Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Hipólito Mora, Michoacán self-defense force founder, is murdered

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Hipólito Mora led a vigilante pushback against organized crime in Michoacán starting in 2013, but said the security situation was "worse than ever" last year. (Archivo/Cuartoscuro)

The co-founder of a citizens’ self-defense force movement that took up arms in 2013 and succeeded in driving the Knights Templar cartel out of Michoacán was murdered on Thursday along with three of his bodyguards.

Hipólito Mora Chávez, a lime farmer turned vigilante, was attacked by gunmen in Buenavista, a municipality in the notoriously violent Tierra Caliente region of Michoacán.

Mora was attacked and killed by gunmen in Buenavista, a municipality in the notoriously violent Tierra Caliente region of Michoacán. (Juan José Estrada Serafín/Cuartoscuro)

The Michoacán Attorney General’s Office (FGE) said that police heard about the violence shortly before 1 p.m. and subsequently traveled to the small town of La Ruana, where they found two damaged vehicles. Officers also found the badly burned body of Mora, who was 67, and the corpses of three bodyguards, all of whom had been shot.

According to the FGE, Mora was on his way home at around midday Thursday when he and his state-supplied security detail encountered a group of men who had blocked the road with two pickup trucks. The armed men – possibly members of the Viagras crime group – opened fire and subsequently set ablaze the vehicle in which Mora was traveling. They then fled the scene, the FGE said in a statement.

Soldiers, members of the National Guard and other security personnel are on the ground in the area where the attack occurred, the FGE said.

Mora’s house in La Ruana was shot up before the armed attack on the four men, the Reforma newspaper reported, while the former self-defense leader was unharmed in an apparent attempt on his life in March.

The site of the attack in the town of La Ruana. (Juan José Estrada Serafín/Cuartoscuro)

Michoacán Governor Alfredo Ramírez Bedolla said that his government “profoundly regretted the cowardly murder” of Mora and his Civil Guard security detail.

“We say it loud and clear, there will be no impunity for those who take away lives. … We will get to the bottom of what happened and justice will be served,” he wrote on Twitter.

At his Friday morning press conference, President López Obrador said that the murder of Mora was “regrettable” before asserting that the crime is a “remnant of the violence that was fostered by the government of Felipe Calderón,” who launched a militarized “war” on drug cartels shortly after he was sworn in as president in late 2006.

In a video posted to Facebook a week before his murder, Mora said that he and other residents of La Ruana were holding out hope that “the authorities” would act to stop extortion in the area.

Mora was instrumental in founding vigilante forces to protect Michoacán citizens from cartel violence. Some of the groups have been accused of being infiltrated by organized crime. (Juan José Estrada Serafín/Cuartoscuro)

“They don’t let us work, and the work we do is unfortunately for organized crime. We ask you … the authorities to come and do your work here in La Ruana, and to stop all these people that are doing so much damage to the people,” he said.

Guadalupe Mora blamed authorities for his brother’s death. “All the authorities from here, from the state, were against my brother. They left him on his own,” he said.

Guadalupe Mora accused the military of collusion with the Viagras.

“All of La Ruana knows that the soldiers, those who are here, are very involved with them, with those who killed my brother, with the Viagras. That’s why they left, they gave [the Viagras] a chance to kill him,” he said.

While self-defense force members, assisted by the military, managed to drive the Knights Templar cartel out of Michoacán in 2014, violence continued to plague the state, especially the Tierra Caliente region. Mora’s son was killed in a 2014 confrontation between warring factions of the Fuerza Rural self-defense group that left a total of 11 people dead.

Michoacan security forces on patrol
Poor families in rural areas like where she lives in Michoacán are at risk of violence from cartels and security forces alike. (Juan José Estada Serafín/Cuartoscuro)

In early 2019, Mora said that the security situation was “worse than before,” and declared later the same year that he would begin carrying a rifle and a pistol because governments have failed to provide security and are only interested in being in power and deceiving the Mexican people.

“Any authority that tries to detain me or disarm me will have to murder me because they won’t take me to jail or disarm me alive,” he wrote in a Facebook post in July 2019.

“When the government provides us with security, … I’ll gladly lay down my arms,” said Mora, who normally traveled in an armored vehicle and often wore a flak vest, even while celebrating Mass.

Self-defense groups such as that founded by Mora have been lauded by many Mexicans, but some have been infiltrated by criminal groups, and accused of committing crimes themselves.

Ioan Grillo, a Mexico-based British journalist who focuses on crime, said on Twitter that “the auto-defensas of Michoacán appeared like the heroes that Mexico needed against cartels.”

However, “by the end, many had become “narco defensas” with the same vices,” he wrote, adding: “But Hipólito Mora represented the best of the movement and his death is another tragedy in the relentless war.”

As well as the Knights Templar and the Viagras, the nearby CJNG cartel has also moved to consolidate control in the area, with civilians caught in the crossfire. (Cuartoscuro)

Mora said last year that the security situation had deteriorated to a new low in parts of Michoacán. “In terms of safety, we are worse than ever,” he told the Associated Press.

The Viagras, head of a group known as the Cárteles Unidos, moved in on territory once controlled by the Knights Templar cartel and proceeded to commit crimes including murder, abduction and extortion. The Cárteles Unidos has also been involved in numerous confrontations in Michoacán with the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG).

Mora complained that authorities neglected to combat the Viagras and other local crime groups because most of their anti-cartel security efforts in Michoacán were focused on the CJNG. “They have to fight all the cartels, not just one,” he said.

Mora and other Michoacán residents, including José Manuel Mireles Valverde, the co-founder of the broader Michoacán-based self-defense force movement, were originally motivated to take up arms because the Knights Templar cartel and other crime groups were kidnapping people, and committing a range of other crimes, including extortion of farmers and the exertion of control over who they could sell their products to and at what price.

The vigilantes waged a battle against criminals largely on their own, but their eventual expulsion of the Knights Templar cartel was assisted by the military.

“After the vigilantes had held off the cartel alone for months,” the Associated Press reported, “Mexican troops finally rolled in to rescue them. Mora led a rousing cheer, shouting: ‘This war has been won!'”

Hipólito Mora at a campaign rally
Hipólito Mora ran for governor of Michoacán in 2021 with the Social Encounter Party (PES). (Hipólito Mora/Twitter)

Mora spent periods of his life in jail both in Mexico and the United States for crimes including kidnapping and drug possession, and ran unsuccessfully as a candidate for federal Congress in 2015 and governor of Michoacán in 2021.

Among those who paid tribute to Mora in the wake of his death were Rev. Gregorio López, a Catholic priest who was involved in the self-defense movement founded in Michoacán in 2013.

“He was a man who could not be corrupted, a natural leader, an authentic voice,” he said.

Guillermo Valencia, an Institutional Revolutionary Party leader in Michoacán, said that Mora “deserved to be in the history books, not killed the way he was.”

“He never ceased in the struggle,” added Valencia, who described himself as a friend of Mora.

Óscar Balderas, an expert on organized crime and security, described Mora as “an extraordinary man, a brave man who plotted a course for the self-defense movement and the armed civilian uprising against Mexico’s cartels.”

Hipólito Mora's funeral
Mora’s funeral was held on Friday in La Ruana, Michoacán. “He knew his enemies would kill him,” says organized crime expert Óscar Balderas. ( Juan José Estrada Serafín / Cuartoscuro.com)

“He knew he wouldn’t die of old age. He knew his enemies would kill him. He knew it and he lived with the knowledge that he would soon suffer a fatal attack and, regrettably, that came true,” Balderas said.

“He never got to see his dream of a pacified Michoacán and I believe that this, after the murder of his son, would be his greatest cause of grief.”

Mora himself said last year that “the day they attack me, if they give me even the slightest opportunity, I will go down fighting.”

“I won’t sit around with my arms crossed. I will die defending my rights and defending my life,” he said.

With reports from ReformaEl Universal, AP, The Guardian and El Economista 

En Breve: Bosch Rexroth in QRO, Asiaway in SLP, Tim Hortons in CDMX

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Automotive manufacturing is one of the industries benefiting from nearshoring, as manufacturers relocate operations closer to the U.S. market. (Wikimedia Commons)

Bosch Rexroth opens plant in QRO

Bosch Rexroth has opened a new 4.3-billion-peso (US $251 million) plant in Pedro Escobedo, a municipality in southern Querétaro. The German company will make hydraulic pumps for mobile machinery at the 42,000-square-meter facility.

The new Bosch Rexroth plant in Querétaro will generate some 900 jobs during the coming years. (Bosch Rexroth)

Reinhard Schaefer, a member of the Bosch Rexroth executive board, said at an inauguration event on Wednesday that the establishment of the Querétaro plant allows the company to strengthen its presence in the North American market. Its operation will generate some 900 jobs during the coming years.

Schaefer wrote on LinkedIn that the Querétaro facility and a new Bosch Rexroth plant in Slovenia allows the company to expand its “global production network” and increase its capacity to deliver hydraulics and factory automation products.

“Our operations in Brnik and Querétaro will benefit our customers by increasing flexibility and robustness of our supply chain. Expanding local footprint and local sourcing in the region, especially in Mexico, means to serve increasing customer demand with competitive lead times and at the same time reducing the carbon footprint to contribute to sustainability,” he wrote.

Bosch, a multinational engineering and technology company headquartered near Stuttgart, has another plant in Querétaro that was recently expanded for the production of auto parts. The company, which has had a presence in Mexico since 1982, has announced investments in Mexico totaling more than 20 billion pesos in the past two years.

Asiaway sets up shop in SLP

Chinese auto parts manufacturer Asiaway began operations at a new plant in San Luis Potosí city last week. The facility is located in the World Trade Center Industrial Park on the outskirts of the state capital.

San Luis Potosí Governor Ricardo Gallardo attended an inauguration event with Asiaway executives early last week. (Government of San Luis Potosí)

Asiaway invested US $41.4 million to open the new plant, which is the first stage of a two-part project. The company will invest an additional amount of some US $370 to develop a second phase of the project.

Some 300 people will initially work at the new plant, but Asiaway’s workforce will increase to 2,000 once the second larger part of the project comes on line in the coming years.

San Luis Potosí Governor Ricardo Gallardo attended an inauguration event with company executives early last week. He said that security in San Luis Potosí and government policies in a range of areas were among the reasons why foreign firms had confidence to invest in the state.

Tim Hortons to enter CDMX market 

Canadian coffeehouse chain Tim Hortons will open its first location in the greater Mexico City metropolitan area later this year, the company’s Mexico president said.

In a video posted to Twitter by a Mexico-based Canadian diplomat, Juan José Gutiérrez said that a Tim Hortons store will open on Aug. 31.

“Join us at Sentura, that’s where we’ll be with you,” he said in the video posted by the Embassy of Canada’s Deputy Head of Mission Shauna Hemingway.

A Tim Hortons coffeehouse will open Aug. 31 at the Sentura shopping center in Tlanepantla, the franchise’s first announced location in Mexico City. (Wikimedia Commons)

Sentura is a shopping center in the México state municipality of Tlalnepantla, which adjoins Mexico City to the north.

Tim Hortons arrived in Mexico in 2017, opening its first outlet in the Monterrey metropolitan area. It now has over 50 cafes in the country, but hadn’t announced plans to enter the Mexico City market before Gutiérrez appeared in Hemingway’s video last Sunday.

Valley of Mexico eyes automotive investment 

The Mexico City Economic Development Ministry (Sedeco) and the México State Automotive Cluster (CLAUT México) are working together in an attempt to attract automotive sector companies to the Valley of Mexico metropolitan area, which includes the capital and parts of México state.

The Mexico City Economic Development Ministry is working with the México State Automotive Cluster to bring auto manufacturing plants to vacant land surrounding the metropolitan area. (Sedeco/Twitter)

Economic Development Minister Fadlala Akabani Hneide said there is potential to attract US $12 billion in investment in the next five years as a result of the growing nearshoring phenomenon, in which companies relocate some or part of their operations to Mexico to be close to the United States market.

He said there are 40 auto sector companies from the U.S., Europe and China that are interested in establishing plants in the Valley of Mexico metro area.

“We have more than 22,000 square kilometers of … [land] … where large factories can set up,” Akabani said.

The minister said that Sedeco officials would meet with representatives of auto sector companies visiting the Mexico City area with a view to establishing an operational presence, while CLAUT México would help link the firms to local supply chains and industrial parks.

CLAUT México president Elisa Crespo Ferrer said there are already 154 auto sector businesses in the Mexico City area. Those firms collectively employ 31,800 people, she said.

With reports from TYT, Mexico Industry, Lider EmpresarialExpansión and Forbes México

Amigos de Animales expands animal welfare work in San Miguel de Allende

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Woman with Dog
A resident of San Miguel de Allende brings her chihuahua to Amigos de Animales for free sterilization. (Amigos de Animales)

In the small hours of the weekend mornings of June 24 and 25, dozens of pet owners and their furry companions began lining up outside the Lions Club in San Miguel de Allende to take part in a free sterilization campaign.

The organization that makes this possible – to the benefit of the animals and also the community – is Amigos de Animales, A.C.

Volunteers promote a rural Amigos de Animales sterilization clinic.
Volunteers promote a rural Amigos de Animales sterilization clinic. (Amigos de Animales)

Established in 2001, the all-volunteer organization’s mission is “to help curb the overpopulation of companion animals in San Miguel de Allende through no-cost sterilizations, thereby helping to eliminate the fear, pain, suffering, and misery of homeless animals in San Miguel de Allende and outlying areas.” 

While rescue and foster organizations are also very important, Amigos de Animales believes that their work, and that of other non-profits in the area, prevents these problems in the first place.

Since its inception, Amigos de Animales has sterilized over 28,000 dogs and cats, averaging over 1,300 sterilizations annually. Moreover, in the last year the organization has managed to double the number of major campaigns offered in the city center, which serve hundreds of cats and dogs, from two to four.

Amigos de Animales has also doubled the number of smaller clinics it holds in the communities surrounding San Miguel, where the animal overpopulation problem is far more acute.

Vet
Amigos de Animales volunteers and pet owners care for cats after sterilization surgery. (Ann Marie Jackson)

May alone saw 248 sterilizations in a total of 10 rural communities, a huge increase over the previous average of 100 per month. 

Michael Friedman, Treasurer of Amigos de Animales and President of Amigos’ U.S. non-profit entity, explained that the rural clinics are arranged in cooperation with local community leaders.

In the last year, Amigos de Animales conducted 48 clinics in 34 communities. Two veterinarians with the assistance of two volunteers can typically sterilize 20 to 30 animals per clinic. A 50-peso donation is solicited but not required.

Thanks to the generosity of many donors, the organization was recently able to buy a new vehicle, enabling the team to conduct the rural clinics without having to hire trucks and drivers.

The organization’s sterilization efforts have reduced the potential animal population growth by millions. (Amigos de Animales)

“We are also trying something new this year that we believe will be impactful,” Friedman told me. We’re going to each location three or four times in a row to truly saturate it.” 

“For example, in the last three weeks we’ve been to the Palo Colorado community four times and sterilized a full complement of animals each time. Unfortunately, no official census is taken of dogs and cats, so it will be difficult to measure the impact with precision, but we are told by residents in the areas that we have visited repeatedly that they see a difference.”

Amigos de Animales has established an important partnership with Guanajuato Health Ministry (SSG), whereby the ministry provides skilled veterinarians to perform the sterilization surgeries and Amigos de Animales helps support SSG with supplies and medication. Seventeen veterinarians worked on last weekend’s big campaign.

Our pets mean the world to so many of us. (Amigos de Animales)

Veterinary students assist in surgical prep, and Amigos de Animales also recruits a small army of volunteers from the community to help with each campaign. Large events in the city require the services of approximately 35-40 volunteers. Volunteers register animals as they arrive, guide their owners through the process and help to care for the animals as they wake up from anesthesia, among other tasks. 

Amigos de Animales was founded by Arno K. Naumann in 2001. A devoted animal lover, he was dismayed by the multitude of animals roaming the streets of San Miguel that were at the mercy of traffic, the elements, and human abuse.

After working with a crowded animal shelter, Naumann came to the conclusion that the best solution to the plight of animals wandering the streets was sterilization.

Arno K. Naumann founded Amigos de Animales in 2001. (Amigos de Animales)

In addition to providing sterilizations, Amigos de Animales has worked to bring about other improvements in animal welfare. For example, the organization was instrumental in working with the local government to establish lethal injection, preceded by total anesthesia, as the only permissible method for euthanizing animals. This replaced the inhumane method of electrocution used in the past.

Amigos de Animales also works in the local public schools to teach children and their families about pet care, the animals’ need for love and the importance of dog and cat sterilization. 

“Nearly 2,000 pets are abandoned in San Miguel de Allende every year, and many others are abused,” said president of Amigos de Animales, Claudia Chavarría Moreno. “So it is important that we visit schools, from kindergartens to universities, to educate young people and change the future.”

Miguel Angel Chavira Guerrero (M.V.Z); MVZ. Adriana Gutierrez Morales (M.V.Z.); Claudia Chavarría Moreno, President, Amigos de Animales; and Michael Friedman, Treasurer, Amigos de Animales. (Ann Marie Jackson)

The group acknowledges that some people are uncomfortable with having their cat or dog sterilized. Pet owners may feel that sterilization is unnatural or cruel, or that their animal should at least have one litter. 

However, there is no scientific basis for this belief. On the contrary, neutered dogs live 1 to 3 years longer on average than unneutered dogs, and neutered cats live 3 to 5 years longer. For a variety of reasons, sterilized animals make better companions for people.

Spaying also reduces or eliminates the risk of many kinds of disease and health issues. Amigos de Animales reports that spaying and neutering also significantly decreases roaming, aggression, and urine marking in cats and dogs.

If you would like to support Amigos de Animales’ efforts to reduce the overpopulation of cats and dogs in San Miguel de Allende, visit www.amigos-sma.org to donate or volunteer. 

Based in San Miguel de Allende, Ann Marie Jackson is a writer and NGO leader who previously worked for the U.S. Department of State. Her novel “The Broken Hummingbird” will be out in October. Ann Marie can be reached through her website, annmariejacksonauthor.com.

Category 1 Hurricane Beatriz approaches Michoacán coastline

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Two hurricanes, Adrian and Beatriz, are forecast to cause storm surges along Mexico's Pacific coast over the weekend. (Cuartoscuro)

Tropical Storm Beatriz has been upgraded to a Category 1 hurricane off Mexico’s Pacific coast, while Hurricane Adrian has swelled to a Category 2 according to the United States National Hurricane Center (NHC).

Early Friday morning, Beatriz was just south of the city of Lázaro Cárdenas, Michoacán, moving at 20 km/h in a northwesterly direction along Mexico’s Pacific coast with maximum sustained winds of 120 km/h.

Hurricane advisory warnings for Beatriz, the only one of the two hurricanes expected to make landfall, issued by the National Hurricane Center. (NHC)

The NHC forecasts that Beatriz will continue strengthening into Saturday, bringing “hurricane-force winds and a dangerous storm surge” to parts of Mexico’s southwest coast.

Hurricane warnings were issued for coastal areas in the states of Guerrero, Michoacán, Colima and Jalisco, with predictions of 100-120 km/h winds, waves of up to five meters, and torrential rains between Oaxaca and Nayarit. “These rains could lead to life-threatening flash flooding and landslides,” the NHC warned.

On Thursday, the Mexican Navy reported that two of Mexico’s largest Pacific ports, Lázaro Cárdenas and Manzanillo, would be closed in anticipation of the hurricane. The National Meteorological Service (SMN) has warned residents in the affected states to take precautions and comply with recommendations issued by the National Civil Protection System.

Beatriz is predicted to reach the Baja California peninsula on Sunday as a tropical storm, after gradually weakening over the coming days.

A view of San Mateo Piñas, Oaxaca, after Hurricane Agatha in 2022. Warnings have been issued for similar landslide and flood conditions caused by Hurricane Beatriz in both Oaxaca and Nayarit. (Twitter)

Meanwhile, Hurricane Adrian – which became the first named hurricane of the eastern Pacific season on Wednesday – was upgraded to a Category 2. On Friday morning, it was located around 700 kilometers south of Cabo San Lucas, Baja California Sur, with maximum sustained winds of 155 km/h and gusts of up to 195 km/h.

While Adrian is not predicted to make landfall in Mexico, it has contributed to the heavy rains and high seas along Mexico’s Pacific coast.

In May, the SMN predicted that Mexico could see between 26 and 38 storms in the Eastern Pacific and Atlantic oceans during the 2023 hurricane season. As many of nine of these could be Category 3, 4 or 5 hurricanes. 

The El Niño climate pattern, which officially arrived on June 8, can lead to a more active Pacific hurricane season, while also contributing to weaker hurricanes forming in the Atlantic Ocean.

With reports from El Economista and The Conversation

Navy intercepts narco-sub carrying 3.5 tonnes of cocaine near Baja

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narco sub
The narco-submarine was followed by navy aircraft until it could be intercepted by specialist units and towed to Baja California. (Semar)

The Mexican Navy (Semar) seized 3.5 tonnes (or metric tons) of cocaine off the coast of Baja California on Tuesday, after intercepting the biggest narco-submarine detected in the last five years.

The vessel is 26 meters long, with two internal engines. It had an average speed of eight knots and could remain at sea autonomously for up to 20 days. The navy said in a statement that the vessel had the largest load capacity of any semi-submersible seen during the current administration of President López Obrador, who took office in 2018.

186 packages of cocaine, totaling nearly 3.5 metric tons, were seized by the navy. (Semar)

“After [the semi-submersible] was located, it was followed by Mexican navy aircraft, so that navy ships equipped with helicopters and interceptor patrols were positioned for the interdiction of the illicit vessel,” the statement said.

The navy stressed that advanced training was required to carry out the operation, as “the officers boarded the illicit vessel in motion, under conditions of strong wind and waves on the high seas.”

Authorities seized 186 packages of cocaine, which were handed over to law enforcement officers in La Paz, Baja California. Five crew members of different nationalities were arrested.

With this latest incident, the Mexican Navy has seized almost 21.3 metric tons of cocaine and arrested 121 people at sea so far this year. The increased naval activity is in addition to seizures on land and in ports, including a huge seizure of nearly 40 metric tons of “material contaminated with cocaine” in the port of Ensenada, Baja California, last month.

By comparison, by mid-June last year, the navy had seized 14 metric tons of cocaine at sea, on land and in ports – at the time considered a notably large figure. The navy commented in September 2022 that a sharp increase in cocaine seizures at sea has been seen during AMLO’s administration. Less than 40 metric tons were seized during the previous six-year term of President Enrique Peña Nieto.

With reports from La Jornada and Infobae

Health Ministry: 112 hot weather-related deaths since March

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Oaxaca heat wave
Health authorities have advised to take extra precautions for the elderly and very young in areas experiencing extreme temperatures. (Carolina Jiménez Mariscal / Cuartoscuro.com)

Hot weather was a major factor in 112 deaths in Mexico during the past three months, most of which occurred during the heat wave earlier this month, according to the federal Health Ministry.

The epidemiology department (DGE) of the Health Ministry reported that there were 112 deaths associated with “extreme natural temperatures” between March 19 – the date this year’s “hot season” began – and June 24. The vast majority occurred during Mexico’s third heat wave, during which sweltering conditions were recorded across much of the country between June 1 and June 22.

People shelter from the sun in Mexico City
July is expected to see a number of cyclones in southeastern Mexico, which could contribute to another heat wave. (Mario Jasso/Cuartoscuro)

The northern border state of Nuevo León recorded the highest number of heat-related deaths during the March-June period with 64, according to the DGE report.

Nineteen deaths occurred in Tamaulipas, 15 in Veracruz, five in Tabasco, four in Oaxaca, two in each of Quintana Roo and Sonora and one in Campeche.

The DGE also said that 1,559 cases of illness related to hot weather were reported in the three-month period it assessed. Most of those cases occurred this month.

All but 12 of the 112 deaths occurred during the third heat wave, DGE data shows. Heatstroke was established as the cause of death in 104 of the fatalities, while dehydration was the cause in the other eight.

Electrolytes at a clinic
A nurse shows oral hydration packets at a government clinic. (Crisanta Espinosa Aguilar / Cuartoscuro.com)

There were 89 heat-related deaths among men and 23 among women, while about three-quarters of those who died were aged 65 and above. One child aged between five and 14 died, as did one young person aged between 15 and 24. The other 26 people who succumbed to heat-related illnesses were aged 25 to 64.

The total number of hot weather-related deaths this year is significantly higher than those recorded in each of the past three years. There were 42 last year, 33 in 2021 and 37 in 2020, according to the DGE report, which was published Wednesday.

Scientists and researchers from the National Autonomous University of Mexico said earlier this month that a fourth heat wave could hit the country as soon as early July.

Meanwhile, residents of some parts of Mexico continue to experience uncomfortably hot weather.

The National Meteorological Service said that parts of Baja California, Sonora, Sinaloa, Nuevo León and Tamaulipas would see temperatures between 40 and 45 C (104-113 F) on Thursday, while 14 other states were forecast to reach 35-40 C.

Mexico News Daily 

Meatless in Mexico: A vegetarian’s guide to eating well

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Chilaquiles
Some traditional Mexican dishes, like chilaquiles served with eggs, make for hearty and delicious vegetarian options. (Shutterstock)

If you think it’s hard to find vegetarian dishes in Mexico, you should have visited back in 1982, when my husband, Barry, and I first did.

Luckily we did eat fish, but otherwise, it was tough. Now, though, it’s much easier. Chefs and waiters won’t think you’re weird when you say, “No como carne.” And you don’t have to be fluent in Spanish to eat vegetarian, although knowing the names of different toppings and foods definitely helps. 

Healthy plant-based meal
It’s not as hard as you might think to find healthy, vegetarian options in Mexico today. (Anna Pelzer/Unsplash)

Here are some ways we have figured out how to eat delicious non-meat dishes both in restaurants and at home (note, we are not vegans, and if you are, that is more of a challenge).

Where to shop

When we first came to Mexico, the only international food I could buy was heavily salted soy sauce, but today it’s completely different, with supermarkets that cater to a diversity of tastes. If you live near an urban area or a tourist town, chances are you’ll find one near you. If you visit La Comer, or City Market, you’ll find Asian condiments, tofu, decent peanut butter, various rices, gluten-free products, organic produce, and other imported items. 

Dishes to try for daily meals

A typical Mexican fruit platter with papaya, cantaloupe, watermelon, red and green apples and bananas. (Photo: Deleite)

Breakfast: Mexico has a wealth of egg dishes, which usually come with a side of beans, tortillas and salsa. You can enjoy huevos rancheros (fried egg on a tortilla base, served with salsa); chilaquiles (a breakfast version of nachos, topped with tomato sauce, cheese, beans and a fried egg); and huevos a la Mexicana (scrambled eggs with onion, chile and tomato). Most restaurants also serve granola (with or without yogurt) and fresh fruit.

Snack food: When traveling around Mexico, you can’t miss the puestos (stalls) offering gorditas (pocket sandwiches), tamales, tacos, or tortillas, with their different choice of fillings, including frijoles (beans), queso (cheese), nopales (cactus), papas (potato), cebollas (onion), acelga (chard), champiñones (mushrooms), or huevo (egg). Be sure to use “huevo” in the singular though, since the plural, by itself, is a slang term for a delicate part of the male anatomy! Another popular snack is elote, or corn on the cob, served with different garnishes and found on streets all over Mexico. 

Lunch: La comida is the main meal of the day, and is usually eaten around 2 p.m. In restaurants, the comida corrida (fixed-price meal of the day) usually includes meat, but you can ask if they’ll substitute a non-meat dish for the entrée. Barry and I often enjoy tortilla soup, also called sopa azteca, which is tomato soup poured over fried tortilla strips and garnished with an array of toppings, including cheese, avocado, cilantro, fried chiles, onion, and sour cream.  If you’re vegan, don’t forget to say, “Sin queso o crema, por favor” (No cheese or cream, please).

Nopal cactus
Don’t fear the needles: most markets will make nopal (cactus) safe and ready to cook. A great vegetarian option! (Archive)

While many dishes do include meat, Mexico has a long tradition of eating another protein beans! Black beans, gallo (pinto) beans, and frijoles peruanos (not Peruvian beans, as you might think, but a creamy yellow bean), available both cooked whole (enteros) and refried (refritos), can be found at most restaurants. Whatever you’re eating, ask if they can give you frijoles instead of meat, and check, if you’re a purist, if the beans are cooked in pork lard (manteca de cerdo) which is often the cooking fat of choice here in Mexico.

Another vegetarian option to consider is a meatless burrito. Beans and rice are another good bet, along with some pico de gallo (a diced tomato salsa). Or try mole, the thick, smoky, often chocolate-y sauce usually served over chicken, which many Mexicans consider the crowning glory of their national cuisine. In Puebla, I almost wept over my rice and mole. 

We’re partial to quesadillas, which traditionally consist of melted cheese tucked into a folded tortilla, but nowadays have all kinds of variations, like the spinach quesadillas with roasted veggies I ate at a café in Querétaro. My all-time favorite quesadilla dish is the one I order at our local corner eatery, Cafe Santo, in Guanajuato, with a filling of portobello mushrooms, though huitlacoche (a fungus that grows on corn) and beans are also popular options.

Enchiladas verdes can be served with a cheese filling instead of typical chicken. (Twitter)

Dinner: Mexican dinner (la cena) is typically light, since the main meal is in the afternoon. Still, if you’re in a city, you can find plenty of restaurants open. International restaurants are more and more common, even in smaller cities. We’ve savored risotto in Zacatecas, tabouli in Guanajuato, and aloo gobi masala in Puebla. You can also find sushi anywhere. Chinese restaurants are everywhere in Mexican cities, but the food tends to be greasy. In Guanajuato, we can choose from Vietnamese, Thai, Mediterranean, and Arabic restaurants. 

Mexico City however, is in a league of its own, and offers almost every type of cuisine as well as an array of vegan and vegetarian restaurants.

Cooking at home

Cooking vegetarian food is not much different than in the U.S. or Canada. Buy black or pinto beans in cans or plastic packaging if you’re in a hurry; otherwise buy dried beans and cook  in a crock pot. I often cook lentils in my crock pot.

Staying in rentals

All Mexican homes come equipped with a blender since Mexicans have enjoyed licuados (smoothies) long before they became popular in the English-speaking world.

Buy some mangoes, papayas, pineapple, mandarins, and bananas, and blend up a hearty fruit smoothie. Just be sure to disinfect the produce first by soaking it in Microdyn, an antibacterial solution, available everywhere. Add spinach, Mexican zucchini, and other veggies for an even healthier green smoothie.

You may notice that a lot of these dishes are not exactly low-calorie. To avoid weight gain (and protect my heart), I ask for salsa instead of sour cream, cheese or heavy sauces, or order sour cream on the side (“al lado”). Guacamole is fine, but I skip the complimentary deep-fried tortilla chips (yummy as they are), and ask for jicama (a Mexican root vegetable), red pepper, or cucumber sticks instead for dipping.

¡Buen provecho!

Food in Mexico is a sensory pleasure, however you eat it.

You can while away a couple of lazy hours over a meal in an outdoor café, in warm, forgiving weather. No one will hover over you to pay up and leave. Or you can hang out on a park bench in the zócalo (town plaza) and watch the vendors selling their wares and the kids playing and the couples strolling arm-in-arm, while you bite into your tamal.

Whether you’re inside or out, at a table or on a bench, eating a meal in Mexico is delectable experience — and not just because of the food. 

Louisa Rogers and her husband Barry Evans divide their lives between Guanajuato and Eureka, on California’s North Coast. Louisa writes articles and essays about expat life, Mexico, travel, physical and psychological health, retirement and spirituality. Her recent articles are on her website, louisarogers.contently.com

Mexico’s athletes winning at Central American and Caribbean Games

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Alexa Moreno (right) becomes Mexico's most decorated gymnast with 3 gold medals at the Games, despite missing 2022 due to health problems. (Conade/Twitter)

Mexico has pulled ahead in the 2023 Central American and Caribbean Games, closing Wednesday with 136 medals while its closest competitor, Colombia, had 87.

Mexico’s medal tally included 52 gold medals, 47 silver and 37 bronze by the end of the fifth day of the 15-day tournament in San Salvador.

Mexican Cycle team 2023 Caribbean Games
There was also success for Mexico’s cycle team at the Games, with yet another gold medal. (Conade/Twitter)

Gymnast Alexa Moreno was a notable success story, winning three gold medals – in floor, vault, and as a member of Mexico’s winning female team – as well as one silver and one bronze during her events.

The medal haul gives the 28-year-old the best record in Mexican gymnastics history, despite not competing in 2022 for health reasons.

Other Mexican achievements at the Games include:

  • Mexico dominating the racquetball contests on Thursday, with an individual gold for Paola Longoria and for doubles players Alexandra Herrera and Monserrat Mejía. In the men’s contest, Mexico claimed both gold and silver after Eduardo Portillo beat his compatriot Rodrigo Montoya in the final.
  • Athletes Emiliano Hernández, Manuel Padilla, Mayran Oliver and Mayan Oliver all taking gold in the modern pentathlon.
  • Andrea Ibarra and Carlos González winning gold in sport shooting, while fellow Mexicans Alejandra Zavala and Daniel Urquiza secured silver.
  • Lilian Armenta, Hugo Reyes, Jordy Gutiérrez and Mildred Mercado winning gold in mixed rowing, with a time of 6:24.45.
Mexican olympic synchronized swimming team
Mexicos’ synchronized swimming team, seen here at the World Championships in Egypt earlier this year, continued their success by winning gold, amid an ongoing dispute over funding. (Twitter)

The Mexican women’s synchronized swimming team also took top prize in their discipline.

“It is a great honor to add more medals for my country, because it has been a great job by this group of teammates, who have worked hard to give everything in the water so that our routine was perfect,” swimmer Itzamary González told the press.

The win was the latest in a strong season for the team, which also won three gold medals and one bronze at the synchronized swimming world cup in Egypt last month.

However, the team has also clashed with the National Commission for Physical Culture and Sport (Conade), after complaining about a lack of support from the government. In May, Conade chief Ana Gabriela Guevara denied claims the team was forced to self-fund its trip to Egypt, claiming instead that they had failed to properly account for previously received funding.

With reports from El Universal and El País

Mexico to hand over temporary presidency of Pacific Alliance to Chile

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Diplomats from Pacific Alliance countries.
Diplomats from the Pacific Alliance countries (Mexico's Bárcena is in the middle) agreed on the temporary presidency of Chile, which will then be handed over to Peru in August. (Chilean Ministry of Foreign Affairs/Twitter)

Chile will temporarily assume the presidency of the Pacific Alliance trade bloc to diffuse the diplomatic tensions that followed Mexico’s refusal to cede the position to Peru.

The agreement was finalized on Wednesday, in a meeting in Santiago de Chile between representatives of the Pacific Alliance countries of Mexico, Chile, Peru and Colombia. Chile will hold the presidency for a month, after which time it will pass to Peru on Aug. 1.

Mexico has been attempting to negotiate over the presidency of the trade bloc for some time. Here, President López Obrador is seen at a summit with Chilean President Gabriel Boric, in late 2022. (Galo Cañas/Cuartoscuro)

“We have always recognized Peru’s right to exercise the pro tempore presidency,” Chile’s Foreign Minister, Alberto van Klaveren, said at a press conference. “We have assumed the responsibility of acting as intermediaries to resolve this situation.”

Mexico was supposed to hand over the rotating presidency to Peru in late 2022 or early 2023 but refused because President López Obrador considered the current Peruvian government under President Dina Boluarte to be illegitimate. Boluarte took over after former president Pedro Castillo attempted to dissolve congress ahead of an impeachment vote in December 2022. Castillo was arrested and remains in state custody.

Castillo’s arrest caused mass protests in Peru which Boluarte’s government repressed forcefully, leaving at least 60 civilians dead between December 2022 and March 2023. Though initially Boluarte said she would move up the scheduling of general elections, she recently stated that she will remain president through 2026.

Dina Boluarte, president of Peru
AMLO does not recognize Peruvian president Dina Boluarte’s government and has granted asylum to ousted president Pedro Castillo’s family in Mexico. (@PresidenciaPeru Twitter)

AMLO was an outspoken supporter of Castillo throughout the crisis, claiming the Peruvian leader was the victim of a conspiracy by Peru’s oligarchy. After Castillo was ousted, AMLO offered asylum to his family and put diplomatic relations on hold with Peru.

Months of tensions followed in which both countries withdrew their ambassadors and AMLO challenged Boluarte’s legitimacy to hold the Pacific Alliance’s leadership.

“I do not want to hand over [the presidency] to a government that I consider spurious,” AMLO said in February. “I don’t want to legitimize a coup.”

The spat threatened to escalate further when Peru’s foreign minister, Ana Cecilia Gervasi, condemned AMLO’s comments as “interventionist, irresponsible and ideological,” and suggested that withholding the presidency could “have consequences in the international legal community.”

The Peruvian Congress went as far to declare AMLO persona non grata for his comments in May, after having done the same to Colombian president Gustavo Petro in February after Petro compared Peru’s national police to “Nazis marching against their own people.”

However, AMLO conceded that he would let the other members of the Pacific Alliance decide the Pacific Alliance question, paving the way for this week’s rapprochement.

Following Wednesday’s agreement, Mexican Foreign Minister Alicia Bárcena passed the bloc’s leadership to Van Klaveren, in a ceremony also attended by Renzo Villa Prrado, chargé d’affaires of Peru in Chile. Van Klaveren stressed that Chile accepted the temporary presidency “in a spirit of brotherhood with the countries and with the consent of all members of the alliance.”

“The agreement reached reflects the political will to continue betting on Latin American integration, which encourages dialogue, economic and commercial exchange,” Peru’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

“This agreement relaunches the work of the Pacific Alliance and highlights the role of diplomacy as a means to achieve commitments through dialogue.”

With reports from El País, Reuters and Aristegui Noticias

The mysterious ‘Gringo Zapatista’ who fought in Mexico’s Revolution

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Zapatistas
According to stories about Martson, Emiliano Zapata (center) planned to execute him, thinking he was a "gringo" (from the U.S.), but a tattoo convinced him to spare his life. (Gob MX/Edher A. Moreno)

The story of Australian Roderick James Martson (at times referred to as Marston) – the photographer who became a Zapatista – was largely unknown until the 1990s, 60 years after his death, when his great granddaughter Erin Reid discovered a box of his journals and photos taken during the Mexican Revolution in the basement of his Vancouver home.

Reid has not yet released the contents to the public but has confirmed that the journals and photographs document his time with the Zapatistas. He has been referenced in Zapata biographies simply as “El Gringo”.

Late 19th century photo of a mine in Puebla
A late 19th-century mine in Puebla not far from where Martson would set up his own mine, with permission from President Porfirio Díaz. (Fototeca Nacional INAH)

Martson was an intrepid traveler and adventurer.  From an early age, he began traveling the world in search of adventure and his wealthy parents indulged his wanderlust. He was also a photographer, inventor, miner, and entrepreneur.  

His travels eventually took him to Vancouver, Canada where he caught gold fever.  His desire to become a prospector took him south to the United States, settling in San Antonio, Texas and acquiring two mining properties.

His scientific skill and intuitive sense of timing led him to invent a method of mining using explosive devices he invented to rip away the hard rock revealing the hidden treasure within – veins of gold to be exploited. His expertise gained him huge profits and gave him an edge over the other gambusinos (prospectors).

Eventually gold mines in the region began to dwindle, so Martson, backpack slung over one shoulder, traveled further south into Mexico to seek new adventures.  

He received permission from President Porfirio Díaz to settle in the city of Tehuacán, Puebla to carry out “scientific work” which for Martson meant mining. He immediately acquired a silver mine and once again employing his unique explosive techniques, began making large profits. 

Emiliano Zapata and soldiers mounted on horses.
Emiliano Zapata and his troops circa 1917. (Archivo Casasola / Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia)

His profits were so immense that he built a large estate and hired twenty people to staff it.  For the next six years he spent his time making money, designing new inventions, and indulging in his true passion: photography.

However, the Mexican Revolution of 1910 interrupted this more settled life for Martson.

In the leadup to the war, General Emiliano Zapata’s army dominated the states of Morelos and Puebla.  The slogan of the Zapatistas was “Land and Freedom”. Their goal was restitution of the land to the peasants – land currently owned by wealthy landowners. As the Zapatistas advanced through the area, ranches and estates fell one by one – the land then distributed to peasants.

According to the limited accounts available, when they reached Martson’s property, he and his employees put up a fierce defense but they were no match for Zapata’s army – the estate was in ruins, most of his servants killed, and Martson taken prisoner.

The Zapatistas considered him a “gringo” (born in the United States) and Zapata ordered him to be executed by firing squad. Martson, in broken Spanish, tried to explain that he was not a gringo.  The story goes that by displaying a tattoo of the British flag on one of his arms, he convinced them he wasn’t an American. According to interviews conducted with his great-granddaughter, he had obtained the tattoo while spending time with the British merchant navy during his earlier travels.

The story may be apocryphal, but Zapata decided to spare him if he agreed to fight with the Zapatistas.  

Martson, donning the Zapatista hat and carrying bandoliers on his shoulder, became part of Zapata’s army and was assigned to a battalion in Puebla. Due to his experience with explosives, Zapata put him in charge of blowing up the roads and railways being used by the federal army to fight the Zapatistas.

Attack on a constitutionalist military train in Sept. 1913.
An attack on a Constitutionalist military train in Sonora in September 1913. According to family lore, Martson was ordered to carry out a similar attack on a hospital. (José Mendoza / Fototeca INAH)

In 1911, Porfirio Díaz was overthrown and revolutionary leader Francisco I. Madero marched triumphantly into Mexico City to claim the presidency.  Zapata – as the revolutionary leader of the south – began peace negotiations with him in the hope of sharing power in the new government.  However, it quickly became apparent that Madero was not interested. Considering him a traitor to the cause, Zapata restarted the armed struggle for land – this time fighting the federal forces under President Madero.

On one occasion General Zapata himself ordered Martson to blow up a hospital where wounded federal soldiers lay dying. Martson refused, considering this a criminal act.  Zapata saw his disobedience as a betrayal of the cause and ordered him to be executed, for a second time. But the Zapatistas had come to like and respect the gringo – even calling him Captain Martson – and intervened to save his life.

Martson did not blow up the hospital, but he continued to fulfill his revolutionary duties until he was eventually captured by the Madero federal army and imprisoned. Madero, who was at the time seeking the support of foreign nations – and believing Martson to be a British citizen – gave him a reprieve on one condition: exile. Once more, the tattoo had saved his life.

Peppino Garibaldi on a horse.
Martson was not the only foreigner to fight on one side or another of the Mexican Revolution. Giuseppe Garibaldi II, also born in Australia, served under Francisco I. Madero in the first stage of the revolution, and Mexico City’s Plaza Garibaldi is named in his honor. (Harry Blumenfeld)

He made one last trip to the Zapatista camp where he had spent so much time to say his goodbyes to his comrades, who were by now his friends, and collected his most valuable possessions – his photographic equipment, his photo negatives, and his journals – and departed for the United States.

His days of wandering, however, were not yet over.  He traveled around the United States trying his hand at managing land, factory management, and even at one point selling Dr. W. B. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin (an early U.S. patented laxative) until he migrated north to Canada – where he finally settled down in Vancouver to start a family.

It is believed that he died there in 1933, at the age of 59. All that remains are his journals and more than 500 photos of Zapata and the Zapatistas.  His days of wanderlust had finally come to an end but many of the details of his adventures in Mexico remain shrouded in mystery.

Sheryl Losser is a former public relations executive and professional researcher. She spent 45 years in national politics in the United States. She moved to Mazatlán in 2021 and works part-time doing freelance research and writing.