Home Blog Page 2059

Seatbelt infraction leads to synthetic drug bust

0
Drums of suspected synthetic drug precursor discovered after seatbelt infraction.
Drums of suspected synthetic drug precursor.

A driver who neglected to fasten his seatbelt was busted yesterday with 8.4 tonnes of synthetic drug ingredients in Nayarit.

The National Security Commission said Federal Police halted a cargo truck on the Tepic-Mazatlán highway when they observed the driver was not wearing a seatbelt.

A routine inspection of the truck’s cargo and its documentation followed but the information provided by the driver did not withstand close scrutiny: police found inconsistencies in the return address and destination data, as well as in the cargo’s total weight.

An inspection of the shipment revealed 40 blue plastic drums containing 8.4 tonnes of a chemical substance believed to be a crystal methamphetamine precursor.

The driver, the truck and the cargo were placed in the custody of a prosecutor’s office.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Dark days in Yucatán municipality due to unpaid CFE account

0
All is dark at the municipal offices after the electricity was cut off last April.
All is dark at the municipal offices after the electricity was cut off last April.

These are dark times for Motul, Yucatán, particularly at municipal headquarters.

The new mayor was sworn in Saturday, but the ceremony would have been conducted in the dark were it not for rented portable generators: the electricity was cut off Thursday due to an overdue account.

Mayor Roger Aguilar Arroyo claimed during the swearing-in ceremony that his predecessor, Vicente Euán Andueza, had left the municipality in arrears with the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE). So municipal headquarters, several adjacent streets and the main square of Motul have no power.

The Institutional Revolutionary Party mayor said the National Action Party’s Euán left outstanding debt of 3 million pesos (US $156,000), 2 million of which is owed to the CFE.

The new mayor pledged to negotiate a payment plan with the federal utility to have the administration’s power reconnected.

The electricity was cut off four times during Euán’s three-year term. He has blamed his own predecessor for the unpaid debt.

Source: El Universal (sp)

1,000 homes flooded in México state after Lerma river bursts its banks

0
Flood victims move their belongings to higher ground.
Flood victims move their belongings to higher ground.

Around 1,000 homes were flooded in México state Saturday after the Lerma river burst its banks following heavy rains, state authorities said.

The river, Mexico’s second longest, overflowed in the municipality of San Mateo Atenco, about 15 kilometers east of the state capital Toluca.

Homes and agricultural fields in the neighborhood of San Pedro were directly affected by the river runoff, which overwhelmed drainage systems and caused more flooding of houses in the neighborhoods of San Juan, San Nicolás, San Francisco, Santiago and Guadalupe.

Personnel from the army, the state Secretariat of Security, the municipal police and Civil Protection services carried out an operation to assist affected residents.

Staff from the México state Water Commission (Caem) and the National Water Commission (Conagua) placed thousands of sandbags and rocks along the river bank to prevent further flooding while municipal authorities set up four shelters for affected residents.

“It was about three o’clock in the morning [Saturday] when we heard a lot of voices and went outside to find that there was already drainage water approaching so we started to raise the things in our home on breeze blocks,” said Francisco Valencia, a resident of San Juan.

“It’s been about 12 or 13 years since the last flood as big as this one, we hadn’t suffered since then with wastewater [flooding] but unfortunately it’s happened to us again . . .”

Virginia Maldonado, a resident of the San Francisco neighborhood, told the newspaper Reforma that she was concerned about health problems that the flooding could cause.

“The bad thing for us is that blood from the municipal abattoir came in [to our home], all the water that came in is from the drains. The smell and the risk of infections and diseases is what is affecting us,” she said.

Officials from the Secretariat of Health were deployed to evaluate health risks in the flood-affected areas.

State Civil Protection services said this morning that joint efforts to “restore normality” to the lives of San Mateo Atenco residents are continuing but are expected to conclude shortly.

More heavy rain, possibly accompanied by an electrical storm and hail, is forecast for México state later today, the National Meteorological Service said, while the state government warned residents via Twitter to take precautions.

Source: Reforma (sp), Capital (sp)

New Congress, old president: Peña Nieto delivers his final report

0
Peña Nieto and Trump in Mexico City in 2016
Peña Nieto and Trump in Mexico City in 2016: the latter's visit was not well received by Mexicans.

President Enrique Peña Nieto today submitted his sixth and final government report to the new federal Congress but it won’t be until Monday that the details will be made public.

Peña Nieto, whose six-year term will conclude on November 30, said in a statement that on Monday, “in an act of accountability for all Mexicans, I will address the nation from the National Palace.”

The statement, based on remarks the president made at a business event this week, also outlined a range of achievements of his Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) administration.

They include “14 structural reforms” that “pursued three main objectives: to strengthen and expand the rights of Mexicans, strengthen the democratic regime and freedoms and increase the productivity and competitiveness of the economy.

Peña Nieto said that “the implementation of these reforms is already under way, and some of their benefits are already being felt in the everyday lives of Mexicans, although their full scope will be seen in the medium term.”

Among the most prominent were the energy reform, which opened up the oil and retail petroleum sectors to foreign and private companies after a 75-year state monopoly, and the educational reform, which made teacher evaluations compulsory but faced vehement opposition from the powerful CNTE teachers’ union.

The president also highlighted the successful resolution of differences with the United States “within the framework of the North American Free Trade Agreement“ (NAFTA) following the announcement Monday that a bilateral deal had been reached.

“We established, by mutual agreement, new rules and procedures that provide certainty for investments,” Peña Nieto said.

Talks in Washington D.C. this week aimed but ultimately failed to bring Canada into the deal. However, negotiations will continue next week.

The statement also cited the new Mexico City International Airport project and the Mexico City-Toluca train project as significant achievements, although neither has yet been completed and both are behind schedule.

“Both of these public works, which will extend beyond this administration, will facilitate the everyday life of the inhabitants of Mexico City and make it even more attractive for national and international tourists,” Peña Nieto said.

In the lead-up to his address Monday, Peña Nieto has also posted a series of videos to his social media accounts in which he talks up the government’s achievements and also addresses some of the most contentious and controversial events that occurred during his administration.

Speaking about the disappearance of 43 teacher-training students in Iguala, Guerrero, in September 2014, the president said he stands by the “historical truth” declared by investigators that the students were killed by a crime gang which then burned their bodies.

On the visit of United States President Donald Trump to Mexico while he was a candidate in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, Peña Nieto said he “underestimated the great social resentment there was for President Trump.”

However, he also defended the meeting, stating that “it left the door open for dialogue and a closer relationship with the new government of the United States.”

In another video, Peña Nieto said he regretted the so-called “casa blanca” (white house) scandal, in which a favored government contractor built a mansion for his family.

However, the president added that the arrangement was “strictly legal” although he conceded that it “impacted negatively on the credibility of the government, the credibility of the institution of the presidency and the credibility of the administration.

Those negative impacts, along with widespread dissatisfaction with the absence of any measurable economic improvement due to the reforms, a security situation that has steadily worsened and indications that corruption is seemingly as bad as it ever was have left Peña Nieto extremely unpopular and his party standing in third place after the July 1 elections.

At 5:00pm today, Interior Secretary Alfonso Navarrete Prida handed over the report to the president of the Chamber of Deputies, who will make it available to all deputies and senators for review.

Everyone else will see the details on Monday.

Mexico News Daily 

IPN students develop robot to rescue disaster victims

0
Students and their robot, Heiland.
Students and their robot, Heiland.

A group of students from the National Polytechnic Institute (IPN) has developed a rescue robot capable of detecting the presence of earthquake survivors trapped under rubble.

Called Heiland, which means savior in German, the robot was designed to aid human and canine rescue workers when carrying out rescue missions in the aftermath of quakes or other natural disasters.

The robot prototype consists of two fiberglass boxes joined at the center in a form similar to the body of an ant, four wheels, an FPV (first-person view) camera that sends images in real time and a passive infrared sensor, which can detect body heat from the bodies of people or animals even if they are not visible to the camera.

It also uses a Hall effect sensor and a magnetic pick-up sensor to help it navigate amid rubble and regain its balance in the case of sustaining a fall and flipping over.

The sensors are programmed by an Arduino Mega micro-controller board and the robot is manipulated by a joystick remote control, with which forward, reverse and turn commands can be made within a radius of 100 meters.

The remote control has a built-in LCD screen to which the camera images are transmitted.

Heiland is the brainchild of Itzeli Camacho Vargas, Abril Suárez López, Gerardo Huerta Pérez, Eduardo Salmerón Sánchez and José Sánchez Ramírez, all of whom are studying for IPN’s Technical Studies in Digital Systems degree.

They said they also plan to develop an interface that will enable information such as the number of people the robot detects to be sent back to the person controlling the device.

Other possible future improvements include adding a sensor to the robot that can detect gas leaks and the development of a mobile application that will allow Heiland to be operated via a cellphone or tablet.

“What we are planning is for the robot to be able to support rescue groups and reduce the risk of losing human and canine lives in the search for people trapped by the collapse of homes or buildings because of a natural disaster, like the earthquake that occurred on September 19 last year,” the students said.

Source: El Financiero (sp)

Over 2 tonnes of cocaine seized aboard small boat off Oaxaca

0
The boat seized off Oaxaca this week.
The boat seized off Oaxaca this week.

Suspicions over a small boat traveling offshore near the coast of Oaxaca led to the seizure this week of more than two tonnes of cocaine.

An armed forces aircraft detected the boat 150 nautical miles (278 kilometers) southwest of the tourist destination of Puerto Escondido. Using another aircraft, a helicopter and four vessels the boat was intercepted and its cargo seized.

The eight people aboard — four Mexicans, three Colombians and a Canadian — were taken into custody.

The boat was carrying 2.25 tonnes of the drug in 66 packages.

Another, similar seizure was made three weeks ago when security forces intercepted a small boat off Guerrero. It was carrying nearly two tonnes of cocaine.

Federal forces have seized a record amount of cocaine from smugglers off the Pacific coast this year.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Fake social media messages create fear that feeds lynch mobs

0
Relatives in the funeral procession for lynching victims.
Relatives in the funeral procession for lynching victims.

Rumors fanned by social media had fatal consequences in two Mexican states this week.

Four apparently innocent people were beaten and burned alive in two separate incidents in Puebla and Hidalgo after residents accused them of being child snatchers.

Behind both lynchings was hysteria whipped up by fake messages circulating on social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter and the messaging service WhatsApp, which supposedly served to alert citizens in several states that a wave of kidnappings was taking place.

The gist of many messages was “don’t leave your kids alone, there’s a band of child snatchers within our midst.”

Some messages claimed that children are being abducted by organ-trafficking rings while others called for vigilante justice for anyone believed guilty of the crime.

That’s exactly what happened in San Vicente Boquerón, Puebla, and Santa Ana Ahuehuepan, Hidalgo, on consecutive days this week.

First an uncle and his nephew were killed by an angry mob in the first town Wednesday before history quickly repeated itself when a man and a woman were lynched in the same way in the latter location Thursday.

In both cases, the Puebla and Hidalgo prosecutor’s offices said that there was no evidence that the victims had committed the crime of which they were accused.

Both authorities also issued statements declaring that claims that child abduction rings were operating in each state are false, and urged citizens not to spread such information.

“There is no record of child abductions to date,” authorities in Puebla said, adding that there is a national “misinformation phenomenon” occurring.

“Do not be alarmed, inform yourself!” their counterparts in Hidalgo said.

Authorities in other states where the same falsehoods have flourished — Yucatán, Durango, Jalisco and Sinaloa — have issued similar statements of their own.

“. . . The [Yucatán] state Attorney General’s office calls on the public not to spread or share information of dubious origin disseminated via these means [social media], whose objective is to undermine the peace and quiet and [sense of] security of Yucatán residents.”

In Hidalgo, Interior Secretary Simón Vargas Aguilar said that once those responsible for the lynching have been identified and arrested, they will face prosecution with the full weight of the law in order to “preserve the rule of law, governability and peace in the state.”

In Puebla, a joint funeral service for the two deceased men — punctuated by cries of “we want justice” from the parents of the younger man — has already been held.

The mother of 21-year-old Ricardo Flores Rodríguez, who was a farmworker and a law student at a university in Veracruz, blamed the mayor of Acatlán de Osorio, presumably because the two men were taken by force from municipal police before they were tied up, doused with gasoline and set on fire.

“I want the head of the mayor because he is responsible for the death of my son and my brother-in-law,” Rosario Rodríguez said. “Why did they kill them? Why did they [local authorities] let them?”

The young man’s father and brother of the older man said a little girl had lost her dad through an act of barbarism.

The president of the National Human Rights Commission used the same word when he spoke out about the case this week.

Raúl González Pérez said the acts of mob justice must be punished but also recognized shortcomings in Mexico’s justice and legal systems that result in high levels of impunity.

“We reproach and condemn [the serving of] justice by one’s own hands. We cannot prosecute presumably illegal behavior . . . by seeking to serve justice with our own hands. We have to recognize that there is an institutional weakness in the procurement of justice but that must not be substituted by . . . justice by one’s own hands,” he said.

The governor said today that two people are now in custody in connection with the incident and that more arrests would follow. He criticized municipal police for not following protocols and allowing “a horde of savages” to commit “an atrocious crime.”

Source: Diario de Yucatán (sp)

Cirque du Soleil’s Luzia opens in Guadalajara

0
A scene from Luzia, now running in Guadalajara.
A scene from Luzia, now running in Guadalajara.

Cirque du Soleil’s Luzia, A Waking Dream of Mexico, opened this week in Guadalajara with a carefully crafted display of lights, music and acrobatics.

The Canadian troupe’s show, which opened in Canada in May 2016, has arrived in the land from which its inspiration was drawn, after successful runs in both Canada and the United States.

Singer Majo Cornejo told the news agency EFE that the show’s goal is to win the heart of the Mexican public and remind them why the country is unique.

The show “is a homage” to Mexico’s history, culture and traditions that, while written from a foreigner’s point of view, will make Mexicans shout with pride “Viva México!” she said.

Many features of the culture of Mexico are captured in Luzia: majestic birds, monarch butterflies, jaguars, lucha libre fighters, soccer players and mambo dancers share a landscape of deserts, seas and rivers. The show offers an artistic rendition of the country’s natural and cultural riches.

Cirque du Soleil’s circus skills — acrobatics, aerial arts, object manipulation and other specialized physical skills — are all evident on the stage.

A unique element of the show is a curtain of water constantly flowing and sharing the stage with the acrobats.

Cornejo explained that creating the show’s acrobatics took between eight and 10 months, after which musicians joined the creative process. “It was a tough job . . .” she said.

Music composer Simon Carpentier drew his inspiration from a musical landscape that includes mariachi, banda, bolero, huapango and cumbia.

Luzia has a cast of 43 artists from 25 different nations, accompanied by the music of seven musicians from Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela and the United States.

It opened on Thursday in Guadalajara, where it will remain until September 23. It will then travel to Monterrey before closing its Mexico tour in Mexico City later this year.

Source: Vanguardia (sp)

Aircraft pilot revives the Chona Challenge — on the runway

0
Pilot Manríquez, left, dances alongside her plane.
Pilot Manríquez, left, dances alongside her plane.

The Chona Challenge is back and reaching new heights thanks to an airplane pilot.

The challenge is to step out of a slow-moving vehicle — which you are driving — and dance alongside to a tune by a band from Tijuana while someone else takes a video of the performance.

Videos of dancing drivers went viral earlier this summer but the popularity of the challenge has been waning. Until now, having been revived not by a motorist but the pilot of a private aircraft.

Alejandra Manríquez, a Mexican pilot who was reported two years ago to be dating Portuguese soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo and flying his private plane, did the challenge on the runway.

In a video posted online, the pilot springs from her seat in the cockpit of a taxiing plane and, with a companion, descends the stairs on to the tarmac before beginning the Chona Challenge dance moves.

As with many Chona videos, it drew admiration from some and criticism from others.

However, apparently neither pilots nor planes were harmed in the recording of the video.

Source: Vanguardia (sp)

Pilot Manríquez, left, dances the Chona Challenge.

 

Health emergency declared as garbage piles up in the streets of Acapulco

0
Garbage in the streets.
Garbage in the streets of Guerrero resort destination.

It’s not just violence that plagues the streets of Acapulco.

Large quantities of garbage have piled up repeatedly in several parts of the Pacific coast resort city in recent months due to a shortage of garbage trucks, triggering a bitter dispute between the mayor and the governor of Guerrero and the declaration of a health emergency this week.

La Zapata, El Renacimiento, El Coloso, La Venta and La Vacacional are among the affected neighborhoods.

Mayor Evodio Velázquez Aguirre says that the garbage is in the street because the city hasn’t received funding from Governor Héctor Astudillo Flores to pay for its collection.

The governor denies the claim, charging this week that the state government has transferred more than 7 billion pesos (US $365.5 million) to the city.

As the two men engage in an acrimonious blame game, trash continues to accumulate, leading the state’s Secretariat of Health to declare a health emergency Thursday and to start a sanitization and fumigation operation.

“We declared the health emergency due to the inaction [of the municipal government] on all the recommendations that have been made,” Health Secretary Carlos de la Peña Pinto said.

He added that it was determined that the health of 42% of Acapulco’s population is at risk due to the masses of uncovered rubbish that residents are exposed to in the city’s streets.

In addition to declaring an emergency situation, the Health Secretariat also fined the municipal government 322,000 pesos (US $16,815) for failing to provide adequate garbage collection services.

But in a video message posted online Thursday, Velázquez said his government won’t pay the fine and accused the Guerrero governor of conditioning the delivery of a single new garbage truck on its payment. He also accused state authorities of exaggerating the extent of the problem.

Four private companies contracted by the municipal government currently provide waste collection services in Acapulco with 40 trucks.

According to local authorities, between 800 and 1,000 tonnes of rubbish are generated in the city on a daily basis but during vacation periods the figure can spike to as high as 1,300 tonnes.

But even if the city was capable of collecting all the trash it creates, Acapulco’s trash problem wouldn’t be solved.

There is only one dump in the city and its capacity has already been exceeded, and state Environment Secretary Allan Ramírez charges that municipal authorities have made no plans to build a new one or extend the existing one.

In a statement, the state government rejected the claim that it is to blame for the city’s rubbish-clogged streets and pointed out that in addition to failing to deal with the trash problem, the city government is in debt to the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) and municipal employees.

Source: El Universal (sp)