Sunday, May 18, 2025

In memoriam: the life and legacy of a passionate plant lover

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deceased mexican botanist Miguel Chazaro
The man who loved plants: Miguel Cházaro. On April 4, he passed away peacefully at home reading a book.

On April 4, 2023, at the age of 74, Mexican botanist Dr. Miguel de Jesús Cházaro Basañez died peacefully at his home in Veracruz, while reading a book… on plants, of course.

Cházaro loved plants all his life. When, years ago, his university heard that one of the most famous botanists in the world, Dr. Hugh Iltis, was coming to visit Veracruz, they appointed young biology-student Cházaro as his guide out in the field.

deceased mexican botanist Miguel Chazaro
Botanist Miguel Cházaro hiking with a suitcase full of plant specimens. He discovered a love of plants during childhood.

As they were walking along, the story goes, Iltis would say, “I wonder what plant this is?” And Cházaro would tell him the scientific name. 

“And what about that one?” And Cházaro knew the name. 

At the end, it seemed Iltis couldn’t find any plant that Cházaro didn’t already know quite well. As a result, he invited the young student to get his master’s degree at the University of Wisconsin, launching Cházaro’s career.

During that long career, Miguel Cházaro discovered and described 18 previously unknown plant species — 10 of them agaves — and his work was so well respected among his colleagues that eight species are named after him.

Echeveria chazaroi
Echeveria chazaroi is a species of succulent from Oaxaca named after the botanist. This lovely plant changes tones in sync with the seasons of the year.

Estimates say that Cházaro was involved in finding one-third of all the species of cacti that have been discovered since the Spanish arrival in the early 16th century.

One of Cházaro’s most celebrated discoveries is the maguey relisero (Agave valenciana), a gigantic century plant that he found growing in a remote spot near Jalisco’s Mascota River. When the plant is fully mature, it produces a quiote (flower spike) 6 meters tall with clusters of golden blooms loved by nectar-eating bats. 

Cházaro named his discovery after Oscar Valencia, a local plant expert who was completely self-taught. The massive heart of this agave — which is now considered critically endangered — was highly prized by distillers of raicilla, a traditionally made mezcal popular in the western Sierra Madre Occidental.

I met Cházaro in 2007 at the launching of a book on Mexico’s celebrated Piedras Bola located on a hilltop in a remote part of western Jalisco.

Oscar Valencia sitting-in his agave
Oscar Valencia with the Agave valenciana, one of Cházaro’s most celebrated plant discoveries. Cházaro named the plant after Valencia, a civil engineer and self-taught botanist who died in 2020.

During the ceremony, I was seated in the audience, paging through my new copy of the book. 

“I wonder what the altitude is in this picture,” I whispered to the man sitting next to me.

“1,925 meters!” replied the bearded stranger with such authority that I asked him how he knew that.

“Because I wrote that chapter you’re looking at,” he answered.

“What? If you’re an author, why are you sitting down here with us peons?” I asked, “Why aren’t you up there with the other authors?”

“Authors?” Cházaro whispered, “Those aren’t authors; they’re all VIPs.”  

deceased mexican botanist Miguel Chazaro
Cházaro in the field with his portable plant press. Although estimates say he was involved in finding a third of the plants discovered in Mexico since the conquest, he always lived on a tight budget.

And I couldn’t fail to notice that those so-called VIPs never once asked those who actually contributed to the book to take a bow.

Cházaro’s accomplishments are all the more striking because they were carried out under the same hardships that affect most botanists and biologists in Mexico: low salaries and no funding for projects or equipment.

“Miguel made all those discoveries without a car of his own,” his friend (and frequent supplier of transportation) Roy Sánchez told me. “He simply couldn’t afford one. And I know for a fact that his university only allotted him 5,000 pesos a year for field trips — and not a centavo for expenses like gasoline.”

Cházaro, however, had a well-proven technique for finding transportation when he needed it. One day I received a call from him. 

“John, I found a place you’ll love. It’s a delicious, natural hot waterfall located right next to an orchard where juicy mangoes drop right into your hands… and then there’s this unexplored pyramid…”

Of course, I was hooked and so were plenty of hiker friends who wanted to go. 

deceased mexican botanist Miguel Chazaro
Enjoying a natural hot waterfall at the bottom of La Bolsa Canyon in Jalisco. Whenever he could find a water hole, Cházaro would stop to bathe in it.

“Miguel says it’s just outside town,” I told them.

Several hours after our departure for the hot waterfall, we found ourselves standing at the edge of a cliff overlooking part of the Río Verde Canyon, known as La Bolsa. 

The waterfall really was there, but we had to hike 500 meters down to the bottom to enjoy it — giving Professor Cházaro plenty of opportunities to collect the rare plants that grew at different altitudes in the canyon.

Sánchez describes his first meeting with Cházaro as “both memorable and simpático.”

“The Natural Science Association had a field trip planned,” Sánchez told me, “and we were to meet in front of an ice-cream parlor. I was standing there talking with several members of the Association, when a man came walking towards us. 

wild passion flower
This wild passion flower was one of many species the writer encountered with Cházaro during a long hike to the bottom of La Bolsa Canyon.

“This man was wearing a very dirty jacket, his hair was all disheveled and he was carrying what looked like a big shopping bag — a really tattered one, I must say. I figured he was some poor down-and-outer looking for a handout. Since we were all in the middle of a quite interesting conversation, I thought I would just give the poor guy some money so we could keep right on talking.

“Well, I was in the midst of pulling the money out of my pocket when everyone in the group shouted, ‘’¡Hola Miguel! ¿Qué tal, Miguel?’ all at once — and, fortunately, nobody noticed the money in my hand.”

Cházaro then explained to the group that he had arrived home that morning from a long camping trip of a week or so and that when he opened the door, his wife told him about this excursion. 

“Oh, I can just make it!” he told her and turned right around and left. 

“So, you can see,” Sánchez told me, “he wasn’t a person preoccupied with appearances. And I should also mention that he never combed his hair, well almost never. ‘If you comb your hair, it’ll fall out,’ he used to say.”

As for Miguel Cházaro’s character, he was a person who loved to talk to people. If he came to a market, he would end up talking to everybody about the flowers or medicinal plants they were selling, asking them where they picked this or that herb.

deceased mexican botanist Miguel Chazaro
The botanist explaining how belenes (Impatiens balsamina) use spring action (insert) to propel their seeds through the air.

As his colleague, forest engineer Raúl López, put it: “He was not just a great botanist — he was a great human being.”

Want to read more tales of the legendary Miguel Cházaro? Read our stories about the Mexican Maple Forest and the Amazing Singing Geyser.

The writer has lived near Guadalajara, Jalisco, since 1985. His most recent book is Outdoors in Western Mexico, Volume Three. More of his writing can be found on his blog.

‘Los Chapitos’ claim they are ‘scapegoats’ in letter to media

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Sons of ex-cartel boss "El Chapo" criticized the media for assuming that they are running the Sinaloa Cartel, which faces fierce persecution by the DEA for trafficking fentanyl to the United States. (Archive)

Sons of convicted drug trafficker Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán Loera have denied their involvement in the illicit fentanyl business in a rambling four-page letter sent to the Mexican media outlet Milenio.

“We have never produced, manufactured or commercialized fentanyl or any of its derivatives,” the brothers said, contradicting an accusation leveled at them by United States authorities last month.

The letter was addressed to the Milenio program “Azucena a las 10,” hosted by the journalist Azucena Uresti. (Uniradio Informa)

“We are victims of persecution and have been made into scapegoats,” their letter claimed.

José Refugio Rodríguez, a lawyer for “Los Chapitos” — as the sons of Guzmán are colloquially known — confirmed the unsigned letter’s authenticity.

Milenio’s publication of the memo on Thursday came almost three weeks after the United States Department of Justice unsealed drug trafficking and other charges against more than 20 Sinaloa Cartel members and associates, including Ovidio Guzmán López, Jesús Alfredo Guzmán Salazar, Iván Archivaldo Guzmán Sálazar and Joaquín Guzmán López.

United States Deputy Attorney General Lisa O. Monaco said at the time that the “fentanyl crisis” in the United States is “fueled in large part by the Sinaloa Cartel,” while Attorney General Merrick Garland called the cartel “the largest, most violent, and most prolific fentanyl trafficking operation in the world.”

DEA Administrator Anne Milgram has launched a “laser-focused” campaign against the Sinaloa and Jalisco drug cartels, blaming the groups for “the most devastating drug crisis in our nation’s history.” (Shutterstock)

Anne Milgram, administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), said last week that the Sinaloa Cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) pose “the greatest criminal threat the United States has ever faced,” and asserted that Los Chapitos “pioneered the manufacture and trafficking of the deadly fentanyl that is flooding our country today and is responsible for countless American deaths.”

Milgram said April 14 that the DEA had “proactively infiltrated the Sinaloa Cartel and the Chapitos network,” over the past 1 1/2 years, obtaining “unprecedented access to the organization’s highest levels” and following them “across the world.”

Ovidio, who is fighting extradition to the United States, was detained in January, while brothers Jesús, Iván and Joaquín are at large.

El Chapo, who is serving a life sentence in a United States prison after being convicted on drug trafficking, conspiracy to murder and other charges in 2019, reportedly has 10 sons. It was unclear how many of them were responsible for the letter.

El Chapo Guzman
Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán in U.S. custody in 2017 after he was extradited to the United States to face trial there. (Department of Homeland Security)

Los Chapitos said that the purpose of their letter, which was addressed to the production team of a Milenio Televisión program, was to “clarify several points.”

They asserted that they are not the “head” of the Sinaloa Cartel and are not interested in leading the criminal organization. They also claimed that small and large “independent” cells of the cartel use their name or that of their father while carrying out illicit activities.

“For example, to work with complete impunity, [the cells] make their suppliers and customers think that they are our partners or intermediaries in order to negotiate better,” the brothers said.

When they have problems with authorities, the letter continued, “they involve us to obtain benefits,” even though they have nothing to back up their claim that they are associates of Los Chapitos.

The brothers also railed against musicians and companies for using their name or that of their father for their own financial gain in songs known as narcocorridos or on products such as clothing and beverages.

“Media outlets regularly publish stories with our name in the headline, or even on front pages, just to sell newspapers or get clicks … on their web pages,” they added.

The letter also asserted that Iván Guzmán Salazar never said that Los Chapitos would “flood” the streets of the United States with fentanyl and rejected accusations they had fed people to tigers or killed adversaries with baseball bats.

“We don’t have nor have we had tigers. Easy and simple to investigate,” the brothers wrote.

Navy Minister José Rafael Ojeda Durán has insisted that Mexico “is not a producer of fentanyl,” and that the drug arrives in Mexico from Chinese suppliers. (lopezobrador.org.mx)

“… The use of our name by other people to get rid of problems, avoid problems or solve problems is becoming a real danger for us,” they said toward the end of the letter.

“If they are caught, whoever they are, [they should] face up to their own situation without involving us. … We will always look out for our own safety and that of our family. We didn’t choose to be where we are. No one can choose their birthplace. We would have liked to have chosen a different life with a good education … [but] that was denied at the time due to the hunt for our father,” Los Chapitos said.

They claimed that no judge will treat them fairly due to the fear of persecution, and challenged the media and authorities to “thoroughly investigate the issue of fentanyl” in Sinaloa and Mexico.

“Who produces it? Where are the ingredients obtained? How does it get to the United States? We are certain that any impartial investigation will reach the same conclusion. The sons of Joaquín Guzmán Loera … have never produced, manufactured or commercialized fentanyl…”

The DEA is offering up to US $10 million each for information leading to the arrest and/or conviction of Jesús Alfredo Guzmán Salazár and Iván Archivaldo Guzmán Salazár, the alleged sons of ex-cartel boss Joaquín (“El Chapo”) Guzmán. (Twitter)

The case against Los Chapitos comes as Mexico and the United States ramp up cooperation to combat fentanyl.

The two countries committed in Washington last month to “continue joint work to dismantle the fentanyl supply chain and the Sinaloa Cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel on both sides of the border.” Mexican and U.S. officials also met at the U.S.-Mexico Synthetic Drug Conference in Mexico City in late March.

The Los Angeles Times reported that the letter sent to Milenio by Los Chapitos was probably “an effort to drum up some public sympathy south of the border as U.S. authorities increasingly press their Mexican counterparts to take down the three fugitive brothers.”

Mike Vigil, the DEA’s former head of international operations, told the Times that he firmly believes the Los Chapitos “are feeling the pressure.”

In disseminating a letter, “they are probably trying to gain some public support from politicians who may want to extradite them,” he said.

President López Obrador told reporters Thursday that he was aware of the letter but declined to comment on it. He said last month that he did not expect the extradition of Ovidio Guzmán to happen quickly.

“He resorted to the argument or the excuse … that he who was detained wasn’t him, that he wasn’t … Ovidio,” López Obrador said, referring to a bizarre claim made at an extradition hearing in March. “… It has to be proven that [the person detained] is Ovidio, so it takes time.”

With reports from Milenio and The Los Angeles Times 

Tourism organization says medical tourism sector is evading taxes

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Nogales, Mexico
Dental care is expensive in the United States, pushing many to seek more affordable care in Mexico, particularly in border towns like Nogales, Sonora. (Shutterstock)

Providers of services to medical tourists are evading taxes to the tune of US $500 million a year, according to the president of a tourism-oriented umbrella organization.

Jorge Hernández, president of the Mexican Federation of Tourism Associations (Fematur), told the newspaper Milenio that medical tourism is increasing, and so too is the evasion of taxes by professionals who provide services to foreigners who travel to Mexico to undergo treatment.

Dentist talks to patient
Many U.S. citizens come to Mexico for cheaper, quality dental care. (Caroline LMUnsplash)

Health care providers such as dentists and plastic surgeons avoid paying taxes to the federal tax agency SAT by not issuing formal invoices known as facturas to medical tourists, he said. Many only issue basic receipts, said Hernández, who didn’t explain how he arrived at the US $500 million figure.

Not paying tax on income received from medical tourists allows health care providers to keep prices low.

Hernández said that authorities need to find a way to “oblige” medical professionals to issue formal invoices to all their patients. As a result of their tax evasion, it is impossible to accurately calculate how much Mexico’s medical tourism industry is worth, the Fematur chief said.

According to Patients Beyond Borders, which describes itself as the “most trusted resource in medical tourism,” the price of most major procedures performed on medical tourists in Mexico is between 40% and 60% lower than in the United States.

New City Medical Tijuana
A growing number of modern healthcare facilites, like New City Medical Plaza in Tijuana, are seeking to attract higher-end medical tourism. (NewCity Medical Plaza/Facebook)

Hernández said that the primary treatments sought by medical tourists are cosmetic, followed by dental, and that the quality of the care patients receive here is on a par with – or even better – than that on offer in the United States.

According to the state-owned National Exterior Commerce Bank (Bancomext), the industry had revenue of just over US $5 billion in 2017. Professional services firm Deloitte has cited a significantly higher figure of US $8.8 billion.

Josef Woodman, the CEO of Patients Beyond Borders, estimates that about 1.2 million Americans per year come to Mexico for medical treatment. Border cities are particularly popular with medical tourists, but foreigners also travel to places such as Mexico City and Cancún to find the affordable treatment they are looking for.

With reports from Milenio and CNN

Invest in a luxury lifestyle at MISTIQ Pedregal in Cabo San Lucas

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Mistiq Pedregal
The stunning views from MISTIQ Pedregal, overlooking the Sea of Cortez and the unique beauty of Cabo San Lucas.(Courtesy: MISTIQ Pedregal)

To invest in real estate in the exclusive Pedregal Cabo San Lucas community – also known as the “Beverly Hills” of Cabo San Lucas – is not only about investing in luxury real estate. It’s about investing in a better quality of life.

With over four decades of providing unmatched living experiences, the community of Pedregal Cabo San Lucas offers an elite investment opportunity in a prime location, just steps away from the Cabo San Lucas Marina.

Mistiq Pedregal
Rendering of the MISTIQ Pedregal condominiums (Courtesy: MISTIQ Pedregal)

Whether you’re considering investing in a second home or looking to reap the rewards of passive rental income, MISTIQ Pedregal (under construction now) is the perfect choice.

Pedregal Cabo San Lucas, home of hillside villas and exclusive resorts, is a community that boasts an impressive array of architectural styles and designs to choose from, all meticulously built and incorporating state-of-the-art amenities.

Embrace the welcoming lifestyle of this vibrant community and create unforgettable memories with your loved ones on the pet-friendly private beach.

From an early game of tennis or pickleball to indulging in the exquisite cuisine offered at their restaurants, or strolling through the weekly farmers market, Pedregal Cabo San Lucas offers a welcoming lifestyle that will have you enjoying every day from start to finish.

MISTIQ Pedregal
Designed by Jesús Díaz and to be built with the highest quality materials. (Courtesy: MISTIQ Pedregal)

MISTIQ Pedregal is designed by renowned architect Jesús Díaz and will be built with only the highest quality materials. The attention to detail and impeccable taste will be evident in every corner, from the lush gardens to the elegant interiors of each unit.

MISTIQ Pedregal offers a variety of floor plans to choose from, including one-, two-, and three-bedroom units, as well as penthouses and villas. Each unit will be spacious, bright, and designed to maximize the breathtaking views of the marina and surrounding mountains. The open-concept living areas are perfect for entertaining and lead out to private terraces, where residents will enjoy the spectacular sunsets.

The amenities at MISTIQ Pedregal will provide everything you need to live a life of luxury.

Residents will be able to take a dip in one of the two infinity pools overlooking the ocean, unwind in the hot tub, or work up a sweat in the state-of-the-art gym. The complex also features a spa, where you could indulge in a range of treatments, including massages and facials.

Room interior of condo
Rendering of the interior of a condominium at MISTIQ Pedregal. (Courtesy: MISTIQ Pedregal)

Security is a top priority at MISTIQ Pedregal, with 24-hour surveillance and controlled access. You can rest assured that you and your family will be safe and secure in this exclusive gated community.

MISTIQ Pedregal is not just a place to live, it’s a lifestyle. It’s the perfect place for those who value luxury, privacy, and the beauty of nature. Owning a property in this stunning development is not only a sound financial investment, it’s an investment in your happiness and well-being.

This is one of the rare places on earth where the majestic desert dunes and towering mountains converge with the vast ocean, while the Sea of Cortez, famously called “the world’s aquarium” by Jacques Cousteau, offers a paradise for water sports enthusiasts. 

If you’re looking for the ultimate luxury living experience, look no further than MISTIQ Pedregal, which will be completed by late 2024. It’s time to turn your dream of owning a property in Pedregal Cabo San Lucas into a reality. 

For more information on MISTIQ Pedregal, please visit the website. Prices start at US $367,920.

Trade Minister says Canada sees no need to escalate energy dispute with Mexico

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Mary NG, International trade minister
Canada is satisfied that progress is being made to resolve concerns over the legality of Mexico's energy policy, says minister Mary Ng (second from right). (Mary Ng/Twitter)

Canada’s top trade official has said there is currently no need to escalate the country’s trade dispute with Mexico, citing positive steps by Mexico to engage with Canadian energy companies.

Canada requested dispute settlement consultations with Mexico last July, arguing that President López Obrador’s policy of favoring the state-owned Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) violated the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Free Trade Agreement (USMCA).

The energy dispute centers on Mexican policies that allegedly favor the the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE). Pictured: the CFE's Huexca Thermoelectric Plant in Morelos.
The energy dispute centers on Mexican policies that favor the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE). Pictured: the CFE’s Huexca Thermoelectric Plant in Morelos. (Gobierno de Morelos)

But during a trip to Washington this week, Canadian International Trade and Export Minister Mary Ng said she was satisfied with moves by Mexican Economy Minister Raquel Buenrostro to open dialogue with Canadian companies about the legislation.

President López Obrador also met with four Canadian firms in January, reportedly resolving concerns from three of the companies.

“We’re going to be keeping a close eye on this to make sure that the provisions of our trade agreement are being met,” Ng said in an interview on Tuesday. “Ultimately, it’s making sure that the investments down there are met with the predictability of the rules that they’ve got.” 

Ng made the remarks during meetings with U.S. trade representative Katherine Tai, in which they discussed working together to address mutual concerns about Mexico’s energy policy.

Enormous Canadian, Mexican and U.S. flags hang from stone archways in the National Palace in Mexico City, which the presidents of each country standing at small podiums far beneath each flag.
The USMCA free trade agreement has governed trade between Mexico, the United States and Canada since 2020. (Lopezobrador.org.mx)

The U.S. is also holding separate, broader talks with Mexico over energy policy, which have been without resolution for seven months. It was reported in late March that the U.S. was considering issuing an ultimatum to Mexico, threatening to advance the dispute to an independent USMCA arbitration panel.

If the panel rules against Mexico, Mexico would be required to change its nationalistic energy policy or face heavy tariffs on exports. Mexico is the United States’ largest trading partner.

However, all three countries have been reluctant to advance the dispute, citing the need to cooperate over migration, environment, drug trafficking and border security. Tariffs would also have a severe impact on the US $1.4 trillion of annual trade between the three economies.

Ng did not rule out resorting to arbitration in the future but said that as long as progress is made in dialogue, Canada prefers to hold out for a negotiated settlement. 

Early-stage talks are also underway to resolve a separate dispute over Mexico’s proposed ban on genetically modified agricultural imports, over which Canada requested consultations in March.

With reports from Bloomberg Linea

Mexico is US’s largest trading partner in 2023’s 1st quarter

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An avocado export truck in Jalisco
Mexico emerged as the largest trading partner for the United States in the first quarter of 2023. The country exports a diverse range of goods north of the border. (Secretaria de Agricultura/Cuartoscuro)

Mexico was the United States’ largest trading partner in the first quarter of 2023, with exports of US $115.5 billion, according to figures released by the U.S Census office on Thursday.

​​Figures for Q1 2023 showed that total trade between the two countries (a combined total of imports and exports) was US $196.7 billion, an 8% increase over the same period in 2022.

Manzanillo port
Primary exports to the U.S. include refined petroleum, office supplies, automobile parts and integrated circuitry, according to the OED. (Depositphotos).

In March alone, goods from Mexico accounted for 16.1% of U.S. imports — beating out Canada (15.5%) and China (10.1%) — for a total of US $42.8 billion. The figure represents annual growth of 5.9%. 

China has topped the list in Q1 of each year since 2009 — with the exception of 2020, when the Covid-19 pandemic saw Mexico take the top spot. But in March, China saw exports drop 35% to US $30.8 billion. 

Last year’s top whole-year trading partner, Canada, saw a 7.2% year-on-year drop in exports to the U.S market in March, registering only US $37.6 billion. 

U.S. exports to Mexico also rose 2.6%, to US $29.3 billion in March — despite a year-on-year fall of 0.4% compared to 2022. Despite the rise, the U.S. still maintains a US $97 billion trade deficit with Mexico, or 12%, said the Economic Commission for Latin America. This figure has contracted considerably, however, previously standing at 39% in 2020.

Mexican peso and US dollar
A strong peso has buoyed export conditions in Mexico, although some experts are concerned that the exchange rate may remain volatile in the coming months. (Rmcarvalho/Istock)

The recent “super peso” and weakened U.S. dollar have created favorable conditions for export, but credit analysts Moody’s warned that there was some uncertainty surrounding global solvency for financial institutions, as well as volatility in the bond market that could lead to further fluctuations in exchange rates.  

Mexico has become a nearshoring hub, with businesses from Asia rushing to set up operations in the country, taking advantage of the favorable investment conditions and proximity to the North American markets. This has led to a boom in manufacturing, especially in the automobile industry, but also increasingly in data, computing and home electronic goods, which are often exported to the United States.

Top exports from Mexico in 2023 included refined petroleum, auto parts and accessories, office machinery and integrated circuits, according to the Observatory of Economic Complexity.

With reports by El Financiero, El Economista, OEC and U.S Census Bureau

‘Fast-tracked’ science bill provokes criticism from academics

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Protest outside university building
Various universities around the country participated in a strike on Tuesday in response to the new legislation. (Instituto de Biotecnología de UNAM/Twitter)

The approval by federal Congress of a bill that has significant ramifications for Mexico’s science and research sector triggered a strike this week as well as criticism from numerous members of the scientific community.

In the early hours of last Saturday morning, senators with the ruling Morena party and its allies voted in favor of the creation of a new General Law on Humanities, Science, Technology and Innovation (LGHCTI), which was initially proposed by President López Obrador last December.

Senate on April 29
The “fast-track” Senate meeting on Saturday held at an alternative venue. (Galo Cañas Rodríguez / Cuartoscuro.com)

The bill, one of about 20 pieces of legislation approved during a frenzied Senate session that began Friday night, was subsequently sent to the president for promulgation.

There was no debate before the vote took place, and opposition senators didn’t attend the legislative session, which was held in an alternative venue due to an unrelated protest in the Senate chamber.

According to the National Council of Science and Technology (Conacyt), approval of the LGHCTI is a “milestone in the history of the country” as the law protects the “human right to science and knowledge.”

Conacyt will become the National Council of Humanities, Science and Technology (Conahcyt) once the new law takes effect.

Conacyt director at press conference
María Elena Álvarez-Buylla discusses a slide during the president’s morning press conference on Wednesday that shows a supposed “neoliberal” network responsible for misusing public funds in previous administrations. (Mario Jasso / Cuartoscuro.com)

Critics of the law have denounced its centralization of decision-making in the academic sphere and its curtailing of the autonomy of public research centers. They have also pointed out that an existing goal of investing 1% of GDP in scientific research is absent in the new law, and criticized the inclusion of military representatives on a board that will make decisions about funding for various academic projects.

Students and academics from institutes including the Center for Research and Teaching in Economics and the National Autonomous University (UNAM) joined a so-called paro nacional, or national strike, on Tuesday. Mexico City, Yucatán and Morelos were among the federal entities where stoppages took place.

Conahcyt, once it is established, will have a 20-person governing board whose members will be officials from numerous ministries including those of Agriculture, Welfare, Culture, Economy, Education, Foreign Relations, National Defense and the Navy. The allocation of seats at the board’s table to the military – which has been given responsibility for a wide range of non-traditional tasks in the current government – is a particular point of contention.

Representatives of civil society organizations, business groups and state and municipal governments will not have a say in how Conahcyt is run and which academic projects receive government funding.

Scientist Antonio Lazcano
Mexican scientist and professor Antonio Lazcano. (Foro Consultivo Científico y Tecnológico AC)

Antonio Lazcano, a biologist and emeritus UNAM professor, told the newspaper El País that the way in which the bill was approved was disgraceful and indicative of the “irresponsibility” of lawmakers.

Most senators hadn’t even read the 112-page bill before the vote took place, according to El País, and just two of seven scheduled “open parliament” sessions on the bill – at which interested citizens have the opportunity to voice concerns – went ahead as planned.

Alma Maldonado, an academic at the Center for Research and Advanced studies at the National Polytechnic Institute (IPN), described the process – or lack thereof – to approve the bill as “sloppy” and “very clumsy.”

She said that the new law will “subordinate” scientific institutes and agencies to Conahcyt because they will be dependent on the decisions taken by that organization’s board.

Brenda Valderrama, a researcher at the UNAM Institute of Biotechnology, said that the power to take decisions about issues related to science in Mexico will be concentrated in “a handful of officials.”

Lazcano asserted that the bill that passed the Senate has “brutal defects” and represents an attempt to bring political ideology into science. Martín Aluja, an entomologist, offered a similar view, asserting that what passed Congress is not a “general law” but rather “a political manifesto.”

Luis Omar Montoya Arias, a historian, asserted that the approval of the LGHCTI is “another step toward the militarization of the country,” while the president of the Mexican Association for the Advancement of Science said that the new law will likely face legal challenges given that the process by which it was approved was “full of legislative procedural flaws.”

Alma Cristal Hernández Mondragón, who is also a policy specialist at the IPN’s Center for Research and Advanced studies, expressed concern about the exclusion of “voices that can contribute” to policy debates, given that all Conahcyt board members will be government officials.

David René Romero Camarena, a genome scientist at UNAM, said that the LGHCTI favors public universities, and, as a result, researchers and students at private institutions will be treated in a “discriminatory” way once the law takes effect.

The federal government, however, has argued that the law is “needed to streamline policymaking and bolster government support for basic and applied research,” according to a news report by the academic journal Science.

The journal also reported that “some scientists are encouraged by provisions that call for work on behalf of the environment and disadvantaged communities.”

Martha Ileana Espejel Carbajal, a social ecologist who until recently was a professor at the Autonomous University of Baja California, said that the LGHCTI will “help many who were not privileged before.”

Mexican scientist
Martha Ileana Espejel Carbajal, a Mexican ecologist, sees the LGHCTI reform as flawed but “perfectible”. (Gaceta UNAM)

“It is the first time in 40 years of being a research professor that the law asks [us] to do what my team has always struggled to defend: … work with the most marginalized communities, with women, with youth, with social and ecological systems,” she said.

The LGHCTI may have flaws, but “every law is perfectible,” Espejel said.

In a statement issued after last Saturday’s vote, Conacyt said that the LGHCTI has a “humanistic focus that frames and guides scientific progress and technological development in favor of social wellbeing and environmental care.”

It also said that the law will strengthen Conacyt (or Conahcyt) and the 26 public research centers it manages.

“With the creation of this … General Law, Mexico breaks the paradigm, which, in the past three six-year periods [of federal government], permitted the use of public resources to fund a great quantity of private projects that simulated [rather than actually carried out] research,” Conacyt said.

“… This LGHCTI mandates mechanisms that prevent … resources of the people of Mexico … being transferred to … vested interests, … taking care that each peso allocated to the funding of HCTI activities is used in strict accordance with the [established] guidelines,” it added.

With reports from El País, Sin Embargo, El Financiero, Crónica and Science  

Are problems with your Mexican bank account inevitable?

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It can be daunting to deal with banks in Mexico when Spanish is your second language, but it's made worse when your bank insists on you using online banking or cellphone apps to get anything done, as the writer found out when money began disappearing from her account. (Shutterstock)

What I cannot understand is why banks abroad like Citibank, Santander, put their names on their Mexican acquisitions.

Over the 20 years I have lived in Mexico, I have changed banks frequently; all seem to cause me grief sooner or later, but I never experienced anything like I did recently with Citibanamex.

I opened the account in late 2021 because Santander had been threatening to close my account if I did not sign some paperwork, insisting I had to do so at my “home branch,” located over an hour away. So I withdrew the money and abandoned the account, deciding to go with Citibanamex. 

But problems with my new bank began from the get-go. They screwed up my name, which took weeks to fix. I shrugged it off because my husband had had an account there for many years without any problems. It seemed like a fluke. 

But my nightmare began last month. I kept my relationship with that account simple, avoiding online banking, which I do not really trust, especially on cell phones. But late on April 19, I saw that my balance was way off.

Of course, my first act was to cancel the debit card, but this proved impossible. I could not do it on my computer without the cell phone-based “Netkey” — a device that allows for two-factor authentication. And when I called the bank, they said my answers to their security questions were “wrong.”

Citibanamex
Citibanamex is the antagonist in this story, but the writer points out that over the more than 20 years she’s lived in Mexico, she’s had account problems come up with every Mexican bank she’s worked with. (Shutterstock)

So I went to my home branch first thing the next morning for help. I had a similar problem with Santander some years ago, and to their credit, all it took was one visit to the branch to solve it.. 

Not so this time. Staff directed me to the phones in the lobby to call the same number I had already called with no luck. I ended up with the same outcome, which resulted in me making a scene. 

This led me to poor Corina, who would bear the brunt of my frustration for the next hours — and, yes, days. But at least now a person that I could sit in front of could see that my answers to the security questions were indeed what’s on my documentation. 

But this was not helpful, she could not tell the telephone-based representatives who I was, nor could she accept the complaint about my account.

Now, to make a very long and very complicated story short(er), there were basically four issues:

  • There were at least a dozen “unrecognized” charges to my account starting on April 17.
  • A significant sum was being withheld as “not available” with nothing in any computer system (cell, laptop or branch computer) to indicate why.
  • In my opinion, Citibanamex’s overall customer service is atrocious.
  • The bank’s computer system is completely messed up, and no representative or app had all the necessary information. During the more than eight days I spent on this problem, numbers and entries changed and appeared and disappeared wildly.
online banking
Due to the ubiquity of cell phones, many banks in Mexico have made online banking the only way you can communicate with your bank and have made it exclusively the domain of cellphone apps. Even bank employees need you to open your banking app in order to be able to assist you with your account. (Sabermassermas.com)

Also, there are no official accommodations for those with hearing and language difficulties, nor any visual option for reporting account issues. While I don’t expect the bank to provide me with English-speaking help, they highly frown on, even prohibit, bringing your own person to help you with the Spanish.

It took multi-hour visits over multiple days just to resolve  the security question problem and make my complaint. 

During one of these visits, Corina told me that if I did not install the cell phone app, she could not help me further. So I did very reluctantly. Here is when we both saw charges appearing and disappearing in real time, which prompted an immediate replacement of my debit card, which was neither lost or stolen.

But all she could do, supposedly, was cancel my card. So I took out all the money in my account that was available.

After promises of a phone call that did not materialize, I returned to the branch on April 25 to be directed yet again to the phone in the bank lobby. When I finally got through, the guy on the phone said he did not know to whom the payments were made, although I could see this information on my new app. 

I persisted and managed to get through it, learning there was one new charge, and the “unavailable funds” were related to charges “in process” for 4 working days. No way to dispute those.

Condusef website
Mexico has an agency devoted to advocating for the consumer when it comes to dealing with financial institutions: Condusef. They have offices in major cities where you can get in-person help, or you can register a complaint on their website. (Condusef)

My knight in shining armor came through Condusef (Comisión Nacional para la Protección y Defensa de los Usuarios de Servicios Financieros), the Mexican consumer protection agency for bank account holders. 

On the advice of a friend, I went to their complaint page, finding it surprisingly intuitive and easy for a government website. I made two complaints, one for the extra charges and one for the unavailable funds. 

After that, things moved quickly: the day after Condusef emailed me to say that they sent the complaints to the bank, the money reappeared in my account — which, of course, I immediately withdrew. 

The nightmare is not quite over yet. Online access is still unreliable, so I cannot be sure down to the peso, but if I lost anything, it is a mere fraction of the original amount, and I will close the account after I get the next bank statement. 

All this prompted me to look into banking in Mexico in a general way, and I found that the problems are huge. I’m not alone in experiencing bank nightmares, and there are stories far worse than mine. 

Mexico’s Condusef (the National Commission for the Protection and Defense of Users of Financial Services), which receives millions of consumer complaints each year, states that the skimming of debit and credit cards is particularly a problem, as are the various scams out there to steal physical cards and personal information. 

Spencer McMullen, an attorney with Chapala Law knows about these problems and many others, having represented foreign and Mexican clients against most banks. 

“If you haven’t been a victim of a Mexican bank, you eventually will,” McMullen says very pessimistically. He adds that fraudulent access to accounts not only originates at ATMs and points of purchase but also in the banks themselves. 

His advice? Don’t have any more money in a Mexican account than you can bear to lose.

Fortunately for me, my story has a more-or-less happy ending. I still have to do a definitive accounting with the upcoming statement and close the account. Having a Mexican account is unavoidable due to my financial situation, but lesson learned: how I work with my new account at Bancomer (the only major bank recommended by the financial publication Forbes México) will be very different. 

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

Tulum conservationists get ready for turtle breeding season

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Baby sea turtles in Chiapas
The conservation of nesting sites on beaches in Quintana Roo plays an important role in preserving the numbers of this endangered species. (Isabel Mateos/Cuartoscuro)

The seventh edition of an annual sea turtle protection program convened this week in Tulum, Quintana Roo, aiming to protect the local nesting sites of the endangered marine animals.

The State Committee for the Protection, Conservation and Management of Sea Turtles in Quintana Roo met in Tulum’s Bahia Principe hotel to plan conservation activities for the 2023 breeding season, which runs from May to November.

baby turtles heading to the ocean
Sea turtles, who are an endangered species, are under threat from pollution and development – and until recently, local cuisine. (Joseph Sorrentino)

Measures discussed include the cleaning and monitoring of nesting areas, raising awareness among tourists about protection measures and implementing protocols for turtle sightings.

There was a calendar of events throughout the week, including beach cleanups and conservation workshops in coastal towns throughout Quintana Roo.

“We have achieved significant results in the protection and conservation of this endangered species,” said Rocío Peralta, head of the natural resources department of Tulum’s Directorate of Environmental Sustainability. “All this comes from the commitment of the community and the joint work of the authorities, organizations and companies.”

The program involves the Directorate of Environmental Sustainability and the Environmental Protection Ministry, as well as local businesses and civil society organizations in Tulum. The Navy will also participate in the monitoring program.

The theme of this year’s convention is “Sea turtles and plastic pollution.” It aims to raise awareness of how poor waste management leads to around 8 million tons of plastics a year ending up in the oceans, and threatens sea turtles’ habitat.

A further event – the 21st Sea Turtle Festival – will take place in October, according to Itzel Trujano, president of the State Committee for the Protection, Conservation and Management of Chelonia.

Four species of sea turtle nest on the beaches of Quintana Roo – whites, loggerheads, leatherbacks and hawksbills – playing a key role in the marine ecosystem.

Until recently, turtles were not only threatened by pollution and habitat change, but also were hunted to supplement the local diet. Various environmental organizations, however, now collaborate with the Mexican government to prevent poaching, run breeding programs and integrate sea turtle conservation into local tourism projects.

 With reports from La Jornada Maya

Chinese automotive parts manufacturer Yinlun opens US $80M plant in Nuevo León

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Governor Garcia cuts the ribbon to open the Yinlun factory
Nuevo León governor Samuel Garcia (second from left) cuts the ribbon to open the new US $80 million factory, alongside Yinlun executives. (Samuel Garcia/Twitter)

Chinese auto parts manufacturer Yinlun has opened a new plant in Salinas Victoria, Nuevo Leon, an investment of US $80 million. 

The company, which provides thermal management solutions including coolers, battery heaters and radiators, expects to generate over 1,000 jobs and is considering opening another plant in the northern state. It recently opened a plant in the nearby municipality of Ciénega de Flores.

Outside the new Yinlun factory
The new factory in Salinas Victoria is the second Yinlun facility in the state. (Samuel Garcia/Twitter)

Yinlun has manufacturing plants in China, the United States and Poland. Its customer portfolio includes Caterpillar, Volvo, GM, Stellantis, Ford and Paccar. 

Speaking at the plant’s inauguration, Governor of Nuevo León Samuel García said that “a powerful economic boom is coming [to Nuevo León], and the government is not going to be left behind.” 

State Economy Minister Iván Rivas added that companies like Yinlun continue to arrive in Nuevo León because “they find the right conditions to thrive — particularly, the most competitive human capital.”

He also said automotive sector investments represent 26% of the total that has arrived in Nuevo León since García took office in 2021.

The Yinlun Salinas Cruz factory under construction in 2022
The Salinas Cruz factory, seen here under construction in 2022, is part of a wave of nearshoring by Asian manufacturers looking to strategically access the North American markets. (Hofusan Industrial Park/Twitter)

Growth in the state has been fueled by the boom in nearshoring —  where companies relocate to strategic foreign markets to take advantage of a more favorable investment climate. As part of the trend, companies like Tesla and Unilever have recently announced significant investments in the state.

Mexican brokerage firm Grupo Bursátil Mexicano recently noted that Nuevo León was the biggest nearshoring winner in all of Mexico last year. In February, García predicted that foreign direct investment in his state could double those of 2022.

With reports from El Economista