Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Illegal opium poppy cultivation in Mexico on the rise again

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A blooming poppy surrounded by mature seed pods.
Opium poppies are grown in remote areas of Guerrero and Oaxaca, the western state of Nayarit, and in the “Golden Triangle” of Sinaloa, Chihuahua and Durango. (Ingo Doerrie / Unsplash)

A report issued jointly this week by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and the government of Mexico stated that the cultivation of poppies in Mexico had grown by 12% in the 2019-2020 season compared to the previous year.

The poppy is the flower that provides the opium gum for the manufacture of heroin, and its cultivation in Mexico is illegal.

It is grown in difficult-to-access areas in the southwestern states of Guerrero and Oaxaca, the western state of Nayarit, and also in an area of the northwest known as the “Golden Triangle” within the states of Sinaloa, Chihuahua and Durango.

The report was the fifth in the U.N.’s MEXK54 Project and was titled “Mexico, Monitoring of Illicit Poppy Plantations 2019-2020.”

In releasing the report on Thursday, the UNODC explained that between July 2019 and June 2020, poppy cultivation in Mexico was estimated at 24,100 hectares — an increase of 12% over the 21,500 hectares for the same period in 2018-19.

Despite the increase, the report noted that the latest data was below the 30,600 hectares found for the 2016-17 period. However, the downward trend that had been occurring since then has been broken.

The cultivation figures in the report are estimates obtained through the interpretation of satellite images complemented with field visits and aerial photography.

“Despite the eradication campaigns by the Mexican government, the opium gum market persists and continues to be a very profitable activity,” the report stated. “Opium gum can be stored for long periods of time, allowing it to be marketed when conditions are optimal for the farmer.”

Pictured: heroin seized by the National Guard in Durango in 2021.
The government is shuttering illegal heroine labs at lower rates than in the past, as the market has shifted towards synthetic drugs. Pictured: heroin seized by the National Guard in Durango in 2021. (FGR)

The price that cartels pay for opium gum has fallen due to the boom in synthetic drugs such as fentanyl, growers from the Sierra de Guerrero have indicated over the past three years, according to the digital news source Sin Embargo. But with few alternatives to make money, poor farmers continued to plant poppies.

The monitoring of illicit farms — “mainly in Sinaloa, Chihuahua, Durango, Nayarit, Guerrero and to a lesser extent in Oaxaca,” the report said — is the product of a joint effort between the Ministry of National Defense, the Navy, the Attorney General’s Office, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the UNODC.

The report also included other data.

In regard to yields, for example, the report stated that the production of opium gum on a national level increased by 2%, fueled by an increase of 17% in Guerrero. But in the northern area of Sinaloa, Chihuahua and Durango, the yield decreased 13%.

The elimination of heroin laboratories by Mexican officials fell 33% between 2018-19 and 2019-20, the report added.

Comparing two other periods, the report noted that the seizure of opium gum by Mexican officials, during raids on fields, for example, fell from 1,694 kilograms in 2013-14 to 87 kilograms in 2019-20 — a dropoff of 95%.

The report also said that, during field work, it was observed that the farmers use fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides on their poppies, which creates higher yields.

The results of the report will be included in the next World Drug Report, published each year by UNODC.

With reports from El Economista, Sin Embargo and UNODC

Biologists promote “Adopt an Axolotl” campaign to raise funds for conservation

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Close up of an axolotl or ajolote
Axolotls: they're slimy, cute and on the brink of extinction. (Depositphotos/Archive)

The National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) has launched the international fundraising campaign called AdoptAxolotl to fund an environmental plan safeguarding the habitat of the axolotl, an endangered Mexican salamander.

The campaign was announced by Mexican biologist Luis Zambrano, who has been working on conservation projects to protect the axolotl’s natural environment for more than 20 years.

One of those projects is the maintenance of “chinampa refuges.” The chinampas are the artificial islands built on Mexico City’s freshwater lakes for agricultural purposes. The refuges consist of many protected areas within the lake that seek to maintain the original ecosystem of the axolotl while protecting the species from predators.

According to Zambrano, the AdoptAxolotl campaign is an extension of the chinampa refuge project, an initiative also promoted by UNAM.

El ajolote de Xochimilco, a punto de la extinción - UNAM Global

UNAM shared information about the conservation project, including footage of the chinampa refuges, on their YouTube channel.

To adopt an axolotl, Diana Laura Vázquez Mendoza, the campaign coordinator, explained that there are two types of donations. The first one is called “invite an axolotl to dinner” and seeks to raise funds to buy supplies for the maintenance of the colony. The other one, “tune up an axolotl’s house,” is aimed at supporting the maintenance of the chinampa refuges in Xochimilco.

Through the campaign’s website, 200 pesos (US $10) buys “dinner for an axolotl” and 1,000 pesos (US $50), “tunesup an axolotl’s house.” With larger gifts, donors can adopt a specimen or a chinampa refuge for six months to a year.

To personalize the adoption process, Vázquez Mendoza said that donors will receive informative posters and postcards with some donations allowing for the donor to name an axolotl or a chinampa refuge.

Currently, the UNAM and the chinamperos (those taking care of the chinampas) work with 48 chinampa refuges, which correspond to just over five linear kilometers of canals in which the axolotl and other species can live without threats.

Xanthic (dark) axolotls are less well known than their leucistic (pale) kin, but just as charismatic.
Xanthic (dark) axolotls are less well known than their leucistic (pale) kin, but just as charismatic. (Nathan Guzman / Unsplash)

“We must protect the species and let it reproduce in its natural ecosystem, which is in our country,” Zambrano said regarding growing interest around the world inkeeping axolotls as pets. In fact, there are more axolotls in captivity than there are in the natural world.

This interest is attributed to Minecraft — a video game that includes — and the social media platform TikTok. Jake Pak, co-owner of a U.S. breeding sanctuary in Dallas, Texas, told the news agency NPR that nearly every kid who goes to his store to buy a pet axolotl learned about the salamander in the game.

The amphibian has also gained popularity thanks to the award-winning children’s book “My Life At The Bottom,” which recounts the idyllic life of an axolotl at the bottom of a lake that is threatened by climate change.

The book depicts the reality of the axolotl’s natural habitat, which is  threatened by several factors: the urbanization of Xochimilco, the quality of the water (which is full of waste from a treatment plant), and the introduction of predators — carp and tilapia — between 1970 and 1980 with the intention of a green revolution.

All these reasons have led the axolotl to be classified as critically endangered  by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, which estimates only 50 to 1,000 mature adults are left in the wild.

More information about how to adopt an axolotl and support the recovery of its natural habitat is available on the AdoptAxolotl project website.

With reports from El Universal and UNAM Global

En Breve Travel: Record number of flights in Cancún, a new Waldorf Astoria hotel, and the first ‘Barrio Mágico’

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Tourists swim and lounge on a Cancún beach.
Tourists swim and lounge on a Cancún beach. (David Vives/Unsplash)

Record numbers of flights in Cancún

On Saturday, Dec. 3, the Cancún International Airport registered 660 operations, surpassing the record number of operations registered on Dec. 18, 2021.

According to the Southeast Airport Group, the maximum number of operations was registered on December 18, 2021, with 648, reaching almost the record of 659 registered on March 31, 2018.

On Saturday, 129,000 passengers are expected to pass through the Cancún terminal, an unprecedented number, while Quintana Roo expects more than 27 million passengers by year end.

Most of the flights scheduled for this weekend are bound to the United States and Canada, while some transatlantic cities include London and Amsterdam. 

These are the first Barrios Mágicos (Magical Neighborhoods) in México

The new Barrios Mágicos de México program aims to promote and invigorate the diversification of touristic destinations in Mexico while publicizing the spirit of the city. It also seeks to promote road trips within the country.

An aerial view of Chetumal.
The first official Barrio Mágico was downtown Chetumal. (Gobierno de Quintana Roo)

Downtown Chetumal in Quintana Roo was recognized as the first Barrio Mágico in México due to its touristic potential. Neighborhoods like San Miguelito and Tlaxcala in San Luis Potosí followed.

In Mexico City, 21 neighborhoods have also been recognized as Barrios Mágicos including Xochimilco, Tepito, La Roma, La Condesa, Cuajimalpa, Coyoacán, San Ángel and Mixcoac.

One of the things all Barrios Mágicos have in common is that the title is given only to neighborhoods in capital cities.

Volaris predicts Mexico will regain aviation status by last quarter of 2023

Mexican low-cost airline Volaris expects the country to regain its aviation Category 1 rating by the end of 2023.

During a presentation on Tuesday, the airline noted that Mexican government authorities forecasted that Mexico could recover the rating as soon as April.

In May 2021, the United States Federal Aviation Administration downgraded Mexico’s aviation to Category 2 due to Mexico’s lack of regulation in accordance with minimum international standards. The current rating prevents Mexican airlines to increase routes and frequencies to the U.S.

Waldorf Astoria Cancun opens

Hilton reached 200 properties in Latin America and the Caribbean with the opening of the luxurious Waldorf Astoria Cancun resort.

The new Waldorf Astoria resort in Cancún, Quintana Roo.
The new Waldorf Astoria resort in Cancún, Quintana Roo. (Waldorf Astoria Cancun)

The resort is located 15 kilometers from Cancún International Airport on the Mexican Caribbean coast. With 173 rooms, this is the second Waldorf Astoria in Mexico — the first one opened in Cabo San Lucas, Baja California Sur.

The resort is operated by Hilton and is owned by the American Parks Hospitality Holdings, one of the largest hotel developers in Latin America.

22-year-old flamingo detected in a flock that arrived to Cozumel

The Foundation of Parks and Museums of Cozumel (FPMC) reported the presence of a 22-year-old flamingo in the Ecotouristic Park Punta Sur, that was tagged by researchers in the year 2000 in the Reserva de la Biósfera Ría Lagartos.

A flock of flamingos in Celestún, Yucatán.
A flock of flamingos in Celestún, Yucatán. (Virginie Fialon / Unsplash)

For biologists, this is an important finding since it contributes to the study of flamingos in the Yucatan peninsula as well as to the analysis of their displacement and longevity. 

Héctor González Cortés, deputy director of the Punta Sur Park, said that flamingos are an important part of the biocultural heritage and an additional ingredient of the scenic beauty of Cozumel.

With reports from Reuters, Adn40, La Jornada Maya

AMLO ranks as 14th most influential world leader on Twitter

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A screenshot of President López Obrador's Twitter profile.
The president has 9.3 million followers and high levels of engagement on Twitter. (Screenshot)

With over 20 million followers across Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, President López Obrador is no social media slouch.

But in case he needed additional affirmation of his clout in the digital world, a global communications agency has just ranked him as the world’s 14th most influential leader on Twitter.

New York-based firm BCW published its 2022 Twiplomacy World Leader Power Ranking on Wednesday, an index that shows that only 13 leaders are more influential than AMLO on the social network that was recently purchased by the world’s wealthiest person, Elon Musk.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India, U.S. President Joe Biden and Turkey President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan ranked No. 1, 2 and 3, respectively.

To measure the influence of world leaders, BCW created an algorithm that “assigns a tailored weighting to variables including mentions, tweets, retweets, reach, impressions, follower changes, likes and follower count” of world leaders.

BCW said that “engagement matters most” when it comes to influence on Twitter, which has hundreds of millions of active users.

“Online influence is no longer about how many followers a leader has or how many tweets the leader puts out – it’s about how engaged that follower base is, and how likely they are to interact with a leader’s message,” the firm said.

López Obrador is not an overly active Twitter user, but usually publishes at least one post per day to his account — which has 9.3 million followers — even if it is just video footage of his morning press conference, or mañanera.

President López Obrador at a podium in front of a projection of a tweet from former president Vicente Fox.
The president also enjoys analyzing the tweets of his rivals. (Presidencia de la República)

Among the reasons why AMLO took to the microblogging site in the past two weeks were to acknowledge his meetings with Ecuador President Guillermo Lasso (No. 20 on the Twiplomacy index) and Colombia President Gustavo Petro (No. 4); lament the passing of actor Héctor Bonilla; post footage of his “counter-march” in Mexico City; congratulate Mexico’s soccer team — just after it was knocked out of the World Cup; promote the Maya Train railroad project; and offer an opinion on fellow leftist Pedro Castillo’s dismissal from his position as president of Peru.

His posts typically attract thousands of comments, and are also routinely retweeted and liked by thousands of Twitter users. AMLO’s engagement on Facebook, which he appears to favor over other social networks, is even higher.

The president has described social media as “blessed” because of the platform it provides him to communicate directly with his followers, and denounced the silencing of some users, most notably former United States president Donald Trump, who was banned from Twitter and Facebook after the 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

He said last month that he voted in favor of Trump’s reinstatement to Twitter in a poll run by Elon Musk, while in January 2021 he floated the idea of creating a national social media network to avoid the possibility of Mexicans being censored.

While he has never used Twitter with the same frequency, forthrightness and ferocity with which Trump tweeted, López Obrador is a polarizing figure on social media (as he is offline), with ardent supporters of the president and strident critics using the so-called “digital town square” as a venue for mudslinging and name-calling in a seemingly never-ending slanging match.

Mexico News Daily 

Ousted Peruvian president Castillo sought asylum in Mexico, AMLO confirms

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President López Obrador in a 2021 meeting with former president of Peru, Pedro Castillo.
President López Obrador in a 2021 meeting with former president of Peru, Pedro Castillo. (Cuartoscuro)

Pedro Castillo, the ex-president of Peru who was removed from office by that country’s Congress on Wednesday, tried to get to Mexico’s embassy in Lima to seek asylum, President López Obrador said Thursday.

He said that Castillo — who was ousted due to “moral incapacity” just hours after he attempted to dissolve the Congress by decree and establish a new emergency government — called him to tell him he was going to Mexico’s Embassy in the Peruvian capital.

“He told me he was on his way to the embassy, but surely they had already tapped his phone,” López Obrador told reporters at his regular news conference.

Pedro Castillo waits in a police office after his arrest on Wednesday.
Pedro Castillo waits in a police office after his arrest on Wednesday. (Policía Nacional de Perú)

“He was going to seek asylum,” he said, adding that he spoke with Foreign Affairs Minister Marcelo Ebrard and directed him to contact Mexico’s ambassador to Peru to ensure the embassy’s doors were opened to Castillo “in accordance with our tradition of asylum.”

But police and citizens surrounded the embassy, and Castillo never arrived because he was arrested, the president said.

“We ask that his human rights be respected. That they act with true legality, that his family is protected,” López Obrador said.

Mexico’s ambassador to Peru, Pablo Monroy, visited the ex-president in prison on Thursday, according to reports by Peruvian media outlets.

Castillo, a former teacher and union leader who was sworn in as president in July last year, is being held in a police prison in Lima where another former president, Alberto Fujimori, is detained, according to a report by the Reuters news agency.

Ebrard said on Twitter Thursday afternoon that Monroy found Castillo “physically well” and in the company of his lawyer. He also posted a letter in which the lawyer formally requested asylum in Mexico for his client.

Castillo’s first international trip as president was to Mexico in September 2021 to attend the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States summit.

López Obrador, who has made no secret of his admiration of Castillo, said on Twitter Wednesday that the ex-president faced “an atmosphere of confrontation and hostility” from the beginning of his “legitimate presidency” due to “the interests of the economic and political elite.”

He said Thursday that he was a “victim of harassment and confrontation” and considered an uncultured “mountain-dweller” by the political and economic elite in Peru.

“He told me once that when he used to walk in Lima there were ladies who covered their noses when he went by” López Obrador said.

“… He was always harassed and they weakened him until they managed to remove him. That’s the decision these elites took. I don’t believe it’s the best thing for the people. I feel very sorry for the people of Peru, because it’s a lot of instability [to have] five presidents in six years.”

With reports from Aristegui Noticias, Reuters and Reforma 

Photo essay: in this Puebla factory, Christmas magic is made

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Worker handpaints an ornament at the Castillo de la Esfera ornament factory in Chignahuapan, Puebla, Mexico
Employees of Castillo de la Esfera factory create 5 million ornaments per year, decorated, and in some cases hand-blown, individually. (Photos by Joseph Sorrentino)

With 400 stores and factories making and selling artisanal Christmas ornaments (called esferas in Mexico), Chignahuapan, Puebla is the place to go for Christmas decorations — especially artisan-designed ones. Between all the factories here, they make an estimated 70 million ornaments.

Esfera production in Chignahuapan began in 1965 with one man: Rafael Méndez Nuñez, a chemical engineer with an interest in making them who moved to Chignahuapan.

His first esferas were simple, undecorated bulbs; now there’s an almost endless variety made by several factories — from small round bulbs to elaborate designs that look like piñatas and hot-air balloons.

Almost all glass ornaments esferas have one thing in common: they start out as a simple Pyrex tube. But the process from tube to a bauble hanging from your Christmas tree is anything but simple.

Worker in Puebla, Mexico, factory making handblown Christmas ornaments
Luís Rivera making a hand-blown Christmas bulb.

Castillo de la Esfera (The Ornament Castle), the largest producer of esferas in Chignahuapan, offers tours of its factory, and Arturo Amezcua Muñoz, the director of online sales, was my guide.

The first step in making an esfera is heating the glass tube until it softens and glows a bright orange. The artisan, called a globeador, then blows steadily into the open end of the tube.

“It takes about two weeks to learn the basics, “ said Luís Rivera. The large bulb he was making takes about a year to learn how to do.

Next, the bulbs are coated with a silver solution.

Worker at the Castillo de la Esfera factory in Chignahuapan, Puebla, Mexico
One of the first steps in the decorating process is laying down a base color. Jaime Romero Sánchez achieves this by dipping each ornament individually in paint.

“This is done in a chamber,” explained Amezcua. “The bulbs are transparent, and this [step] gives them higher quality and makes them shine.”

Four years ago, after decades of using glass, the company expanded into making esferas from plastic, which are better for exporting because they don’t break.

Unused plastic is white, and those bulbs are also coated with the silver solution. They also make large black bulbs from recycled plastic, which aren’t coated. Both are made using molds.

Worker in Puebla factory soldering a metal base to hold Christmas ornaments
The factory also makes metal bases that are popular in Mexico for hanging one or a few ornaments as a decorative item in the home. Paul Hernández’s job requires soldering knowledge.

Rafael Romero Sánchez, in the painting workshop, was dipping silver-coated bulbs into purple paint. As he removed it, gave it a quick twist with his wrist to evenly cover it.

Nearby, his brother Jaime Romero Sánchez was coating larger bulbs with red paint. “Many employees are relatives,” Amezcua mentioned.

Once the bulbs are dry, they’re sent to the decorating workshop.

Worker at Christmas ornament factory in Puebla, Mexico
One of the last steps for this hand-blown glass ornament was precisely dipping it into glitter to color in the painted figures’ clothing.

Jimy Brian Romero was decorating a trompo (a top). “If you have the talent can learn in about a week” he said. “You must have technical skill.”

Nearby, Orlando Reyes was painting a Nacimiento (a Nativity scene) onto a trompo. While he paints 150 to 200 of these a day, Reyes said he recently made 100 Nacimientos in three days, despite the process being slow and detail-oriented.

“As you can see,” he said, “it is painted in parts, and one must let the part dry before adding more.”

Worker at Christmas ornament factory in Puebla, Mexico
Gabriella Tellez decorative glitter on a large bulb made of recycled plastic that is melted down and reformed into Christmas joy.

At another station, Gabriella Tellez coated large black plastic bulbs with glue and then poured on red diamanita (sparkles).

The Castillo also has a metal workshop where a variety of bases are made from which esferas can be hung. Paul Hernandez has worked there six months, making 120 a day.

All esferas are handmade. “The tradition is to make these by hand and to provide employment,” said Amezcua.

The company has about 200 employees who make 1,500 different styles of esferas and produce five million a year. There are tours every day and at the end, people can go to the store where there are thousands of esferas to choose from.

Puebla, Mexico factory's handmade ornaments
One of the metal bases made the factory holds a single hand-painted ornament.

If you want to tour Castillo de la Esfera yourself, Chignahuapan is about two hours north of Puebla City. Castillo de la Esfera is located at Carretera Chignahuapan-Zacatlán, Km.2. The town is also a Magical Town, so all in all it makes a charming visit, especially at Christmastime.

Joseph Sorrentino, a writer, photographer and author of the book San Gregorio Atlapulco: Cosmvisiones and of Stinky Island Tales: Some Stories from an Italian-American Childhood, is a regular contributor to Mexico News Daily. More examples of his photographs and links to other articles may be found at www.sorrentinophotography.com He currently lives in Chipilo, Puebla.

Mexico in Numbers: Another brush with World Cup glory

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The Mexican national team warms up for practice on Nov. 29, the day before what turned out to be their last game in the 2022 World Cup.
The Mexican national team warms up for practice on Nov. 29, the day before what turned out to be their last game in the 2022 World Cup. (Selección Nacional de México)

Last week, Mexico beat Saudi Arabia in their last game of the group stage, but it wasn’t enough to win them a spot in the round of 16. The failure to advance this year was just one in a decades-long string of so-close-you-can-taste-it losses for El Tri, as the national team is known.

By points, Mexico tied with Poland for second place in the group; each team had a win (3 points), a draw (1 point) and a loss (0 points), for a total of 4 points. But Poland beat Mexico on goal differential, the number of goals scored by the team minus the goals scored against them during the group stage of the tournament. Poland’s goal differential was 0, while Mexico let in one more goal than they scored, for a final goal differential of -1.

Thanks to this year’s performance, Mexico is now the team with the most games lost in a World Cup (28) followed by Argentina with 23 losses and Germany with 24. Mexico has also joined the exclusive club of teams that have had more than 100 goals scored against them in World Cups: Mexican goalkeepers have failed to block 103 points since the World Cup began in 1930. The only other members of this club are Germany, which has been scored on 128 times, and Brazil, with 105 goals scored against them.

These records are actually perverse reminder of the Mexican team’s many brushes with greatness: El Tri ranks with the likes of soccer superpowers like Argentina, Brazil and Germany in losses partly because all four teams routinely qualify for the the soccer’s top competition. But unlike those teams, Mexico has yet to be a World Cup champion. (For hardcore El Tri fans, the 2014 documentary “Ilusión Nacional,” or “National Hope” in English, documents the Mexican selection’s ups and downs over the years.)

The farthest Mexico has made it was to the quarter-finals in 1970 and 1986, also the only two years in which Mexico has hosted the World Cup. This year, Mexico ranked 22 out of the 32 teams to qualify for the World Cup, in the middle of the pack of group stage participants who failed to qualify for the round of 16. But they’ll have another chance in 2026: as a co-host of the next World Cup (along with the US and Canada), Mexico automatically qualifies.

Headless life-sized statue unearthed at ancient Maya city of Oxkintok

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Two images: on the left, a close up of the sculpture. On the right, the headless sculpture is seen laying in a pit where it was found, with several workers standing nearby.
The headless statue may represent a decapitated prisoner of war, the INAH director explained. (INAH)

An imposing, life-size sculpture of a headless human found during excavation work for the Maya Train has been temporarily nicknamed “Yum keeb” — the god of the phallus or fertility. 

The finding occurred in the state of Yucatán in the archaeological zone of Oxkintok, about 55 kilometers south of Mérida. The limestone statue without a head, hands, lower legs and feet measures 1.65 meters tall, or about 5 feet 5 inches.

“He was found lying on his back and represents the human figure,” archaeologist Luis Pantoja Díaz said during a media tour of the area on Wednesday. “We see the marked pectorals, the middle part that could be the hanging belly and the part of the member.”

He also said one could see buttocks (which are clearly visible in the photo) and some lines on the back, such as those that delineate shoulder blades (which are not).

While the newspaper La Jornada used the terms falo (phallus) and miembro (member) in describing the figure, another newspaper reported nothing along those lines, or about fertilidad (fertility), explaining instead that the sculpture is that of a warrior.

Its lack of a head “surely represents a warrior who was a prisoner in combat,” said Diego Prieto, general director of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH), as quoted by El Financiero.

Both sources said the sculpture was possibly used as an offering to the gods. It was found near a hieroglyph-laden staircase that was being cleaned and restored. Pantoja Díaz stressed that the figure is still being analyzed to determine its specific function, thus the “temporary” nickname. Even the statue’s status as the representation of a male is not 100% assured, he added.

Oxkintok was a Maya city that existed in the latter portion of the Mesomerican Classic Period (A.D. 250 to 900) and was the capital of the region before the emergence of Uxmal. Noted for its historical markers, such as pyramids and monuments, it is nestled among mountains that are covered in undergrowth — with lots of potential discoveries still to be made.

An infographic map showing the location of ancient cities and landmarks relative to the planned route of the Maya Train.
The statue was found in Oxkintok in western Yucatán, along Section 3 of the Maya Train. (INAH)

The Maya Train has been divided into seven sections and the INAH reportedly has completed its excavation work in sections 1-3 and 5, with No. 4 to be completed soon and sections 6 and 7 in the prospecting stage.

“We have uncovered information that will nourish the knowledge of the Mesoamerican Maya world for at least the next two decades,” said Prieto, the INAH director. “This work will undoubtedly impact the study of Maya cultures … over many, many years.”

Overall, according to INAH data through Dec. 6, findings on the entire Maya Train route include 31,306 structures including foundations, 1,541 ceramics and chiseled stones, 463 sets of bones or skeletons, 1,040 natural features such as caves and cenotes, 708,428 ceramic figures and fragments (from sections 1-4) and 576 pieces in the process of analysis.

The Maya Train, one of President Andrés Manuel Lopéz Obrador’s most ambitious projects, and one that has been challenged by various problems and issues, will pass through Tabasco, Chiapas, Campeche, Yucatán and Quintana Roo. Originally budgeted for nearly US $8 billion in 2020, it has now ballooned to up to US $20 billion, according to reports.

Last month, AMLO was quoted as saying that “the largest [current] railway project in the world” at 1,550 kilometers (963 miles) will be completed “in December 2023.”

With reports from La Jornada and El Financiero

UN human rights experts express concerns about Maya Train

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Heavy machinery clears a section of jungle to make way for the Maya Train.
Heavy machinery clears a section of jungle to make way for the Maya Train. Greenpeace / Paola Chiomante

Nine special rapporteurs and a U.N. human rights working group have warned that the Maya Train railroad could threaten the rights of local indigenous communities to land, natural resources and a healthy environment.

In a statement on Wednesday, the experts expressed concern that the planned railroad may be pushed forward without the free, prior and informed consent of indigenous groups in the region, and highlighted that activists opposed to the project have faced threats and attacks.

The experts also denounced the military’s growing involvement in the Maya Train’s construction and stressed that the categorization of the railroad as a national security project could further undermine social and environmental safeguards.

“This decision not only has the potential to allow human rights abuses to remain unaddressed, but also undermines the project’s purpose of bringing inclusive and sustainable social and economic development to the five Mexican states involved,” said Fernanda Hopenhaym, Chair of the UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights.

An indigenous Maya family poses in an outdoor setting. The mother and father stand, each holding a child, whle the grandmother remains seated.
The U.N. panel said that the construction of the train could violate the rights of indigenous Maya families. (Ryan Brown / UN Women)

The Maya Train is a US $10 billion public-private mega-project that was a key campaign pledge of President López Obrador. The planned railroad will form a 1,500-kilometer loop through the Yucatán Peninsula. It aims to promote tourism and development in the region by reducing transport times for passengers and freight.

However, the project has long been controversial. Although it received overwhelming approval in a 2019 public consultation, the vote was criticized for its low turnout and lack of prior information. Since then, numerous indigenous and environmental groups have come out in opposition to the railroad, leading to several legal challenges and temporary injunctions.

AMLO has already been forced to make several concessions to the project’s critics. In the latest alteration, AMLO announced on Monday that the railroad will now include a 72-kilometer stretch of elevated trackway through the jungle — a huge feat of engineering that raises questions as to whether he will be able to fulfill his promise to complete the railroad within a year.

Originally, the Maya Train was projected to run on an elevated line over the coastal highway between Cancun and Tulum. However, this was opposed by nearby hotel owners who feared the impact on their businesses. A revised route involved clearing a 68-mile (110 kilometer) swath of jungle to make way for the tracks. The latest proposal seeks to assuage environmentalists’ fears that laying tracks through the jungle risks crushing or contaminating the area’s network of cenotes, or sinkhole lakes.

The view down into a cenote, with water in the hole below and jungle growing above the rim.
Activists say the construction of the Maya Train threatens to contaminate the Yucatán Peninsula’s delicate network of cenotes. (Dorian D1 / Unsplash)

In his Monday press conference, AMLO explained that the new plan would involve elevating the railroad 2.5 meters above the ground, supported by thousands of 25-meter pilings sunk into the earth.

“This will have a minimal effect, because they sink the pilots where there isn’t anything,” AMLO said.

However, activists were swift to reject this claim, and to decry the deforestation that has already taken place.

“They do not have the technical ability to sink the columns where there are no caves, because they [the caves] are everywhere,” cave diver José Urbina told the AP.

He warned that construction of the railroad is already contaminating the aquifers that feed the underground lakes, putting the area’s delicate cave system at risk.

The unique geology of the cenotes is just one of the factors that gives the Yucatán Peninsula such huge environmental, cultural and historical significance. The region’s jungles contain a wealth of biodiversity, as well as numerous archaeological sites and indigenous Maya communities.

In their statement, the U.N. experts emphasized that a transparent and participatory consultation process on the railroad’s social and environmental impacts was necessary to ensure the rights of these communities were respected. They demanded the government conduct this process before taking any further decisions on the project, and urged investors to pressure for all due diligence to be carried out.

“Relevant companies and investors domiciled in Spain, the United States and China cannot turn a blind eye to the serious human rights problems related to the Maya Train project,” they said.

With reports from the United Nations and Associated Press

Annual inflation rate slowed to 7.8% in November

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Chicken and pork for sale at a Mexico City market in August 2022.
Though inflation has slowed, a 13.8% increase in meat prices continued to drive up the cost of agricultural products. (Graciela López Herrera / Cuartoscuro.com)

Headline inflation fell to its lowest level in six months in November, new data shows, but Mexico’s core index rose slightly to its highest level in more than 22 years.

National statistics agency INEGI reported Thursday that the annual headline inflation rate was 7.8% last month, down from 8.41% in October.

The rate is slightly lower than expected, and the lowest rate since May when consumer prices were up 7.65% on a year-over-year basis. However, it is still well above the central bank’s target range of 3% plus or minus one percentage point.

The Bank of México has lifted its benchmark interest rate by 75 basis points on four consecutive occasions in recent months as it seeks to combat high inflation. It is expected to announce another hike — perhaps a slightly more palatable one of 50 basis points — after its monetary policy meeting next Thursday. The bank’s key rate is currently set at a record high of 10%.

The core inflation rate, which strips out some volatile food and energy prices, remains a major concern for the central bank — and Mexican consumers trying to make ends meet.

INEGI reported that core inflation was 8.51% in November, up from 8.42% in October. The rate is the highest for any month since August 2000 when core inflation was 8.8%.

INEGI also reported that headline inflation increased 0.58% compared to October and core inflation rose 0.45% on a month-over-month basis.

Prices for agricultural products were up 8.9% on an annual basis in November, with that rate driven by a 13.8% rise in the cost of meat. Processed foods, tobacco and alcohol were 14.1% more expensive last month than a year earlier, while goods in general cost 11.3% more.

Services were 5.3% more expensive, while energy costs rose 3.2%, INEGI said.

President López Obrador predicted in July that inflation would begin to ease in October or November, a prediction that has been shown to be correct, at least for headline inflation.

This year’s headline inflation peak was 8.7% in August and September, the highest level in over two decades.

With reports from El Financiero