment he received from his mother, who dressed him in female clothing when he was a boy and forced him to watch her having sex with several men.

Juan Carlos confessed to slitting the throats of his victims after which he engaged in sexual acts with their bodies before cutting them up into small pieces and placing most of the remains in jars filled with formaldehyde.

Some body parts, however, were fed to dogs and body fat and skin were used to fertilize potted plants, he said.

Patricia is alleged to have helped her husband to cut up and dispose of the bodies.

She told investigators that she was responsible for convincing victims to enter their home under the pretext of showing them clothes and other items for sale.

Both Juan Carlos and Patricia have been ordered to remain in preventative custody at Ecatepec’s Chiconautla prison.

According to a report in the newspaper Milenio, the couple first met in a bar in Jardines de Morelos, the same neighborhood where they later lived together.

Residents of Ecatepec — a sprawling, densely populated municipality in greater Mexico City that is notorious for femicides — took to the streets yesterday to protest against violent crime against women both in the municipality and further afield.

The president of the México state Congress, Azucena Cisneros Coss, was one of around 1,500 participants who chanted and held up signs emblazoned with “ni una más” (not one more [femicide victim] as they marched.

She described the situation in Ecatepec as both a “state of emergency” and a crisis of violence against women and urged the state government to dismiss Mayor Indalecio Ríos, who she said has done little to combat crime.

Cisneros, a deputy for the Morena party, also took aim at state Public Security Secretary Maribel Cervantes Guerrero, claiming that she has never set foot in Ecatepec despite 40% of the state’s crime occurring there.

“I’m not exaggerating by saying that we are in a deep security, social and economic crisis,” she said.

There were at least 2,585 murders of women in Mexico in 2017, according to official statistics, and of the total México state recorded the highest number.

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

5 Mexico City police arrested for stealing half a million pesos

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Police aboard motorcycles and in patrol cars allegedly robbed a man of half a million pesos.
Police aboard motorcycles and in patrol cars allegedly robbed Coyoacán businessman.

Five state police officers have been arrested in Coyoacán, Mexico City, on suspicion of stealing half a million pesos from a local businessman.

The victim was traveling in his vehicle near the municipal administrative offices when five police officers on motorcycles and in patrol cars blocked his way.

They surrounded his vehicle and demanded 500,000 pesos (about US $26,400).

After turning over the money, the man followed the officers, who responded by offering to return half the money if he agreed not to continue following them.

The victim, who caught the whole exchange in photographs and on video with his cellphone, then proceeded to file a formal complaint before the state Public Security Secretariat.

The five police were taken into custody after their victim identified them and the money recovered and returned to its owner.

The five officers face charges of theft and abuse of authority.

Source: Excélsior (sp)

Enel Green Power to invest US $160 million in solar plant

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There will be new solar panels in Tlaxcala.
More solar panels are coming to Tlaxcala.

The largest solar power plant in the Americas is scheduled to start operations by mid-2019 in the central Mexico state of Tlaxcala.

Located on a 1,000-hectare expanse of land straddling the Tlaxco and Hueyotlipan region, the Magdalena 2 plant will be built by the Italian multinational Enel Green Power.

Representing an investment of US $160 million, the plant will have 550,000 solar panels and generate 231.8 MW.

Enel’s head of renewable energies for Mexico and Central America, Paolo Romanacci, stated that Tlaxcala was the ideal place for the project due to its competitive advantages, including its connectivity and economic stability.

Enel Green Power is one of the biggest renewable energy investors and operators in the country in terms of installed capacity and project portfolio.

Source: El Financiero (sp)

Oaxaca mayor accused of spending public funds on residential project

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The property where public funds were spent on infrastructure.
The property where public funds were allegedly spent on infrastructure.

The mayor of Juchitán, Oaxaca, spent millions of pesos to complete urban infrastructure work in a residential project in which she has a personal financial interest, a local official has denounced.

Municipal trustee María Cruz Vásquez said that Mayor Gloria Sánchez López allocated more than 6.4 million pesos (US $341,000) to pave streets in the as yet unoccupied neighborhood of Guiexhuba.

The money was taken from a 2017 federal government allocation of 31.7 million pesos (US $1.7 million) earmarked exclusively for road surfacing projects, Cruz added.

The trustee said the mayor’s family sold the lots in the planned residential estate, suggesting that Sánchez acted in her own self-interest by allocating funds to Guiexhuba while other parts of Juchitán were neglected.

In addition, the newspaper El Universal reported that there are two large signs in Guiexhuba, featuring the municipal government insignia, that claim that more than 1.5 million pesos (US $79,000) were spent on water supply and drainage projects completed in July and August that supposedly benefit 375 people.

However, there is currently nothing more than scrubland and a single half-finished home in the area, El Universal said.

Cruz Vásquez, who has carried out her own investigation into the use of public money and infrastructure projects in Juchitán, accuses Sánchez of acting with a lack of transparency.

“In May 2017, I started investigating this project and how it was going to be carried out. I found several irregularities and I documented them and I’ve presented them to the relevant authorities,” she said.

Cruz added that more than 59.3 million pesos (US $3.1 million) earmarked for various infrastructure projects in Juchitán in 2017 were largely allocated to neighborhoods controlled by Sánchez and her political allies.

The mayor will leave her post later this year to take up a new role as a deputy in the Oaxaca Congress.

Juchitán, the commercial hub of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec region, suffered widespread damage in the first of the devastating September 2017 earthquakes.

In the aftermath of the quake, Sánchez was accused of handing out provisions directly to local residents in defiance of state and federal government directives that all aid be distributed via the military.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

Hurricane triggers tropical storm warning for Yucatán peninsula

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Hurricane Michael's position at 11:00am EDT.
Hurricane Michael's position at 11:00am EDT. us national hurricane center

Tropical storm Michael has been upgraded to a hurricane, triggering a hurricane warning for western Cuba and a hurricane watch for the northeastern gulf coast, the United States National Hurricane Center said this morning.

Michael was located about 220 kilometers east-northeast of Cozumel, Quintana Roo, at 11:00am EDT and heading north. Maximum sustained winds were 120 kilometers per hour and further strengthening is forecast.

A tropical storm warning is in effect for the coast of Mexico from Tulum to Cabo Catoche at the northern end of the Yucatán peninsula.

The National Meteorological Service warned this morning that strong winds with gusts up to 60 kilometers per hour are forecast for the coasts of Quintana Roo and Yucatán, along with two to three-meter waves.

The hurricane is predicted to move into the southeastern Gulf of Mexico by tonight and become a major hurricane by Tuesday or Tuesday night.

Mexico News Daily

Lime scooter rentals launches in Mexico City

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Lime e-scooters now in Mexico City.
Lime e-scooters offer another transportation option.

United States micro-mobility company Lime has launched its electric scooter rental service in Mexico City.

The battery-powered, shared scooters can be hired in the neighborhoods of Polanco, Anzures, Juárez, Condesa and Roma, all located to the west of Mexico City’s downtown.

To access the service, Lime users pay 10 pesos to unlock a scooter via a mobile application and then 3 pesos per minute.

When a ride is completed, the dockless scooters can be parked by the curb of any street in the designated operating area.

“Lime is committed to providing Mexico City with easy, quick and sustainable travel solutions,” said Alexander Wieland, Lime’s Mexico general manager.

“E-scooters are relatively new in Mexico, and we believe our partnership with Mexico City will help them achieve their clean-air goals while creating a positive economic impact through job creation . . .”

The company is working with the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP) and other partners to ensure that the introduction of the scooters on the capital’s traffic-clogged streets is safe.

“Lime, like other mobility solutions for last mile connections is great news for Mexico City. We should have more options other than private cars but . . . of course they should operate with order, safety and be part of a public policy of sustainable mobility,” ITDP Mexico director Bernardo Baranda said.

Lime launched in June 2017 and has since entered more than 100 markets across the United States and Europe with its scooters and electric bikes.

It is the second scooter company to enter the Mexico City market after the Mexican company Grin, whose scooters are currently available in Roma and Condesa.

Some Mexico City residents have complained on social media that the scooters clog up public space such as sidewalks and are an eyesore but others have welcomed their arrival.

Mexico City also has a well-established, city government-run shared bicycle scheme called EcoBici, which last year added 340 electric bikes to its inventory.

The Chinese company Mobike entered the market this year but soon hit a significant hurdle: bicycle theft.

Mexico News Daily

Close to 10,000 babies were born last year to mothers aged 10-14

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Lots of young mothers in Mexico.
Lots of young mothers in Mexico.

Almost 10,000 babies were born in Mexico last year to mothers aged between 10 and 14, according to government statistics revealed by the federal health secretary.

“The Inegi [National Statistics Institute] statistics are already out, they’re preliminary, they’ll change . . . but not by much. In 2017, 9,748 babies were born to mothers aged [from 10-14],” José Narro Robles told attendees at a tertiary education conference in Nuevo León.

“Every day of 2017, two babies were born to mothers aged 10 and 11, but how is that possible? Biologically, morally and ethically, that is not good,” he added.

Narro, who described the situation as “unacceptable” and one that “pains” him, said that greater sex education is needed, especially in primary and middle schools, but added that parents also need to play a role.

“In 70% of cases, those who get the girls pregnant . . . are adults, aged 18 or older. Where does this happen? At home, the place where they should be most protected, most looked after,” he said.

“. . . We have to eliminate and eradicate childhood pregnancies and reduce teenage pregnancies by at least half, ” Narro declared.

Figures compiled by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) last year showed that Mexico ranks number one for teen pregnancies among the 34 member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

The health secretary, who is a former director rector of the National Autonomous University (UNAM) and director of its medicine faculty, also said that mother-to-child transmission of HIV continues to be a concern although the number of cases declined by 34% last year.

“We should detect in all pregnancies if there is a problem and we would save a baby from having HIV/AIDS their whole life . . .” Narro said.

Source: Milenio (sp) 

Veracruz spill: 300 evacuated, thousands of animals dead, Coatzacoalcos river threatened

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Dead fish in Nanchital, killed after oil spill.
Dead fish in Nanchital, killed by oil spill.

An oil spill in southern Veracruz that forced the evacuation of 300 people is estimated to have killed thousands of birds, fish and other animals, leaving a fishing community wondering how they will live.

Residents of Nanchital blame Pemex and Pemex blames vandals for causing a pipeline spill that has affected a seven-kilometer stretch of the Tepeyac creek and now threatens the Coatzacoalcos river, into which the Tepeyac flows.

The mayor of Nanchital estimates it will take months to clean up the effects of the spill, and fears community wells will become polluted.

Zoila Balderas Guzmán said the municipality will take legal action against whoever is responsible but also criticized the state oil company for what she called “indifference” and neglecting to notify local authorities when the spill took place.

The incident was first noted on September 28 but it wasn’t until Thursday that the evacuation of residents began. They were moved to shelters after the odor of petroleum became unbearable. It was also on Thursday that dead animals began appearing.

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Oceanographer Homero Bennet said the spilled substance was strong enough to cause the rapid decomposition of affected animals. No one has said what precisely the substance is, and Pemex has only said vandals caused the pipeline spill and that personnel were working to contain it at the source.

Bennet also urged that municipal authorities file a complaint against Pemex with the environmental protection agency and suspend all fishing immediately.

A Civil Protection spokesman said it was urgent that Pemex initiate clean-up efforts on the Tepeyac creek and begin bioremediation.

Fishermen claim it’s not the first time they have seen an oil spill in the area. They say Pemex has blamed vandals in the past but locals believe the spills are caused by poor maintenance.

Beatriz Torres Beristáin, a researcher at the University of Veracruz, charges that there are 673 other cases of petroleum pollution in the state that have been catalogued by the federal Environment Secretariat (Semarnat).

In the neighboring state of Tabasco, some people are blaming oil pollution for the deaths of up to 50 manatees along with snakes, crocodiles and fish that have perished in the Bitzales region of Macuspana.

Residents living nearby have reported suffering skin damage.

A Semarnat representative said the situation in Tabasco as “a problem [affecting] the social and economic structures of the region,” and has been described as one of the worst ecological crises in the state.

Source: e-veracruz (sp), Sin Embargo (sp), Milenio (sp)