Sunday, October 12, 2025

Aguascalientes Congress decriminalizes abortion within first 12 weeks

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Campaigners in Aguascalientes celebrated the result of the vote, as Aguascalientes passed legislation to legalize abortion up to 12 weeks. (Angie Contreras/X)

The state of Aguascalientes has legalized abortion within the first 12 weeks, in compliance with Mexico’s Supreme Court (SCJN) ruling to decriminalize abortion at the federal level.

The law will come into effect upon its publication in the official state gazette, announced deputy Jaime González de León from the National Action Party (PAN).

The legislation was passed in Aguascalientes state congress, during a secret ballot. (Gonzalo Kinich Fernández/X)

The legislative vote took place in a secret session on Thursday, so the margin in favor of the resolution is unclear.

“Ultimately, what we know is that once the votes were counted, we complied with the Nation’s Supreme Court of Justice to decriminalize abortion,” Gonzáles de León told reporters after the vote.

Unofficial sources reported that the session resulted in 20 votes in favor and seven against. Six of the votes in favor came from deputies from the PAN party and one from the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).

In August, the Mexican Supreme Court approved an injunction against the legislature of Aguascalientes, ordering it to decriminalize abortion in response to lawsuits filed by reproductive rights groups. In September, the court followed up by declaring that abortion could no longer be considered a crime at the federal level, a ruling that built upon a similar case involving the Coahuila state government in 2021.

While the Supreme Court determined first-trimester abortion was legal at a federal level, many states are yet to bring their laws into compliance. Coahuila and Aguascalientes amended their laws in response to direct orders from the Supreme Court, while Mexico City, Baja California Sur, Guerrero, Veracruz, Colima, Hidalgo, Sinaloa and Quintana Roo brought their laws into compliance voluntarily or legalized abortion before the Supreme Court ruling.

“This situation was something we had to address before Dec. 31 because if we didn’t, we would fall into contempt, and [the Supreme Court] could have even sent us to jail,” González de León said.

With this decision, Aguascalientes becomes the 12th state to decriminalize abortion in Mexico and its public health system must provide this service to anyone who requires it.

According to Supreme Court Justice Juan Luis González Alcántara, authorities in Aguascalientes opened 73 criminal abortion investigations between 2015 and June 2023.

With reports by Expansión and La Jornada Maya

Tourist in Ixtapa dies after attack by marine animal

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A beach with police and a body bag, cordoned off
A Belgian tourist died earlier this month after a shark attack severed his femoral artery, according to a surviving victim of the same attack. (@RTG_Noticias/X)

An incident at a beach in Ixtapa, Guerrero, resulted in the death of a 76-year-old Belgian man after he was attacked by either a shark or a crocodile.

The attack occurred Wednesday morning at Quieta Beach, a public venue that doubles as the swimming area for Club Med’s Ixtapa Pacific resort. The beach is located in Ixtapa’s second hotel zone, about 6½ km from central Ixtapa and 9 km from the neighboring tourist destination of Zihuatanejo.

The tourist who died had been staying at the Club Med Ixtapa Pacific resort. (Club Med)

The victim was named as Joseph Bynens, who reportedly had one of his legs bitten off and succumbed to his wounds after receiving on-site medical aid from the Mexican Red Cross.

Originally it was reported that Bynens was from Canada, but Tourism Minister Miguel Torruco Marqués said he was a Belgian national who was staying at Club Med.

According to several reports, the attack occurred at about 9:15 a.m., just minutes after Valerie Haurowitz, 52, from Los Angeles, California, was similarly attacked. She was reportedly in stable condition on Thursday.

Authorities haven’t been able to confirm whether the attacks were by a shark or crocodile. Using drones and other methods, Civil Protection workers and the Navy tried to locate the culprit.

The vicinity of Quieta Beach includes a crocodile farm, prompting reinforced security measures.

Tourists were previously alerted to a crocodile’s presence at Palmar Beach in central Ixtapa, and visitors to nearby La Ropa Beach recently reported seeing either a crocodile (but maybe a shark) in Zihuatanejo Bay.

Shark attacks are nothing new in the area, having been reported on several beaches in the Costa Grande region along Guerrero’s Pacific Coast. In 2019, an American tourist was the victim of an attack in Troncones, just north of Zihuatanejo, and in 2008, a series of attacks in the region claimed the lives of one tourist and one local.

Marine biologists suspect it’s highly probable that Bynens was attacked by a crocodile, said Zihuatanejo Mayor Jorge Sánchez Alec. Sánchez added that a bacteriological analysis of the bites will allow a more comprehensive conclusion to be reported on Friday.

The attacks come 10 days after a 26-year-old woman died after a shark attack in Melaque, Jalisco. 

Quieta Beach was closed after Wednesday’s tragedy. Purple flags were placed to indicate the presence of dangerous marine fauna.

“The safety of beachgoers is our utmost priority,” Torruco said. The minister added that the beach will remain “closed until we have reports on the area.”

With reports from Milenio, Infobae, Quadratin and EFE

President López Obrador inaugurates first 3 sections of Maya Train

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A teal train leaves a station
The Maya Train leaves behind a burst of confetti as it leaves Campeche station for its maiden voyage. (LopezObrador.org.mx)

The Campeche-Cancún stretch of the Maya Train railroad officially opened on Friday, 3 1/2 years after construction of the government infrastructure project began.

President López Obrador inaugurated sections 2,3 and 4 of the 1,554-kilometer-long railroad at a press conference in Campeche city on Friday morning.

President Lopez Obrador inaugurates first sections of Maya Train
The president held his morning press conference in Campeche on Friday. (Lopezobrador.org.mx)

“We’re very pleased to be here with you in Campeche on this truly historic day because we’re inaugurating this stretch [of railroad] from Campeche to Cancún,” he said.

The multi-billion-dollar railroad “is a project for the people of Mexico and that’s why we’re all going to take care of it,” said López Obrador, who has traveled frequently to the southeast of the country to inspect construction progress.

“It’s a project for all Mexicans … [and will] greatly help the development of the southeast,” he said.

At the conclusion of the press conference, the president, National Defense Minister Luis Cresencio Sandoval and Campeche Governor Layda Sansores unveiled an inauguration plaque.

A map of the route and stations of the Maya Train
The route and stations of the Maya Train. (Tren Maya)

López Obrador and other officials later boarded the Maya Train for the five-to-six hour, 473-kilometer trip to the Cancún Airport station. The first trip on which ordinary paying passengers will be on board will depart Campeche for Cancún on Saturday morning.

Among the 14 stations located along the three sections inaugurated on Friday is one near Yucatán state capital Mérida (in a locality called Teya) and another close to the Chichén Itzá archaeological site. There are also stations in the colonial cities of Izamal and Valladolid, both in Yucatán.

Built by private companies and the Mexican army, the railroad has a total of seven sections and 34 stations (including modest ones known as paraderos, or stops).

López Obrador said last month that the stretch between Cancún and Palenque, Chiapas, will open on Dec. 31, while the entire railroad and its 34 stations will be operational on Feb. 29, 2024.

An overhead shot of under-construction stop of the Maya Train, surrounded by rainforest.
The project has faced opposition from environmentalists over the environmental cost to Yucatán peninsula ecosystems and hydrology.(Facebook @MaraLezamaOficial)

The president inaugurated construction of the railroad in June 2020, and pledged at the time that it would be finished in 28 months, or by October 2022.

However, the project has faced a range of challenges, including court rulings that have temporarily halted work and ardent opposition from environmental groups, which say that the construction and operation of the railroad pose a threat to wildlife, subterranean rivers and the Maya jungle.

A collective of groups representing Maya communities said before construction of the railroad began that there was “nothing Maya about it.

Although the project has taken longer than he initially anticipated, López Obrador declared on Friday that the still-incomplete railroad had been built in “record time,” and reiterated his belief that it is the most important public work currently under development anywhere in the world.

He said that around 100,000 workers from all over Mexico contributed to the construction of the railroad, which, once fully operational, will connect cities and towns in five states: Tabasco, Campeche, Yucatán, Quintana Roo and Chiapas.

With reports from El Financiero and López-Dóriga Digital

Nuevo León approves US $153M towards incentives for Tesla

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Infrastructure projects and land use permits have already been cleared for Mexico's first Tesla "gigafactory." (@tesla_adri/X)

The government of Nuevo León has agreed to spend US $153 million on incentives to facilitate the set-up of Tesla’s electric vehicle “gigafactory” near Monterrey.

These incentives include electricity, water and transport infrastructure, and a reduction in Tesla’s payroll tax, to encourage job creation.

A rendering of Tesla’s planned “gigafactory” in Nuevo León. (Tesla)

Tesla CEO Elon Musk first announced the gigafactory in March, with an investment of at least US $5 billion. In October, Musk said Tesla hoped to start construction in 2024, but was not ready to go “full tilt” due to global economic conditions. He also asked the Nuevo León government to start infrastructure projects in support of the factory, including a rail link, a water treatment plant and the widening of four highways.

Nuevo León Governor Samuel García confirmed that the state had agreed to provide this infrastructure, but said that it first had to be authorized by an unspecified “committee.” Now, it seems, the Economic Development Council has granted that authorization.

The announcement comes days after the federal Environment Ministry (Semarnat) issued permits approving the change of land use for the factory. Tesla is still awaiting water and energy permits. Although Nuevo León is a severely water-stressed region, Tesla has made several commitments to mitigate the factory’s impact, including the use of recycled water.

Nevertheless, economic and bureaucratic obstacles have slowed the set-up process. Musk has said that initial production of Tesla’s next-generation electric vehicle will start at its Texas factory, as the Mexico one won’t be ready in time. Although no opening date has been announced, the Mexico plant is unlikely to be operational until 2026.

The Nuevo León government is eager to accelerate construction on the factory, which local authorities said in March would employ up to 6,000 people. In September, García said that Tesla and its suppliers would invest US $15 billion in the project – triple the original estimate and far surpassing the $4.5 billion planned for the first phase.

The state’s economy minister, Iván Rivas, has also assured that the plant will be crucial in boosting Nuevo León’s development.

“[Tesla’s] Nevada gigafactory generated an economic spillover 28 times greater than public investment, while in California, 120 jobs were created in the supply chain for every 100 Tesla jobs,” he said. “In this way, in Nuevo León there would be 12,000 new direct jobs related to Tesla, [representing] almost 15% of the jobs created each year in the state.”

Besides the actual Tesla factory, the Nuevo León government said that more than 30 Tesla suppliers are looking to set up in the state. García has claimed that “Tesla’s arrival confirms Nuevo León as the next regional hub for electromobility in Latin America,” taking advantage of its position on the United States border to reap the benefits of the nearshoring trend.

With reports from Forbes and Bloomberg Línea

The renaissance of pulque, Mexico’s ‘white gold’ ancestral drink

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Pulque. (Gobierno de México)

In early 20th-century Mexico, it was common to see local tlachiqueros, or pulque makers, in small towns nationwide. These local characters rode into town on donkeys, carrying with them animal skins filled with a slightly alcoholic drink called pulque.

Even though it was originally called octli and during the colonial era its name became a pejorative, pulque remains what this sacred drink is known as colloquially.

It was sacred because during pre-Colombian times it was consumed by a small elite — mainly emperors, nobility and clergy. Because this drink was mildly intoxicating it was associated with states of ecstasy, connection to the mystic, and moments of contact with the divine.

Pulque was even offered as one of the tributes paid to the Mexica during their rule of the Valley of México. During the colonial era, its consumption was allowed and even flourished among the common people, though the Spanish found its taste not to their liking.

Pulque’s decline dates to the 20th century when, according to reports of the time, the growing Mexican beer companies started smear campaigns against this drink. It also didn’t help that pulque had a reputation for being sold in dodgy and rundown places. Its consumption was looked down upon for half of the last century and part of this one. Fortunately, pulque is coming back, assisted by international research on its properties.

Four types of magueys are used to make pulque: Salmiana, Mapisag, Manso or Noble, and Atrovirens, all of which are endemic to Mexico. Of these four Salmiana is the most well-known and most commonly used.

The pulque-making process has remained the same as it was centuries ago. In fact, it’s one of the oldest production processes on earth still in use today. It starts with the heart of the maguey plant, created by removing its innermost leaves. Early in the morning tlachiqueros scrape the heart, to extract a liquid called aguamiel or “honey water,” which can be drunk by everyone, even children.

The aguamiel is then stored in a cool area in wooden barrels called tinacales, as it begins the fermentation process catalyzed by naturally occurring bacteria in the air. The tlachiquero scrapes the heart of the plants twice a day, once in the morning and once in the afternoon. The plants require a lot of special care; without it, the pulque produced is much less quality than those looked after carefully.

No other substance is mixed in or added to the pulque barrels. New pulque is often mixed with some of an older fermented batch, similar to using a sourdough starter for bread. The process is very pure and very nutritional, something that has been researched by universities in various parts of the world. A team of researchers from the National Polytechnic Institute (IPN) discovered that pulque is an incredible probiotic and prebiotic, as it encourages healthy digestion, protects intestinal flora, and contains a high volume of vitamins. It’s also an excellent antioxidant. It was once considered a food, a fact confirmed by reports from today’s researchers and that has helped repair the damage of its bad reputation in the second part of the 20th century.

Once the fermentation has started, it’s up to the mayordomo, a pulque guardian, to carry out the process’s next step, which can take 2 to 5 days. Pulque is called different things at different moments during fermentation and depending on its alcohol percentage, which is never more than 5%. Once the mayordomo decides that the pulque is ready to be drunk, it’s kept in a cool place to maintain its characteristics, and as a “living” drink must be drunk within four or five days or it will start to go bad.

 The most common form of finishing pulque is creating curados, which means adding fruit juice or other natural flavorings to the original pulque. But this isn’t always the case: Sometimes pulque is made into a curado when it’s still fresh, adding to its nutritional properties. One of the most traditional flavors for curados is prickly pear, which some people believe was the first curado ever created and is considered to have a certain relationship with the color of blood. Another ancient and popular curado is tomato and chile pepper. Today you can also find nut-flavored, oat-flavored, passionfruit, guava, mango, and one that’s simply a “green” pulque. Curados can be made with seasonal fruit, making the drink more attractive. The drink is appealing to young palates for its low level of alcohol and its fruity flavor.

The most renowned region for pulque production is the Apan plains, an area that spans the states of Hidalgo, Tlaxcala, and part of México state. In the 1900s the pulque makers would arrive in the city with wineskins full, almost bursting. The wineskins were made of pigskin and the tlachiqueros brought them in so full that even the arms and legs of the pig skin filled up with pulque, which is where the popular saying, “Estás hasta las manitas” came from, which roughly translates to, You’re drunk to the very tips of your fingers.” During that era, pulque was considered a commodity and was even something requested by Hitler, who believed it to be an elixir of eternal youth. Appropriately, it’s been something that time and bad publicity have been unable to vanquish.

Today things are different; pulque is served in bars called pulquerías. There are fewer than once existed for sure, but many have been around for years. Today they have somewhat of a different vibe. Pulquerías are clean, registered, open to both men and women and dispersed throughout the country — there are over 600 just in Mexico City! It’s truly a triumphal comeback for this drink. Today visitors can take specific tours that visit several pulquerías in one day, including some of the oldest in the country like Las Duelistas, El Ombligo del Maguey, or Spica. There are also pulquerías that have a broader cultural ambiance, with books, music and art. For example, Fuego Neo on the highway from Mexico City to Cuernavaca has electronic and rock music and delicious drinks, including modern and traditional preparations.

Pulquerías are scattered throughout the center of the country, each different and representative of this drink’s incredible influence on popular culture. There are four museums dedicated to pulque, one in Mexico City, one in Puebla ( often considered the best), one in Tlaxcala and one in Hidalgo. In each, you can find stories, photos and equipment used in the pulque-making process, including dried gourds and baskets. Museum visits are a great way to learn about this fine drink and many tourism routes are designed to let you visit producers throughout the Apan plains area. In almost every state in central Mexico, there are guided visits offered to pulquerías.

A little over a year ago, the Mexican Sommeliers Association started offering specialty training to become a “pulquelier,” directed by sommelier and pulquelier Eddy Wine, who is well-known in the pulque world and was formerly the director of the pulque museum in Mexico City. Wine created the guides for pulque tastings, elevating this drink to the next level of consumption and appreciation. Wine said that pulque must express the aromas of its plant and have a certain freshness and hints of fruit or flowers. It shouldn’t have a funny smell or be slimy and should be lightly viscous, but never the same consistency as drinking nopal cactus juice.

Without a doubt, pulque is experiencing a great moment in its history. It’s now offered at many cultural events and its production supports Mexican farming. Don’t miss the opportunity to try pulque on one of the farms where it’s made or in one of the many pulquerías in the country.

Sommelier Diana Serratos writes from Mexico City.

For investment, Mexico is the new China, US business leader says

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A bald man with glasses and a suit sitting down in an office or library
Thor Equities founder Joseph Sitt spoke with Bloomberg TV early this month about investment opportunities in Mexico. (YouTube)

Another prominent United States business figure has given a glowing endorsement of Mexico as an investment destination.

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said in November that Mexico “might be the number one opportunity” in the world for investors, while earlier this month Thor Equities founder and Chairman Joseph Sitt asserted that Mexico has become the “alternative” to China and currently represents a “golden” opportunity for investment.

A shopping mall with people walking and playing on the grass outside.
The Park shopping mall in San Luis Potosí is just one of many projects developed by Thor Urbana, Thor Equities’ Mexican branch. (Thor Urbana)

Sitt also highlighted Mexico’s “sophisticated” advanced manufacturing capacity, expressed optimism about a future Mexican government led by either of Claudia Sheinbaum or Xóchitl Gálvez and acknowledged that the country has become a global cultural force.

In an interview with Bloomberg Television, the Thor chairman said that the New York-based real estate development and investment company he leads is one of the “top two” or “top three” developers in Mexico, explaining that it has interests in areas including retail, hospitality, manufacturing and real estate.

Asked why Thor Equities — which has a Mexican offshoot called Thor Urbana — was in Mexico, the man who has been described as “America’s luxury retail property king” cited “opportunity, growth and alternative” before asserting that “Mexico is becoming quite the answer to some of the United States’ economic problems.”

“And by being that solution it’s been wonderful for them,” said Sitt, who later in the interview mentioned the strong flows of foreign direct investment Mexico has seen this year.

A side by side split image of Claudia Sheinbaum and Xóchitl Gálvez.
Sitt is optimistic about the climate for business under Mexico’s next president, whether that ends up being Claudia Sheinbaum (left) or Xóchitl Gálvez (right). (MND)

“… As a country, we see the world sort of bifurcating, multipolar, conflict. Mexico is a great solution; it’s right here in our backyard, it’s easy, labor is actually cheaper than labor is in China, the people are hardworking, they’re industrious, … the logistics for a container ship is free relative to shipping it from China, and so [Mexico has] really become the Chinese alternative,” he said.

Sitt acknowledged the growing strength of Mexico’s auto industry before highlighting the  progress that has been made in advanced manufacturing capacity across sectors.

“Mexico sometimes is thought of as a little bit of a backwards manufacturing country, but they’ve gotten so much more sophisticated, shockingly so to some people, not to myself, but when you look at medical products, EV, battery manufacturing, Mexico’s right up there, just as good if not better than building in China,” he said.

Bloomberg presenter David Westin acknowledged that Sitt had described “a big investment opportunity in Mexico” before putting the following question to the Thor chairman:

“Typically when there is an opportunity money rushes in, capital rushes in and it becomes fully priced. Where are we in that cycle? How close are we to fully pricing the assets in Mexico?”

“Excellent question,” Sitt responded.

“Often people generalize by the country but you’ve got to also look at the specifics, meaning by the asset classes. For example nearshoring, you had 120 companies announce investments in Mexico … [in the] first half of this year, about US $29 billion in [foreign] investment, 41% increase from last year. Based upon the early research, it’s looking like next year is going to double on that,” he said.

A welder works in a warehouse
Manufacturing companies in Mexico save on both labor and shipping costs, compared with manufacturers in China, Sitt said. (Shutterstock)

“So I would say from the industrial opportunity, I think we’re in the very, very early innings of it, probably the earliest innings amongst the different food groups. … We think [Mexico] is another one of those golden opportunities. … We’re just in the beginning of the second inning with a lot of runway and those investors that act quickly, now, to mine that opportunity, will get that benefit. If they wait … three years or four years or five years, then it starts getting priced in.”

Asked about the Mexican political situation and its impact on investors, Sitt said that AMLO, as President López Obrador is best known, “scared the beejeebies out of local players, and candidly myself” when “he was going through his election cycle” prior to the 2018 election he comprehensively won.

“AMLO then came in and he sounded good, he was a good hearer of what people were saying but wasn’t a good listener, I’m sorry to say. And so I really think that Mexico did well in spite of itself,” he said.

“Now, the politics is much better. Either way we’re getting a woman for the first time as the president of Mexico. It’ll either be Claudia Sheinbaum or Xóchitl Gálvez, both of them pro-business, listeners, touching their communities and really caring about their constituents at all levels and not just considering rhetoric to be the answer,” Sitt said.

Earlier in the interview, he spoke about Mexico’s “local specialty assets” — avocados, tequila and beer — and how popular Mexican culture has become.

“We know it as, you know, going out and having that drink of beer and having the dip and the tequila et cetera, et cetera, but it really is a product that’s been growing. I mean if you think of tequila, 30 years ago did you really go to a bar and hear a friend order a tequila? Not really. And so Mexican culture has gone global, it’s gone viral, sort of what happened to sushi 40 or 50 years ago happened to Mexico,” Sitt said.

Mexico News Daily 

Genaro García Luna’s sister and nephew arrested in Cuernavaca

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Genaro Garcia Luna and Felipe Calderon
Former President Felipe Calderón speaks with his then-Security Minister Genaro García Luna — who is now incarcerated in the U.S. after being convicted of colluding with drug traffickers. (Cuartoscuro)

The sister and nephew of Mexico’s former federal security minister Genaro García Luna, convicted in the United States on organized crime charges in February, have both been arrested in Cuernavaca, Morelos.

Gloria García Luna and Edgar Anuar Rodríguez García were detained on Thursday morning in the Lomas de la Selva neighborhood of Cuernavaca, where the family owns two properties. They are accused of organized crime and operations with resources of illicit origin

García Luna is awaiting sentencing after his conviction in the United States. (Octavio Hoyos/Shutterstock)

In addition to being Genaro García’s sister, Gloria García previously served as director of crime prevention at the Morelos Public Security Ministry. During Genaro García’s New York trial for drug trafficking, witnesses accused Gloria García of links to criminal organizations including the Beltrán Leyva and Sinaloa cartels. The state of Morelos was identified as an operational center for the García Luna family’s criminal network.

The latest arrests come two weeks after Oswaldo Luna Valderrabano, Genaro García’s uncle, was detained in Puebla, on Dec. 1. Last Friday, a judge ruled that Luna Valderrabano must stand trial on organized crime charges related to his role in a company that formed part of García Luna’s network.

He is currently held in a federal prison in México State, pending trial. Six months have been granted for investigators to complete their inquiries.

Meanwhile, legal battles continue in the United States surrounding the trial and sentencing of Genaro García, who served as federal security minister between 2006 and 2012, during the administration of former President Felipe Calderón.

García Luna’s Uncle Oswaldo Luna Valderrabano has also been detained in connection with the criminal organization. (SSPC Mexico/X)

On Dec. 15, Genaro García’s lawyer, Cesar de Castro, filed a motion requesting that the guilty verdict against his client be thrown out and a new trial held. He claimed to have new evidence discrediting key witnesses in the trial, whom he alleges had coordinated their stories in order to continue their criminal activities.

De Castro also claimed to have received 3.6 terabytes of information from Mexican authorities showing that Genaro García was responsible for the capture of former drug traffickers who later testified against him at trial. Prosecutors will now respond to this appeal before a judge rules whether to grant the motion.

García was convicted on five drug trafficking-related charges on Feb. 21 this year. Witnesses accused him of accepting millions of dollars in bribes from the Sinaloa Cartel and the Beltrán Leyva family. His sentencing has since been postponed until March 2024, following a successful defense appeal. 

With reports from Sin Embargo, El Universal, Excelsior and Infobae

Got 1 min? First Canadian airline announces flights to Tulum

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Tulum, Quintana Roo

Air Canada has become the first Canadian airline to announce service to the new Felipe Carrillo Puerto International Airport in Tulum.

Starting in May, Air Canada will connect the sunny destination with Toronto and Montreal, year-round. 

Tulum international airpot
The new Tulum airport began operations on Dec. 1 and currently operates only domestic flights. (Mara Lezama/X)

The airline will operate twice-weekly flights between Toronto and Tulum on Fridays and Sundays and the Montreal-Tulum route will operate every Saturday.  

Airline Vice President Mark Galardo, said that the new destination reflects “Air Canada’s market leadership and network diversification strategy of adding capacity to in-demand leisure destinations such as Tulum.”

The new airport started operations on Dec. 1 with five daily domestic flights and will receive international flights in early 2024.

“I celebrate this great announcement from Air Canada,” Mexico’s Tourism Minister Miguel Torruco Marqués said, adding that the airport has capacity to receive five million passengers per year, which will “boost the arrival of tourists from our second-most important source market for international tourists.”

Tulum’s new airport comes as the town recently won the Best Beach Destination in Mexico and Central America at the World Travel Awards 2023.

U.S. airlines carriers that have announced flights to Tulum include United Airlines, Delta, American Airlines, Spirit and as of this week, JetBlue, which will offer daily nonstop flights from New York’s JFK airport starting in June. 

With reports from Travel and Leisure, Simple Flying and Yahoo Finance

Tourism Ministry says Acapulco has 4,500 hotel rooms available

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Acapulco
Acapulco is springing back to life ahead of schedule, with 4,500 rooms now available to travelers during the holiday season. (Omar Reyes Solorzano/ Sectur)

As the end of the year approaches, Acapulco is gearing up to welcome tourists once again with 4,500 hotel rooms now available in 127 hotels, Tourism Minister Miguel Torruco Marqués announced on Wednesday.

This is a surprising amount of hotel capacity, given that the sector initially aimed to have a minimum of 36 operational hotels and 3,500 rooms by April 2024, to host the next annual “Tianguis Turístico” or national tourism fair.

Authorities and businesses in the region have worked tirelessly to restore Acapulco after the destruction caused by Hurricane Otis. (Dassaev Téllez/Cuartoscuro)

Acapulco is recovering from the devastating aftermath of Otis, the strongest hurricane ever to hit Mexico’s Pacific Coast, damaging much of the port city when it made landfall on Oct. 25. The hurricane killed 50 people, with 31 still reported as missing according to government figures.

Which hotels have reopened? 

Of the 127 reopened hotels, 58 two-to-four-star hotels are located in the Zona Dorada (Golden Zone). These hotels include major sites such as Emporio, Playa Suites, Jazmín Suites, and others on the Costa Azul (Blue Coast).

In the La Tradicional area, 57 hotels have reopened their doors, including the iconic Mirador Hotel in La Quebrada, where the famed cliff divers’ show has resumed.

In Pie de la Cuesta, Rocío and Acapulquito, hotels and beach clubs have also reopened, including the La Cabañita beach club.

Meanwhile, hotels such as Holiday Inn and Las Brisas in the iconic Zona Diamante (Diamond Zone) have opened rooms for booking. 

La Caleta and Caletilla beaches, seen here before the hurricane, are now partially reopened to tourists. (Carlos Alberto Carbajal/Cuartoscuro)

Which restaurants have reopened?

Some restaurants on the Bonfil, San Andrés, Playa Encantada, and Playa Las Gloria beaches have resumed business, as well as restaurants in the Caleta, Caletilla, and La Tradicional areas. 

How much has recovery cost?

Torruco said that the unexpectedly fast restoration of parts of the beach destination for the winter holidays was the result of collaboration between the public and private sectors.

The federal government has thus far allotted 61.3 billion pesos (US $3.5 billion) for the reconstruction of Acapulco, although business leaders have estimated the recovery costs could be as high as US $17.2 billion.

Federal support for the rebuilding of Acapulco includes exemptions for electricity payments and tax credits for small businesses. The government has also announced that it will cover 50% of the interest on commercial loans provided to hoteliers.

Torruco called on travel agencies and tour operators to “promote this destination and, together, make Acapulco shine again.”

With reports from Expansión

Government says it has located 16,681 missing persons via new ‘census’

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Photos of missing people in Xalapa, Veracruz
The crisis of disappearances in Mexico has been increasingly dire since the escalation of the drug war in 2006. Today, President López Obrador's government announced the progress of their updated "census" of missing people. (Cuartoscuro)

The federal government said Thursday that it has definitively established the whereabouts of 15% of more than 110,000 people who were listed on its missing persons register in late August.

At President López Obrador’s regular press conference on Thursday, Interior Minister Luisa María Alcalde announced the results of a “massive” nationwide search for missing persons that was carried out as part of the government’s “National Generalized Search Strategy for Missing Persons,” which is commonly referred to as a missing persons “census.”

Luisa María Alcalde, interior minister
Interior Minister Luisa María Alcalde explains the freshly published missing persons data on Thursday. (Lopezobrador.org.mx)

She explained that “search brigades” were formed in all 32 of Mexico’s federal entities, and that their almost 5,000 members completed over 111,000 visits to homes where it was believed missing people might be living based on information derived from numerous government databases.

In addition to visiting homes, search brigade members made over 86,000 telephone calls to inquire about the whereabouts of missing people, the interior minister said.

“What are the results of this effort? The location of 16,681 people. In other words, in these 16,681 [missing person cases] we are certain of their whereabouts,” Alcalde said.

She said that 3,945 people registered as missing were located in their homes, while 4,134 were found to have died. Alcalde said that 197 people registered as missing were found in prisons across Mexico, while local authorities informed the federal government that 8,405 people had already been located.

Many of the missing are believed to be buried in unmarked graves, complicating search efforts. (Dassaev Téllez Adame/Cuartoscuro)

The combined total of 16,681 located persons represents 15% of the 110,964 people who were registered as missing on Aug. 22.

The interior minister said that the government had managed to “place” an additional 17,843 people registered as missing, but hasn’t been able to locate them. That figure represents 16% of the total number of registered missing persons in late August.

“We’ve found [those people] in databases, but we don’t yet have proof of life because we haven’t been able to find them face to face,” Alcalde said.

She gave an example of the kind of thing she was talking about.

Karla Quintana
Karla Quintana resigned as the head of the national search commission in August and has since expressed her skepticism of the new government search initiative. (Karla Quintana/X)

“Nayeli” was reported as missing in February 2014 when she was 13 years old, “but we’ve found her in more than seven databases,” Alcalde said.

She said it was detected that the young woman became a beneficiary of the government’s Liconsa milk distribution scheme in 2019 and enrolled in an adult education program the same year.

In 2020, “she entered the Quintana Roo health system,” while in 2021 she “obtained a middle school certificate,” Alcalde said, adding that the government had also found that Nayeli had been vaccinated against COVID, found employment in the Youths Building the Future apprenticeship scheme and, in 2022, updated her registration with the SAT tax authority.

“We’ve tried to find her, we visited her [supposed] address in Quintana Roo, then in Campeche, but we haven’t had success,” said the interior minister, who didn’t mention the possibility that another person, or other people, had used Nayeli’s name and other personal details.

The interior minister outlined a similar scenario involving a man who disappeared at the age of 25 in 2013.

Alcalde also spoke about cases involving supposedly missing people who had been definitively located by the search brigades. Among them was a woman who the interior minister said was kidnapped in 2019 but released the next day.

“We found her in her home in Cuauhtémoc, Chihuahua,” Alcalde said.

“… We have other cases … [of people] we found in penitentiaries,” she said before citing former cartel leader Miguel “Z-40” Treviño Morales as an example.

“Z-40 was in the databases as missing, but we all know that this person is shut away in one of the high-security prisons,” Alcalde said.

Altiplano federal prison in Mexico
Some of the people reported as missing have been found to be in government custody. (Crisanta Espinosa Aguilar/Cuartoscuro)

López Obrador has previously asserted that Mexico’s missing persons register isn’t accurate, and advocated a new count.

He said in August that Karla Quintana’s resignation as head of Mexico’s National Search Commission (CNB) may have been “because of the census,” which has been conducted by so-called “servants of the nation” – government officials who have mainly aided the implementation of social programs – and others.

After presenting data on the people that have been found and “placed” by the search brigades, Alcalde told the president’s press conference that there was “insufficient data to identify” 24% of the people registered as missing in late August. An additional 32% of people officially classified as missing – some of whom disappeared decades ago – are identified, “but we don’t have enough clues to be able to do some kind of search,” she said.

“Finally, 12,377 [people], which is 11% [of the register], are confirmed as missing,” Alcalde said.

She added that there were 1,951 “duplicate registrations” on the government register,

Quintana, who became CNB chief shortly after López Obrador took office in late 2018, claimed in November that the aim of the missing persons census was to reduce the number of people listed as such across Mexico, and especially in states governed by the ruling Morena party.

Non-government organization, search collectives and academics have also been critical of the census, warning that the government could be seeking to reduce the number of people officially listed as missing for electoral purposes.

However, the number of people on the register has actually increased since the national search strategy, or census, began. On Thursday, 113,322 people were classified as missing, according to a register dashboard on a Ministry of the Interior/CNB website. That indicates that people are disappearing and thus being added to the missing persons register at a faster rate than they are being located and removed.

Alcalde said Thursday that there has been a “campaign with lies” in which government critics have asserted that it was seeking to “remove missing people” from the register.

Martí Batres at press conference
Mexico City Mayor Batres presented data on missing people in Mexico City at the Thursday morning press conference. (Lopezobrador.org.mx)

“We are not eliminating missing people” from the register, she asserted, adding that the government has been focused on searching and locating such people.

While Alcalde portrayed the government’s search strategy as a success, the El País newspaper reported last week that “a missing person was three times more likely to be found” before the new federal plan took effect in May.

Kidnapping has been, and remains, a problem in Mexico, but data presented by Mexico City Mayor Martí Batres at Thursday’s presidential press conference showed that abduction – which in some cases precedes murder – and other crimes were only responsible for 6.8% of “historical” disappearances in the capital.

“Voluntary absence” and “voluntary absence due to personal problems” were the causes of disappearance in over 80% of missing person cases, while mental illness and accidents were factors in 7.8% and 3.1% of cases, respectively, according to the Mexico City data presented by the mayor.

With reports from Aristegui Noticias