Thursday, May 8, 2025

Bolivian winner of Mexico City marathon breaks record

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CDMX Marathon 2023
More than 30,000 people entered the marathon in the Mexican capital this year - 58% more than last year. (Graciela López/Cuartoscuro)

More than 30,000 runners competed in the 40th edition of the Mexico City Marathon on Sunday, but none of them was as fast as Bolivian Héctor Garibay Flores.

In fact, no one in the history of the race had ever been so fast.

CDMX marathon podium 2023
Bolivian Garibay beat out the hotly-rated Kenyan entrants, including last year’s winner, Edwin Kiprop Kiptoo, who finished third. (Daniel Augusto/Cuartoscuro)

The 35-year-old needed just 2 hours, 8 minutes and 23 seconds to run 42 kilometers (26.1 miles) through the capital, breaking the CDMX Marathon record by a whopping two minutes.

Competing in his very first Mexico City Marathon, Garibay Flores bettered the record of 2:10:38 set by Kenyan Titus Ekire in 2018, when the route of the marathon ran from the central Zócalo square to the Olympic stadium, in Coyoacán. 

This year’s route instead started at the Olympic stadium at 6 a.m. under a light rain, progressed up to the Insurgentes roundabout and along the Bosque de Chapultepec to Reforma Avenue, finishing in the Zócalo. The number of participants increased by 58% over last year, when 19,000 people, mostly recreational runners, signed up.

In the women’s competition, Kenyan runners swept the top three places, with Celestine Chepchir (2:27:17) taking first.

Celestine Chepchirchir took the honors in the Women’s race, with a time of 2:27:17. Kenyan runners took all three podium places. (Daniel Augusto/Cuartoscuro)

Kenya’s men also were expected to dominate — and they almost did. But about halfway through the race, the Bolivian kicked it into high gear and moved past last year’s winner,  Edwin Kiprop Kiptoo. Kiptoo responded and regained the lead, but Garibaysurged ahead and never looked back.

Kiptoo ended up finishing third, behind fellow Kenyan Leonard Langat. Both were nearly 3 minutes behind Garibay, a world-class runner who had previously qualified for the 2024 Olympics in Paris.

Despite that accomplishment, the native of Oruro, a city of about 260,000 in the Bolivian highlands, has been strapped for cash and was working as a taxi driver to raise money. Due to his lack of funds, he decided not to travel to Hungary for the recent World Athletics Championships.

Instead, he decided to pony up for a trip to Mexico — “and thanks be to God, it was worth it,” he said afterward. The first-place prize was 550,000 pesos (US $32,814) and a Garmin watch, plus he reportedly received another 550,000 pesos for breaking the record.

Olympic 2-time gold medalist, Ethiopian Hailie Gebrselassie attended the prize ceremony. (Daniel Augusto/Cuartoscuro)

He conceded the prize money is also “very important” because it will help him prepare for the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris. Working as a taxi driver has robbed him of valuable training time, he said.

“I’m very happy because I only came [to Mexico] to get a podium,” he said, alluding to being one of the top-three finishers. “We are very short of money, but the truth is [finishing in the top 3 is what’s] important for me.”

Legendary Ethiopian long-distance runner Haile Gebrselassie, 50, a two-time gold medalist in the Olympics and a four-time world champion, attended the awards ceremony.

With reports from Milenio, El Financiero and El Universal

Hearing canceled in Mexico’s case against US gun shops

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Handguns
Smuggled firearms from the United States help arm Mexican cartels. Guns are heavily restricted in Mexico, but are widely available at gun stores on the U.S. side of the border.(Carlos Canabal/Cuartoscuro)

A hearing in Mexico’s case against five gun shops in Arizona that was scheduled to go ahead on Monday was canceled, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (SRE) said.

The federal government filed a lawsuit against gun stores in Tucson, Phoenix and Yuma last October, accusing them of involvement in illegal arms trafficking to Mexico.

Pawn shop selling guns
The Mexican government hopes that by holding manufacturers accountable, unrestricted sales at the United States border will decrease. (Best Pawn Tuscon)

In a statement on Saturday, the SRE said that the suit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona, cites “tracing data” that shows that the gun stores “routinely supply high-powered firearms to criminal organizations in Mexico.”

“… After the suit was filed, both parties presented their arguments during the written stage of the proceedings,” the ministry said.

“The oral argument was scheduled for August 28, 2023. However, on Thursday, August 24, the judge assigned to the case, Cindy Jorgenson, issued an order canceling the hearing, stating only that she is considering recusing herself from the case. The public will be informed of the new date for the oral argument set by the District Court,” the SRE said.

The government filed its case against the gun stores 10 days after its US $10 billion lawsuit against United States gun manufacturers was dismissed by a Massachusetts federal judge.

Tucson district court
The case has been delayed, as Tucson judge Cindy Jorgenson is considering recusing herself from the case. (Tucson District Court/Pfeiffer Partners)

Late last month, it presented its arguments in favor of the reopening of that suit, in which it accused gunmakers including Smith & Wesson and Barrett Firearms of negligent business practices that have led to illegal arms trafficking and deaths in Mexico, where U.S.-sourced firearms are used in a majority of high-impact crimes such as homicide.

The SRE said Saturday that a “favorable ruling” in its case against the Arizona gun shops “would strengthen the first lawsuit filed in Boston, since it would prove that the gun manufacturers are negligent for not monitoring or disciplining the dealers who sell their products to criminals.”

It noted that “while the broader Boston lawsuit alleges that the gun manufacturers bear responsibility for their negligence in manufacturing and distributing firearms that facilitates their illicit trafficking to our country, this second lawsuit addresses a specific angle of the issue.”

That issue, the SRE explained is “the negligence of gun dealers that enables criminal organizations in Mexico to acquire their products (for example, through sales to straw purchasers).”

Mexican army gun amnesty
Mexico has tried to deal with the flow of illegal firearms but has struggled to meaningfully stem the flow of weapons from the United States. (Daniel Augusto/Cuartoscuro)

The SRE said in 2019 that firearms from the United States are used in seven out of every 10 high-impact crimes committed in Mexico.

The U.S. said in April that it was “deploying new authorities … to target southbound firearms flows and working with Mexican counterparts to increase firearms tracing to identify and choke off the source of firearms flows into Mexico.”

The task U.S. and Mexican authorities face is an enormous one.

It is estimated that hundreds of thousands of firearms are smuggled into Mexico from the U.S. each year, while data from the Federal Attorney General’s Office shows that the number of guns seized here annually has been less than 10,000 over the past decade.

Mexico News Daily 

Las Amazonas de Yaxunah, women warriors of Mexican softball

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Las Amazonas de Yanuxah show up to every game in the same team uniform: traditional huipiles and bare feet. (Cuartoscuro)

Shoeless and wearing traditional Maya dresses known as huipiles, the softball team Las Amazonas de Yaxunah is smashing old-fashioned machismo stereotypes about women competing in sports.

Recently crowned champions of the Yaxcabá quadrangular tournament, the team defeated the hosts, Las Bravas, 7-4 after a spirited effort produced an epic comeback from four runs down. It was the latest victory to propel them towards national stardom – but it wasn’t so long ago that they were criticized for playing sports at all, which was considered the dominion of men.

At 54 years old, María is still one of the big hitters of Las Amazonas. (Photo courtesy of Mark Viales)

The group of Indigenous softball players are from Yaxunah, Yucatán, a village of fewer than 800 people and a stone’s throw away from Chichen Itzá. Like the legendary women warriors known as the Amazons, Las Amazonas de Yaxunah have broken barriers to further the feminist movement in their community. Now with four female teams in Yaxunah, their success is quite a feat, considering not a single women’s team existed here five years ago.

“If it were up to the chauvinists in our village, women would spend their lives slaving away with chores at home, caring for the children and working on the farm,” María Enedina Canul Poot, 54, one of the founding members of the team, told me. “Sport was a no-go for women, but we had enough, and decided to tell our husbands, fathers and brothers that we would play whether they approved or not.”

María is no stranger to softball because, as a child, she used to sneak out of her home to play against the boys who gathered in the local field.

“I was the only seven-year-old girl in the village who could give them a good game,” she said. 

María Enedina Canul Poot, 54, was the only seven year old in the village who played baseball against boys and she continues to break chauvinist stigmas. (Photo courtesy of Mark Viales)

“It gave me great pride to hold my own against the boys. My mother didn’t like it, and I would argue with her to allow me to play, even though she beat me, but I would do everything possible to convince her to go. Eventually, she relented.”

However, when María was 15 years old, her mother insisted she act “more feminine.” She either had to give up softball l or risk being thrown out of the house.

“My mother decided enough was enough, and that I needed to act more like a woman, which was incredibly frustrating,” she said. “I had to face the reality that it was prohibited in my village for young girls to play a man’s sport.”

When the opportunity to play again arose 35 years later, María took it. Four years ago, government health officials set up a fitness program for women in Yaxunah because of the high level of diabetes in the area. But when they proposed aerobics as a way to stay healthy, María was the first to object, suggesting softball instead.

María hit a home run to spark a spectacular comeback against Las Bravas de Yaxcaba, clinching the title of a recent quadrangular tournament. (Photo courtesy of Mark Viales)

“I’m a sportswoman, so dancing and jumping around just doesn’t do it for me,” she said. “I prefer the atmosphere and camaraderie of competitive team sports. They wanted us to play soccer, but baseball is the sport of Yucatán and the game I fell in love with from a young age. Most women in the community agreed with me, and that is how the idea was born, when softball became a part of us.”

It was tough in the beginning. María says she had to carve a makeshift bat out of a piece of wood and beg her late husband to donate one of his baseballs.

“We had no fear,” she said. “At first we played without gloves, so we ended up with some bumps and bruises, but I believe this made us stronger than teams from larger towns with full gear.”

Six months later, a neighboring softball team from Pisté saw the team playing in their field and invited them to compete in their first game. Word spread fast, and soon, other teams from the states of Yucatán, Quintana Roo and Campeche wanted to face the famous shoeless women warriors from Yaxunah. 

Finding a good name to reflect the team’s tenacity and ferocity on the field became a priority, and that was when Las Amazonas was born.

Las Amazonas celebrate their victory with their traditional battle cry “We are the Amazonas! We are women warriors!” (Photo courtesy of Mark Viales)

“A few names were suggested, but only one word came to my mind: amazonas,” María said. “It brought about a moment of silence [when I told the team.] At first, they told me that it did not represent us because it was a story that belonged to another culture, but I didn’t care. This is what I felt we were, women warriors. I could definitely identify with this name, and I am delighted it stuck.”

The woman warriors have warmed the hearts of softball fans across the country, but none more so than their manager, who was love-struck by the team captain. 

Three years ago, coach Joel Díaz Canul, 21, who happens to be María’s son, fell head over heels for captain Citlali Poot Dzib, 20. Their romance blossomed during one practice session when Citlali stayed behind to improve her pitching. Joel worked up the courage to place a bet with her: if he hit a home run, they would go out on a date that night. 

His heart racing, Joel focused on the ball as Citlali lined up her pitch. He knew these pitchers never took any prisoners, but when he smashed it into the trees, he fell to his knees in celebration. Citlali jokes that she was slightly unimpressed with his antics, but thought he was cute enough to honor the bet.

“I was extremely nervous,” he said. “I don’t know if it was destiny or pure luck, but we are still together and going strong. It appears sports can make you happy in numerous ways. We have been married for almost two years now.”

The team has defied expectations, upsetting some of the big hitters in Yucatán. Joel believes his side is ready to participate in the official league, and says players like Citlali could one day go pro.

The team played a game in Mérida in March 2022 as part of International Women’s Day events. ( MARTÍN ZETINA/CUARTOSCURO.COM)

“She’s still young, so who knows?” he said. “It makes me so proud to see what they have achieved already. We were invited to play a match against a team from Campeche. It was the first time we traveled there. It was amazing. This sport has given us the chance to discover new places: Veracruz, Chiapas and Mexico City. We’ve traveled around the country because of the fame we have achieved.”

Joel said the team’s exploits have helped increase tourism interest in their village, which has a cenote and an important archaeological site. According to Joel, many visitors arrive at Yaxunah intending to meet the famous woman warriors.

“We are always open to having a nice conversation with visitors and showing them our cultural identity,” he said. “We are Maya, and the huipil is just one of the components of our diverse culture. I think the municipal mayors are beginning to realize and value our contribution.”

Coach Joel Díaz Canul, 21, shares words of wisdom with his wife, Team Captain Citlali Poot Dzib, 20, whom he fell in love with following a momentous practice session. (Photo courtesy of Mark Viales)

Joel admits there was a much stronger presence of machismo in the village a few years ago, but this changed because of Las Amazonas and other women’s softball teams.

“The same people who used to leer at the players and call them nasty names are now supporting them at matches and online,” he said. “It’s a real turnaround, and I suppose not many people expected chauvinist men would change their attitude in such a small village, but the majority have. Sport is a powerful tool.”

Mark Viales writes for Mexico News Daily.

5 differences between presidential politics in Mexico versus the US

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United States flag and Mexico flag
While both countries head into presidential elections, Travis Bembenek sees major contrasts between the two political scenes. (Shutterstock)

Mexico and the U.S. are both heading into presidential elections in 2024, but from my view, the two races could not be more different.

These are the five most notable aspects of Mexican politics in contrast with U.S. politics that I see today.

Diversity of political parties

After seven decades of being essentially a one-party system dominated by the PRI (Institutional Revolutionary Party) until the election of PAN (National Action Party) president Vicente Fox in 2000, Mexico now has a plurality of active political parties, with seven officially registered.

President López Obrador was a member of both the PRI and the PRD (Democratic Revolution Party) in his career, but after parting ways with the latter, formed his own Morena (National Regeneration Movement) party in 2011, and went on to win the presidency with the party in 2018. Today Morena is the dominant party in Mexico, with more governerships and legislative seats than any other. Movimiento Cuidadano (Citizens Movement) is another political party that only recently began to gain momentum, and now the mayors of Mexico’s second and third largest cities, Guadalajara and Monterrey, are from the MC, as are the governors of their respective states of Jalisco and Nuevo León.

Alliances between political parties

After dominating Mexican politics for decades, the PRI has found itself losing momentum. The two other prominent parties of the past two decades, the PAN and PRD, have also been losing ground, and joined with the PRI to form an opposition coalition bloc to Morena.

This political alliance of rivals, called Va por México, and then changed to Frente Amplio por México or Broad Front for Mexico (FAM) before beginning the candidate selection process, is one that would have been hard to imagine only a decade ago.

Candidates switching political parties

Before founding Morena, AMLO was at different times a member of the PRI and PRD parties. Marcelo Ebrard, AMLO’s former foreign affairs minister, and current hopeful to be the Morena 2024 candidate, is rumored to be considering switching to the Movimiento Cuidadano (MC) party if he doesn’t get Morena’s nomination.

Xóchitl Gálvez (PAN) is currently the leading candidate to win the opposition’s nomination and just yesterday said she would welcome Ebrard to join her campaign if he fails in his bid with Morena. This all makes for a dynamic political scene, and also has inspired a Mexican political term: chapulineo, or “grasshoppering”, when a politician makes en expedient switch in party allegiance.

Left and right ideologies shifting

The ideologies and platforms of the political parties in Mexico are evolving quickly. As a result, legacy definitions of right and left don’t seem as applicable as in the U.S., with a coalition like the Broad Front for Mexico (FAM) made up of a conservative party (PAN), a leftist party (PRD) and an ideologically shape-shifting but most recently center-right party (PRI).

The prominence of women in Mexican politics today

Three of the leading candidates (Xóchitl Gálvez, Beatriz Paredes and Claudia Sheinbaum) to run for the presidency in 2024 are women, and two of them come from scientific and technological backgrounds. In a comparison of the two forerunners, we see diverse backgrounds and experience. Claudia Sheinbaum (Morena) is a physicist who has a doctorate in energy engineering. Xóchitl Gálvez studied computer engineering. Both are in their early sixties. Sheinbaum is the granddaughter of Jewish European immigrants and Gálvez is the daughter of an Otomí father and mestiza mother.

This will undoubtedly be a fascinating election season to watch, on both sides of the border.

Explosives, elections and evasion: The week at the mañaneras

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From the Supreme Court to elections in Guatemala to the Maya train, President López Obrador covered a range of topics at the daily pressers. (lopezobrador.org.mx)

Last Sunday’s presidential election in Guatemala, the failure of the Supreme Court to issue a ruling in a case involving alleged tax evasion and the resignation of the head of the National Search Commission were among the topics President López Obrador addressed at his morning press conferences, or mañaneras, this week.

AMLO started his week of pressers as per usual in the National Palace, but ended it in the balmy climes of Acapulco, where the health of the city’s picturesque Pacific coast bay was discussed.

AMLO stands next to an image of the new Dos Bocas refinery, of which the president made special mention in the mañanera as proof that Mexicans are not “lazy.” (lopezobrador.org.mx)

López Obrador will be back on the coast next Friday, but on the other side of the country in Campeche, where he will present his fifth annual informe (report) in a State of the Union-style address. Brief video clips in which AMLO promotes his quinto informe appeared on the federal government’s official YouTube channel on Friday.

Monday

“They’re within their rights to protest, we’re free,” López Obrador said when a reporter asked his opinion about the burning of the government’s controversial school textbooks by a group of parents in Chiapas and a citizens’ protest against the books in Aguascalientes.

However, if they’re protesting because they believe that the books indoctrinate and “inject the virus of communism,” they’re wrong, AMLO said.

“They’re completely misinformed and manipulated,” he said before blaming opposition political leaders and “conservative bloc” business people for the alleged manipulation.

“They use all these lies to deceive – to try to deceive because a lot of people don’t believe them,” López Obrador said.

Later in his press conference, AMLO described the victory of Bernardo Arévalo in last Sunday’s runoff presidential election in Guatemala as “very good news.”

Guatemala’s President-elect Bernardo Arevalo and Vice President-elect Karin Herrera. (@BArevalodeLeon/X)

“I’m very happy because Bernardo Arévalo won the election in Guatemala,” he said, adding that there is ample evidence that the soon-to-be president is a “progressive man, with principles … who will govern for everyone.”

“But I’m sure he’ll give special attention to the poorest people,” López Obrador said of the 64-year-old son of a former Guatemalan president, who ran on an anti-corruption platform.

“Yesterday I spoke with him and we agreed to meet once he’s [officially] president-elect. Of course we have a lot of issues to address so that there is cooperation, so that we can help each other,” he said.

“… I’m sure that Bernardo will seek more cooperation in economic and social matters,” AMLO said.

Returning to domestic issues, López Obrador acknowledged traffic congestion in southern areas of the Veracruz city metropolitan area, but effectively ruled out starting any projects to address the issue during his administration.

“We’re trying not to start projects that won’t be finished [before I leave office],” he said.

“We don’t want to leave projects unfinished,” explained AMLO, who will hand over the presidential sash to his successor on Oct. 1, 2024.

“For example, in the case of Veracruz we’re finishing the widening of the highway to Tampico [in the neighboring state of Tamaulipas]. … In the case of the southeast, we’re committed to finishing the first stage of the link on the isthmus,” he said, referring to the modernization of the train line across the Isthmus of Tehuantepec between the port cities of Salina Cruz, Oaxaca, on the Pacific coast and Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz, on the Gulf coast.

“… I expect that on Sept. 17, which is a Sunday, we’ll be able to take a passenger train in Salina Cruz and get off in Coatzacoalcos,” López Obrador said.

“… We’re already finishing the first stage of the expansion of the two ports. … And the modernization of the highway from the isthmus to [the Veracruz municipality of] Acayucan will be finished. We’re not going to leave anything [incomplete],” he said.

Interoceanic railway locomotive
The president presented the first locomotive of the interoceanic rawilway on Aug.13, which will haul cargo and passengers across the 303-kilometer line. (Luisa Alcalde/Twitter)

AMLO also pledged that the government’s new universal health care scheme, IMSS-Bienestar, will be “completely established” before he leaves office.

“It will be, I repeat, the best health system in the world,” he asserted.

López Obrador noted there are “some governors that don’t want the system,” but predicted that between 23 and 25 of Mexico’s federal entities will agree to its implementation before his presidency ends.

“The rest will remain with the traditional system managed by state governments,” he said.

Shortly before concluding his first mañanera of the week, AMLO revealed that the director of the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS), Zóe Robledo, won’t leave his current position to contest the 2024 gubernatorial election in his native state of Chiapas.

The president said that Robledo told him late last week that he didn’t want to “abandon” IMSS, and wants to fulfill “the commitment we have to establish the IMSS-Bienestar system and guarantee people’s right to health care.”

“I gave him a hug because one has to know where he or she is most useful in the process of transformation,” AMLO said. You don’t fight for positions, you fight for principles [and] ideals.”

Tuesday

Federal tax prosecutor Félix Arturo Medina Padilla told reporters that the federal government will file a complaint against Supreme Court Justice Luis María Aguilar Morales for alleged negligence in a case involving an unnamed large company with a tax debt of over 25 billion pesos.

“This company, abusing its large corporate structure, has used a range of legal strategies to challenge and delay the issuance of a sentence that forces it to pay the taxes,” he said.

During the past eight months, Aguilar has been “negligent” because he hasn’t issued a ruling on the matter, Medina said.

“Improperly delaying the resolution of the matter not only violates the federal constitution, it goes against the very nature of the Supreme Court, which must impart justice,” he said, adding that that Aguilar’s conduct also has a negative impact on “the resources of all Mexicans.”

“… This kind of selective conduct … must be eradicated from our nation for the benefit of all Mexicans,” Medina said.

Later in the press conference, National Defense Minister Luis Cresencio Sandoval reported that authorities have seized 2,803 improvised explosive devices (IEDs) since the current government took office in late 2018, including some that had already detonated.

The Defense Ministry has seized 2,803 improvised, or homemade, explosive devices (IEDs) since 2018. (lopezobrador.org.mx)

“These devices have been seized in 22 states,” he said, adding that Michoacán ranked first for confiscations followed by Guanajuato, Jalisco and Chiapas.

“On land, 2,186 [IEDs] have been identified, 12 were in vehicles and 605 were on drones. … Those that exploded injured 77 people – 24 military personnel, 10 National Guard officers, 31 police and 12 civilians who belong to [organized crime] groups,” Sandoval said.

“All these explosive devices are homemade using tutorials found on the internet. The explosive material is gunpowder, common gunpowder that you can get in the market,” he said, adding that the majority of the artisanal bombs fail to explode.

Security Minister Rosa Icela Rodríguez subsequently presented data that showed there were 2,462 homicides in July, a 3% decline compared to June. There were 17,589 homicides in the first seven months of the year for an average of 83 per day, according to data displayed by Rodríguez.

She noted that 47.8% of the murders between January and July were committed in just six states: Guanajuato, México state, Baja California, Jalisco, Chihuahua and Michoacán.

Having taken center stage to respond to reporters’ questions, López Obrador also railed against Justice Aguilar for failing to deliver a ruling in the company tax debt case.

AMLO criticized Supreme Court Justice Luis María Aguilar Morales of negligence in a case involving a company, rumored to be the mega-corporation Grupo Elektra, that owes over 25 billion pesos in unpaid tax. (Wikimedia Commons)

“Twenty-five billon pesos are involved – the budget of a state of the republic! It could be the budget of Baja California Sur, Tlaxcala, Zacatecas, Campeche, but he doesn’t rule [on the case]. … Where’s the prompt and expeditious justice?” he said, before noting that Aguilar had ruled in favor of suspending the distribution of government textbooks in Coahuila.

“There is prompt and expeditious justice [in that case] because it’s against us,” said AMLO, who frequently criticizes the judiciary.

“… I’m not saying that the judges have to side with the government in order to recover that [unpaid tax] money [but] I am proposing that [the case] be resolved in accordance with the law,” he said.

López Obrador said that the complaint against Aguilar would be filed with the Federal Judiciary Council, but Interior Minister Luisa María Alcalde interrupted to correct him, saying that it will in fact be presented to the Supreme Court and “the justices themselves” will assess it.

AMLO turned his focus to the Maya Train when a reporter remarked that small-scale tourism operators and other residents of the states through which the railroad will run had doubts about whether they would in fact benefit from the project, as the government has said they will.

The president noted that Quintana Roo Governor Mara Lezama recently attended his press conference and said that communities outside tourism hubs would benefit from the project because Maya Train passengers will visit them and stay there.

Mara Lezama with AMLO
President López Obrador with Quintana Roo governor Mara Lezama. (Mara Lezama/X)

Tourists will stay in the “homes of campesino families, get to know what life is like in the indigenous communities and they can purchase crafts … and enjoy the succulent food of the Yucatán Peninsula,” López Obrador said.

Outside Quintana Roo, Environment Minister María Luisa Albores is working on projects that will benefit honey producers, among others, he said.

López Obrador said he was confident that the Maya Train, which is scheduled to begin operations in December, would “help the people a lot because tourism will increase” in the south of Quintana Roo and in the states of Campeche, Yucatán, Chiapas and Tabasco.

Wednesday

During her weekly “Who’s Who in the Lies of the Week” segment, Ana García Vilchis took aim at a Reforma newspaper article, asserting that reporting that a former soldier planned and took part in a 2019 robbery at the Casa de Moneda de México – the national mint – was false.

The Ministry of National Defense has no record of a person with the name mentioned in the Reforma report having been a member of the armed forces, García said.

She also condemned journalists who were critical of López Obrador for telling a joke at the end of his Aug. 16 mañanera when he was asked about the presumed murder of five young men in Jalisco.

Their sole aim was to influence public opinion so that citizens would reject the president and his actions, García said.

President López Obrador at press conference
The president announced on Wednesday that Grupo Frontera will perform on Sept. 15 in the Zócalo. (Gob MX)

“The President Andrés Manuel López Obrador clarified a day later that it was a campaign of misinformation, a lie,” she said, referring to her boss’s claim that he didn’t hear the questions put to him.

During his Q and A session with reporters, AMLO said that his idea to establish a warehouse with “all the medicines of the world” would become a reality before the end of the year.

“In December we’re going to have a pharmacy here in Mexico City, we’re already working on that. … In that warehouse, in that pharmacy, there will be all medications, all the medicines in the world,” he said.

“If a hospital or health care center reports a shortage of a certain medicine, new stock will be sent out to them and it will arrive within a day,” López Obrador said.

“… We have to get medicines in India, … in China, in France, in Korea, wherever. We’re going to have all medicines. We can do this because … there is no longer corruption,” he said.

Farmacia-IMSS
On Wednesday, AMLO announced another end-of-term promise: a public pharmacy with ‘all the medicines of the world.’ The current administration has struggled to meet the demand for some medicines. (Archive)

Later in the press conference, a reporter asked the president about the Ministry of National Defense’s plan to lease 10 Boeing aircraft from Texan company Petrus Aviation to launch the new state-owned commercial airline, which will operate under the Mexicana brand.

Each month, the Defense Ministry will have to pay Petrus between US $230,000 and $350,000 per plane, the reporter said before suggesting that the expense was excessive.

“They did an analysis and reached the conclusion that it was the best mechanism,” López Obrador said.

“… What I did was speak to the president of the Boeing Board of Directors and asked him to help us and for them to advise us. I spoke with him by telephone and he has been helping,” AMLO said.

“They don’t lease [planes], but I understand that they recommended this company that is going to lease [the aircraft],” he said.

López Obrador indicated that he believed that the costs of leasing the planes won’t prevent the state-owned airline from being profitable.

Mexicana airbus
The first fleet of the new state-owned Mexicana airline will be made up of 10 Boeing aircraft leased from the Texan company Petrus Aviation. (Mexicana)

“I feel that we’re going to have reasonable profits because … the tickets are going to cost 18% or 20% less,” he said.

“This airline is going to have a lot of success because when we inaugurate it, which we think will happen in November of this year or December at the latest, one of the main flights will be Mexico City-Tulum,” AMLO said, noting that planes will depart the Felipe Ángeles International Airport north of the capital and arrive at the airport currently under construction in the Quintana Roo tourism destination.

Among other remarks, López Obrador announced that Grupo Frontera, a Texas-based band, will play in Mexico City’s central square, the Zócalo, on Sept. 15, the night on which he will deliver the Grito – the Cry of Independence – from a National Palace balcony.

“These guys,” he said as a clip of the Grupo Frontera song No se va began to play.

Thursday

“Inflation came down, [only] a little bit, but it declined,” AMLO noted not long after the national statistics agency INEGI reported an annual headline rate of 4.67% in the first half of August, down from 4.79% in July.

“This is very good because this means there is less risk of high costs and incomes go further if food and goods cost less,” he said.

The president at last year’s fourth yearly report. Next Friday, AMLO is expected to present another year in review following his fifth year in office. (lopezobrador.com.mx)

Later in his press conference, López Obrador reminded reporters that he will present his fifth annual report to the nation in Campeche on Sept. 1.

“We’ll have the report in the state of Campeche for the first time because it’s among the most forgotten states,” he said.

AMLO informed reporters that he will travel from Campeche city to Mérida on the Maya Train railroad after delivering his annual address, adding that executives of companies contributing to the construction of the railroad as well as the governors of Campeche, Yucatán and Quintana Roo will accompany him on the “supervision” trip ahead of the scheduled commencement of operations in December.

López Obrador said he will take another “supervision” trip from Mérida to Cancún the following day.

“On Sunday [Sept. 3] in Cancún we’re going to inaugurate the repaving … of the Colosio [Boulevard],” he said, referring to a major road in the Caribbean coast city.

“… And from there we’ll continue, but not on the train. We’ll fly over [the railroad] in helicopter to get to Tulum, oversee the Cancún-Tulum section and the Tulum airport,” López Obrador said.

“The Tulum airport … must already be about 65% finished, we’re going to inaugurate it in December along with the [new state-owned] airline Mexicana,” he said.

President López Obrador at a site visit in Tulum
President López Obrador during a site visit to the Tulum airport in May. (Gob MX)

AMLO also outlined his itinerary for his trip to South America next month, during which he will meet with Colombian President Gustavo Petro and Chilean President Gabriel Boric.

“We’re going to leave on Friday Sept. 8 … and we’re going to Colombia, to Cali, I think. The issue is cooperation for development between the two countries, and also the issue of drug trafficking,” he said.

“There’s going to be a meeting beforehand, an analysis about the problem of drug trafficking, the consumption of drugs in Colombia. Experts from various places are going to meet in advance … and will deliver to us, to President Petro and I, their conclusions,” López Obrador said.

He reminded reporters that he will attend a ceremony in Santiago to mark the 50th anniversary of the death of former Chilean president Salvador Allende during the 1973 coup led by General Augusto Pinochet, who would go on to lead the South American nation until 1990.

“It’s said it was a suicide, but in the circumstances I would say it was murder, a despicable crime,” AMLO said.

The president was later asked to assess the performance of National Search Commission chief Karla Quintana, who resigned on Wednesday.

Karla Quintana at a press conference
Quintana was appointed as director of the national commission in 2019 and did not give specific reasons for her departure. (Karla Quintana/X)

“A lot of progress is being made in the search for missing people,” López Obrador said without offering a direct appraisal of Quintana.

“… Progress has been made and we’re going to continue making progress. She decided to resign, her resignation was accepted and her participation [in the government] during several years was acknowledged,” he said.

It’s not just the Search Commission that is involved in the search for the nation’s missing people – of whom there are over 110,000 in Mexico – but rather the entire government, López Obrador added.

Friday

Dressed down in a guayabera, AMLO presided over his final press conference of the week in Acapulco, Guerrero.

“Acapulco is always Acapulco,” he said at the start of the mañanera.

“As long as the world exists, paraphrasing the Mexicas, the beauty and glory of the port of Acapulco will not end,” López Obrador said.

President López Obrador in Acapulco
The president held his final press conference of the week in Acapulco. (Gob MX)

Violence, unfortunately, is another seemingly indomitable aspect of life in Acapulco, which was described by The Washington Post in 2017 as Mexico’s murder capital.

The city has recorded 395 homicides this year, making it the most violent municipality in the state, according to data presented by Navy Minister José Rafael Ojeda Durán.

He told reporters that Guerrero ranks as the eighth most violent state in Mexico for total homicides during the term of the current government. Based on murders per 100,000 people, the state ranks as the ninth most violent of Mexico’s 32 federal entities, Ojeda said.

Governor Evelyn Salgado – who replaced her father (and alleged rapist) Félix Salgado as the ruling Morena party’s gubernatorial candidate at the 2021 state election after he was disqualified – subsequently said that femicide numbers in Guerrero were down 70% in the first seven months of this year compared to the same period of 2018.

“There have been important advances in Guerrero,” she said. “Advances that are, without a doubt, the result of the support the government of Mexico has provided us at all times.”

López Obrador returned to the mañanera lectern to respond to reporters’ questions, but called on Salgado when he received an inquiry about contamination in Acapulco Bay, which has been sullied by discharges of sewage over the years.

National Guard in Acapulco
National Guard and other law enforcement have been deployed to Acapulco recently in response to violence. (CARLOS CARBAJAL/CUARTOSCURO.)

Over 700 million pesos (US $41.8 million) has been allocated to addressing the issue since 2021, the governor said, explaining that the money came from all three levels of government.

Authorities are attending to the problem, but additional “millions” of pesos are needed to “achieve a total clean-up of the bay,” Salgado said.

AMLO added that having pristine water along the Acapulco coast is a “priority” for the federal government. “We’re helping and we’re going to continue helping,” he said.

López Obrador was later asked about recent violence in Nuevo León, where there were at least 11 murders on Wednesday and three bodies were found hanging from a bridge in the municipality of Salinas Victoria on Thursday.

“The situation was analyzed this morning and an investigation is being carried out,” he said.

AMLO disagreed that Governor Samuel García – who described the acts of violence as “isolated” incidents – had “played down” the crimes, as a reported claimed.

“The Nuevo León governor is a good governor. What’s happening is that those from PRIAN in Nuevo León and [the] El Norte [newspaper] are against him,” he said, using a hybrid acronym for the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, and the National Action Party, or PAN, political allies that are sometimes accused of being one and the same.

In a mañanera with a recurring focus on violence, López Obrador blamed the situation Mexico faces today on the government of former president Felipe Calderón, who he claims won the 2006 election – in which he was runner-up – thanks to fraud.

The Calderón administration – which launched a militarized war against drug cartels shortly after taking office in late 2006 – “got us into this spiral of violence,” he said.

“He stupidly took a whack at the hornet’s nest, there was no diagnosis [of the situation], they didn’t have programs to attend to young people, they never addressed the causes [of crime],” AMLO said.

“And not just that, the worst thing was that the person in charge of security was involved with one of the [criminal] groups,” he said, referring to former security minister Genaro García Luna, who a U.S. jury found guilty of collusion with the Sinaloa Cartel.

López Obrador ended his week of press conferences with another attack on Justice Aguilar for his failure to issue a ruling on the company that is said to have a monumental tax debt.

“Do you know how long he’s had a 25-billion-peso file? … Eight months and he hasn’t ruled on it. And he asked for that file to be given to him,” he said.

“… So I ask the chief justice and the justice, when are you going to rule one way or the other?”

By Mexico News Daily chief staff writer Peter Davies ([email protected])

From New York jeweler to Mexican whiskey pioneer

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Jesús Montiel Hernández returned home in part to help the area’s economy and lessen the need for migration. (Ayutla Distillery and Brewery)

Forty plus years ago, a young Jesús Montiel Hernández left his home in the Mixtec Indigenous region of southern Puebla. He eventually made his way to New York, working all kinds of jobs for 10 years until he and his family founded a jewelry business. That business became successful enough that Hernández could send money to invest back home, a rural area just southwest of Izúcar de Matamoros. 

The time spent up north also introduced him to something else – the United States’ decades-long movement of hobbyists who brought back all kinds of beer, wines and spirits that had been ignored by commercial producers for decades. By the time Hernández decided to turn over most of the business to his children and return to Mexico in 2010, he says “…I had two passions: making jewelry and making alcoholic beverages.”

Entrance to the Ayutla Distillery on the family’s property just southwest of Izúcar de Matamoros. (Alejandro Linares García)

Bourbon whiskey was (and still is) of particular interest. 

“[My family and I] began researching the origins of whiskey in Scotland and discovered that it is made in Japan and China as well. From there, we looked for a Mexican version and found none,” Hernández says, “We also found that “whiskey” does not have a denomination of origin, even in Scotland.” 

While in the U.S., Hernández spent time in Kentucky to learn more about bourbon (American corn whiskey) because he was curious about whether the corn varieties he grew up with had possibilities. 

He quickly learned the pros and cons of using corn, and learning that Kentucky whiskey was a blend of 75% corn and 25% barley. Hernández, however, was determined that a Mexican whiskey needed to be from 100% Mexican corn. Today, this is the accepted standard of what makes a whiskey “Mexican.”

Hernández has branched out into the making of gin and vodka, and next year, will start working with local sugar cane to make rum. (Ayutla Distillery and Brewery)

Hernández’s home in Ayutla today is a testament to his passion for investing in his community… and the idea that it could be a center of fine beverage production. Over the past decade or so, he has built facilities filled with large commercial vats, barrels and experimental gardens to find what needed crops, like hops, can be produced by local farmers. 

The Ayutla Distillery and Brewery’s flagship brand is Cetxim, Mexico’s first “Mexican corn whiskey,” which came out in 2011. It is made with a local Mixtec variety simply known as “white” corn, bred for the local hot climate. It comes in both “white dog” (unaged, clear) and  the more common barrel-aged type with their characteristic caramel hues. 

It is this product that has caught the attention of both local and regional press for some time now, but it is by no means Ayutla’s only product. It produces various craft beers using Mexican ingredients such as cacao, damiana (and other herbs) and a regionally-popular fruit called nanche or nance. It also produces two other spirits – Volfran vodka and Monavgi gin, whose juniper berries are now grown locally. 

In Hernández’s favor is the fact that whiskey is growing in popularity in Mexico. Almost all that is consumed is imported, however, with Johnnie Walker claiming about 45% of the domestic market. In the last few years, a number of distilleries have followed Hernández’s lead, sensing opportunities in higher-end markets where pride in a purely Mexican product is important. Internationally, Mexico has gained a reputation for fine spirits due the meteoric rise in the prestige of tequila and the up-and-coming mezcal. A “Mexican corn whiskey” can certainly piggyback onto the trend.

Inside one of the huge buildings that the Hernández family has constructed and equipped for the distillery/brewery over the past decade. (Alejandro Linares Garcia)

While Hernández has been successful in producing high-quality whiskey and promising craft beers, there is absolutely no local market in the Izúcar area for these beverages, even at their relatively modest prices. While whiskey may be growing in popularity, local consumers simply cannot pay three to five times the price of a regular commercial beer or spirit, making it essential to get the product into outlets in larger cities.

But this is far from easy. First of all, taxes on alcoholic beverages on average account for about 60% of the retail price, and the government requires a seal called a marbete, which classifies alcoholic products sold in main outlets like supermarkets. While there are some exceptions to this rule for traditional home-brewed products, Ayutla Distillery does not qualify for this. This and the costs of small production make it very difficult to compete even against other, larger Mexican distilleries experimenting with Mexican corn, never mind international conglomerates.

The other issue is getting city markets interested in the brand, and even in corn whiskey. Efforts to get into markets in cities like Atlixco and Puebla began about 8 years ago, which included participation in the Puebla State Fair, although the pandemic put a damper on many of these efforts to reach restaurants and hotels. 

Created by Jesús Montiel Hernández, Cextrim is the first whiskey to be crafted 100% from native Mexican corn. (Ayutla Distillery and Brewery)

Hernández realizes that tourism is an important element to the distillery’s success, as visitors may be more inclined to try what a Puebla operation has to offer. He recently opened a restaurant featuring his beers called El Bateador on Highway 892 just outside of Izúcar de Matamoros, which will also have hotel rooms ready by the end of the year. It’s a slight detour if you are traveling between Puebla/Mexico and Oaxaca on the libre, but it’s a good way to sample the product (with some chicken wings) if you are passing by.

The distillery has a website for ordering, as well as reserving a time for a tour/visit. If you are a fan of whiskey and/or entrepreneurial projects with a social side, a visit to the Ayutla facility is recommended. But make an appointment first. The roads require a bit of navigation, and the maestro is not always available. I was fortunate to catch him just before he went out to visit farmer-suppliers and got a tour despite just dropping in.

It remains to be seen whether Ayutla Distillery will grow from a passion project into a true local industry. But the project did plant a seed – several areas of the country including Oaxaca, México state, San Luis Potosí and even Sonora have corn whiskey projects in various stages. 

This achievement is just as important as the whiskey itself, which Hernández strongly recommends sipping neat or with a little ice to fully appreciate what Mixtec corn has to offer the palate.

Leigh Thelmadatter arrived in Mexico over 20 years ago and fell in love with the land and the culture in particular its handcrafts and art. She is the author of Mexican Cartonería: Paper, Paste and Fiesta (Schiffer 2019). Her culture column appears regularly on Mexico News Daily.

Expect the unexpected: lessons on child custody across countries

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(Illustration by Angy Márquez)

Nobody gets married thinking that things might not work out in the end.

Certainly, few people decide to have children with their partner with the idea that they’ll be doing anything other than raising them together. 

The sad reality is, as many of us already know, that marriages and other domestic partnerships don’t always work out. This fact is hard and sad enough for any couple. When the partners are from two different countries and don’t have children, they can each usually decide to go their separate ways, even if this involves moving back to one’s home country. It’s sad, but at least it offers the prospect of a fresh start.

If the couple has children and one of the parents wants to move to a different country with them, however, then things can get extremely complicated, adding an element of panic and horror to what would have otherwise just been good-old-fashioned pain.

In my own case, this was fortunately not a problem that I faced: I knew I didn’t want to be married anymore, but I also knew that I wanted to stay where I was in Xalapa indefinitely. I have a nice community of friends here and live well. This is my home, and it’s my child’s home.

And while my ex-husband and I had our share of differences both before and after (especially after), he was and is an excellent father who I had no intention of separating from our daughter.

Even so, things were tense and very tricky. As the sociological Thomas theorem goes, “If [people] define situations as real, they are real in their consequences.”

Either from the natural mistrust that can come after a separation or from the suggestions of friends I do not know, but he was convinced that I would try to flee the country with our daughter in tow and refuse to return. I was not planning on doing this, but understood his fear: it’s certainly been done by plenty of other people.

Nothing I said could convince him that this was not my plan, and as a consequence of his fear, he asked me for primary custody of our daughter with the down-the-middle visitation schedule that we’d already agreed on. I did consider it, but in the end decided it was definitely a bad idea.

Three and 1/2 years and a lot of drama and hand-wringing passed before we were finally able to set things in stone legally.

Not being able to put a period at the end of that sentence felt like torture, but honestly, it was nothing compared with what people around me have gone through. A few cautionary tales:

  1. One friend in the US married a Mexican woman, came with her and their children to Mexico for vacation, then went back earlier to work. He then received an email saying she wanted a divorce and they’d be staying in Mexico permanently. When he quit his job and moved to Mexico to be closer to them (and his incredibly high child support payments decreased significantly) she accused him of abuse and worked hard to ensure that he would only be able to see his children for court-supervised visitation.
  2. A Canadian woman I know had two children with her Mexican partner and traveled to Canada for a month when her father was dying. When she returned, she found she’d been accused of having abandoned them. The father had taken them away, and convinced a judge (likely by monetary means) to not allow her to see them. 
  3. A local friend, Mexican, recently received a message from the father of her children that he would not be taking them back to her unless she agreed to pay a certain percentage of their private school tuition right before blocking her (thankfully, he was bluffing and returned them to her at the regular time).

These examples – there are many more, unfortunately – aren’t to scare you out of having relationships or children with people from other countries. But if the parents are from two different countries, then there are some things you should definitely keep in mind.

  1. Think about the worst-case scenario, and talk about the worst-case scenario with your partner. If there are incidences of abuse, then that’s obviously a no-brainer (just make sure you have actual evidence). But what about simply wanting to end the relationship? Unfortunately, I’ve seen many instances of one or both ex-partners trying to use their children, either through parental alienation or restricting visitation (often both). Like all areas in life, communication is key, and planning is paramount. If you can, put a “worst-case scenario” plan in writing and sign it. It could save you.
  2. Know the law. While it used to be that one parent always had to have primary custody, now most states allow for shared custody (which is what I have with my daughter’s father). This might not be the right arrangement for every family, but it’s important to know that it’s an option. And when it comes to children in a divorce in Mexico, they are the ones with the rights: to be able to see both of their parents, to be fed, clothed, sheltered, educated, entertained…a judge will not sign off on a divorce without ensuring that the children’s’ rights are protected. Another important feature of the law: you cannot move away with your child without the other parent’s permission (even if you have primary custody), and you most certainly cannot flee the country with them without the other’s permission: that’s international kidnapping.
  3. Know the limits of the law. In Mexico, we know that skirting the law is relatively easy and that manipulating outcomes, particularly through bribes, is also common. Unfortunately, when this happens, the wheels of justice can turn very slowly, and sometimes not at all. When adults are extremely upset, they’re capable of taking hurtful actions you would never have believed them capable of, blind to the fact that they’re hurting their own children just as much. One acquaintance, for example, had an ex-husband who had hand-picked a psychologist to manipulate their children into saying that she was abusive (though he had thrown her out of the house in the middle of the night and locked the door). Though he is very wealthy, he has full custody of their children, and she is required to pay half of her meager earnings in child support to him. Money gives people a lot of freedom to manipulate the justice system, including in family court.

Again, my purpose is not to scare or discourage you. But from the other side of a tricky situation – my own and others’ – it’s always better to be prepared. Mexicans are famous for their passion; just remember that it can swing to the opposite side.

Sarah DeVries is a writer and translator based in Xalapa, Veracruz. She can be reached through her website, sarahedevries.substack.com.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Mexico News Daily, its owner or its employees.

One Good Thing: Ice cream pie

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Ice cream pie is the perfect make-ahead dessert for summer.

Living on the coast as I do, it’s a constant surprise to hear that in other parts of Mexico — Guanajuato, San Miguel de Allende, Ajijic — folks aren’t roasting in the sweltering heat and humidity like we are here. How hot is it, you might wonder? Well, I just turned my hot water heater off; the oven hasn’t been used in weeks and won’t be for many more to come. I wear as few items of clothing as decently possible, and the a/c is my closest and most constant companion. 

Yet one must eat, and food must be made (or, ahem, ordered). At this point I tend to gravitate towards salads, sandwiches — hot or cold — and easily made stovetop meals. I will also say that desserts somehow seem more justifiable now, maybe as a reward for making it through yet another blistering day. 

Ice cream pie is surprisingly simple to make at home. The hard part might be deciding what to put in it!

And that brings us to ice cream pie. 

Had I ever made one before? Sadly, I had not. But there’s no time like the present! 

Like any pie, this one starts with a crust — in this case, a graham cracker or chocolate cookie crust. If you’re able, just buy one; otherwise, find recipes below. Choose your ice cream flavor(s) and let it soften to make it easier to work with; you’ll need about a half-gallon of ice cream per pie.

Next, spread half the ice cream (or one flavor) in an even layer onto the crust. Drizzle this with some kind of yummy sauce: dulce de leche, chocolate, caramel or strawberry. Now sprinkle with your add-ins of choice: nuts, sprinkles, white or dark chocolate chips, crumbled cookies, candy bars or peppermint candies, whatever you fancy. (Imagine an ice cream parlor and let your imagination run wild.) Then spread the top layer of ice cream evenly over everything, drizzle again with your sauce of choice and garnish with some of the add-ins. This second ice cream layer can be the same flavor or a different one.

Cover the pie with foil or plastic wrap and freeze for several hours or overnight. Before serving, let the pie sit at room temperature for a few minutes so it’s easier to slice. Running your knife under hot water before slicing will help too. An ice cream pie will keep about a week in the freezer, as long as it’s covered well and airtight, making it a perfect make-ahead dessert for a dinner party.

First, let your ice cream soften to make it easier to work with. (Unsplash)

A note about Oreos: The reason they’re the go-to for something like this is because of their dense, dark chocolate flavor, a result of the Dutch process cocoa traditionally used in these cookies. That’s why the color is so dark and chocolate flavor so rich. 

To get you started, here are some tried-and-true flavor variations: 

  • Strawberries & Cream: Vanilla or strawberry ice cream, strawberry jam and sliced fresh strawberries. Throw in some blueberries for even more color.
  • Choco Mint: Mint chocolate chip ice cream, hot fudge sauce, and crushed Andes mint candies or peppermints in a chocolate cookie crust.
  • Coffee Toffee. Vanilla or coffee ice cream, dulce de leche or caramel sauce, crushed Heath bars, with a graham cracker crust.
  • Cookies & Cream. Vanilla ice cream, hot fudge sauce and crushed Oreo cookies in a chocolate cookie crust.
  • Chocolate-Peanut Butter. Peanut butter ice cream with hot fudge and crushed peanuts in a chocolate cookie crust.
  • Mango Madness: Vanilla ice cream, chopped fresh mangos, shredded coconut and dulce de leche in a graham cracker crust.
  • Lemon Lime: Vanilla ice cream, lemon and lime zest, a few squeezes of juice (or limoncello liqueur if you can get it), crumbled vanilla wafers, Dorados or Marias cookies.
For a great graham cracker crust, look for Nabisco “Honey Bran” graham crackers at your local supermarket. (Shutterstock)

Baked Graham Cracker Crust

  • 1¼ cups graham cracker* crumbs 
  • ¼ cup sugar
  • 5 Tbsp. butter, melted

Combine all ingredients and mix until texture is like wet sand. Press crumbs into an 8- or 9-inch pie pan, pushing crumbs up the sides. Bake at 350F (177C) for 10 minutes or until lightly golden brown. Remove from oven and cool completely before using.

*Nabisco makes “Honey Bran” graham crackers that you should be able to find in any big grocery store. Otherwise, Gamesa’s “Marías” cookies will work.

Classic Oreo cookie crust

  • 2 cups Oreo cookie crumbs, made from the cookies only (about 24 standard-sized Oreos)
  • 4 Tbsp. unsalted butter, melted 
  • ½ tsp. salt

Heat oven to 350F (177C). Process Oreos in a food processor until fine crumbs form. Add melted butter and salt; process until crumbs are evenly moistened. Spoon mixture into a 9-inch pie pan, and press crumbs evenly into the bottom and sides of the pan. Bake until crust is fragrant and set, about 12 minutes. Remove from oven and cool completely before using.

No-Churn Lime Ice Cream Pie

  • ½ cup fresh lime juice
  • 1 Tbsp. freshly grated lime zest, plus more for garnish
  • ¾ cup sweetened condensed milk
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • ¼ tsp. kosher salt
  • Store-bought or homemade graham cracker crust

In a medium mixing bowl, whisk lime juice, zest, condensed milk and cream. Stir until mixture thickens, for about 1 minute. Add salt.

Pour ice cream base into crust, spreading it evenly with a rubber spatula. Chill in freezer until firm, 2-3 hours or overnight. Let pie sit out on counter for 5 minutes before slicing. Garnish with lime zest and serve.

Janet Blaser is the author of the best-selling book, Why We Left: An Anthology of American Women Expats, featured on CNBC and MarketWatch. She has lived in Mexico since 2006. You can find her on Facebook.

Ron DeSantis says he would send US military to Mexico if elected

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Ron DeSantis
Florida governor Ron DeSantis is vying for the Republican nomination to run in 2024, but is polling behind former president Donald Trump. (Shutterstock)

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis on Wednesday pledged to make immediate use of the United States military to combat Mexican cartels in Mexico if he becomes U.S. president

“As president, would you support sending U.S. special forces over the border into Mexico to take out fentanyl labs, to take out drug cartel operations?” journalist Martha MacCallum asked DeSantis during the first Republican party presidential primary debate in Milwaukee.

Republican primary debate stage
Republican primary debate candidates faced off on Wednesday night. (Screenshot)

“Yes, and I will do it on day one,” the governor responded. “Here’s the thing. The cartels are killing tens of thousands of our fellow citizens.”

DeSantis, seen as the main rival to former President Donald Trump in the quest to represent the Republican Party at the 2024 United States presidential election, said that “the cartels” control much of the U.S.-Mexico border and that authorities “have to reestablish the rule of law” and “defend our people.”

“The president of the United States has got to use all available powers as commander-in-chief to protect our country and protect the people. So when they’re coming across, yes we’re going to use lethal force,” he added.

DeSantis also promised to treat cartels as “foreign terrorist organizations” given that they are bringing “poison” – fentanyl and other narcotics – into the U.S. and killing Americans.

National Guard members pose with apparent fentanyl pills and a sniffer dog
Criminal groups such as the Sinaloa Cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel press illegal fentanyl pills in Mexico using precursor ingredients imported from Asia and then smuggle them to the U.S. (Photos courtesy of National Guard)

In a subsequent interview, the governor reaffirmed his commitment to using force to combat Mexican criminal organizations, among which are the notoriously violent and powerful Sinaloa Cartel and Jalisco New Generation Cartel.

“When I talk about using the military to take on the drug cartels, because they’re killing tens of thousands of our citizens, we have every right to do it,” he told Fox News.

“I’m going to do it. I’m not just going to get into office and say ‘forget about it,” said DeSantis, who has previously indicated that he is open to using drone strikes against Mexican cartels.

Other Republican party figures, such as Senator Lindsey Graham, have also advocated the use of the United States military in Mexico to combat cartels that smuggle fentanyl and other drugs into the U.S.

AMLO at a morning press conference
President López Obrador has been very critical of DeSantis’ stance on immigration, as well as his proposal to send the U.S. military into Mexico to combat the drug cartels. (Gob MX)

President López Obrador, who in 2019 declined Trump’s offer to “help in cleaning out” the cartel “monsters,” has categorically rejected the idea that the United States military could be used in Mexico, but has indicated his willingness to continue cooperation with U.S. authorities in the fight against drug trafficking.

He has been highly critical of DeSantis for his stance towards undocumented migrants in Florida, and on Tuesday described his threats to use force against Mexico as “propagandistic, politically motivated outbursts.”

At Wednesday’s debate in Wisconsin, other Republican Party presidential aspirants presented more cautious and collaborative plans to combat Mexican cartels and the flow of narcotics to the U.S.

Former Arkansas governor Asa Hutchinson expressed support for limited military action, such as intelligence gathering, against Mexican cartels. However, such action would require support from Mexico, he said.

“Cooperation makes a difference. We cannot be successful going against the cartel unless we bring in Mexico as a partner. We have to use economic pressure to accomplish that,” Hutchinson said.

Former vice president Mike Pence proposed partnering with Mexico’s army “to hunt down and destroy the cartels.”

John Negroponte, a former United States ambassador to Mexico, ex-deputy secretary of state and observer of Wednesday’s debate, advised against any unilateral U.S. intervention south of the border.

“I believe any action that is unilateral by the United States vis-à-vis Mexico, especially by U.S. uniformed forces, be they police or military, would be completely counterproductive to United States-Mexico relations,” he said.

“Mexico is our largest trading partner. We share a 2,200-mile border and we have inter-relationships that are extensive and across an entire spectrum of issues such as migration, trade, people-to-people relations and environmental concerns. I believe such action would be extremely ill-advised,” Negroponte said.

With reports from The Hill, The Washington Post and Milenio

Xóchitl Gálvez gains support of PRD in bid to be coalition candidate

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Xóchitl Gálvez with PRD
Xóchitl Gálvez (center) at a press conference with the PRD president and other leading members of the party. (ROGELIO MORALES /CUARTOSCURO.COM)

Xóchitl Gálvez’s hopes of securing the presidential election nomination of the Broad Front for Mexico (FAM) got a significant boost on Friday when the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD) announced its support for the National Action Party (PAN) senator.

Jesús Zambrano, national president of the PRD, told a press conference in Mexico City that the party he leads had decided to back Gálvez, who is competing against Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) Senator Beatriz Paredes for the opposition bloc’s candidacy at the June 2, 2024 election.

Xóchitl Gálvez and Beatriz Paredes
Xóchitl Gálvez (left) and Beatriz Paredes are the remaining hopefuls competing for the FAM nomination. (Xóchitl Gálvez/X)

The FAM is made up of the PAN, the PRI and the PRD and supported by numerous civil society groups.

Zambrano said that the PRD took the opinions of party leaders and members across Mexico into account before throwing its support behind Gálvez. He said that the PRD – a leftist party that President López Obrador represented at the 2006 and 2012 presidential elections – and the senator with the conservative PAN could “identify” with each other because of their shared “social-democratic and libertarian” views.

The PRD chief said that Gálvez has a solid chance of winning the 2024 election, even though polls indicate that the ruling Morena party candidate – most likely former Mexico City mayor Claudia Sheinbaum or ex-foreign minister Marcelo Ebrard – will prevail.

“With Xóchitl we have a shot for 2024,” said Zambrano, who ruled out problems with the PRI for supporting Gálvez over Paredes.

PRD national president Jesús Zambrano (center) says that by supporting Gálvez, the FAM “has a shot” in 2024. (Jesús Zambrano/X)

Gálvez, who attended the event in the PRD colors of yellow, thanked the party for its support and declared that differences between the FAM partners only serve to “strengthen the unity and plurality of the project.”

Polling and a direct vote on Sept. 3 in which registered citizens can participate will determine who will become the Broad Front’s 2024 presidential candidate. The PRD’s endorsement of Gálvez will likely boost her support among supporters of that party.

The senator, an Indigenous Otomí woman from Hidalgo, came out on top in earlier polling that assessed support for the four FAM aspirants who reached the second stage of the candidate selection process.

Santiago Creel, a former interior minister and ex-PAN lawmaker, withdrew from the contest earlier this week and threw his weight behind Gálvez. Enrique de la Madrid, a former federal tourism minister, was eliminated because he placed fourth in the second stage polling.

Two PRD representatives – Senator Miguel Ángel Mancera, a former Mexico City mayor and ex-governor of Michoacán Silvano Aueroles – registered as aspirants to the FAM nomination, but neither reached the second stage of the selection process.

With reports from Milenio and Reforma