Monday, June 16, 2025

What’s your expat economic footprint and how much does it matter?

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expats in San Miguel de Allende
Expats in San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato's main square. News San Miguel

A good friend of mine lives in an area of Mexico whose modern iteration is basically a playground for tourists with U.S. dollars to spend (they’d moved there because of her husband’s non-tourism-related job). Having lived in both Xalapa and Mexico City previously, finding herself in that environment was a shock to the system.

It wasn’t simply that everyone automatically spoke to her in English without even trying to address her in Spanish, though that was indeed odd (as was the assumption when they went out that her Mexican husband was some kind of servant or guide to her).

Sticker shock was another one-two punch. As the mother of young children, she had hoped to find someone to help her at home at least a couple of days a week. Then she realized that most in-home helpers were insisting on more money — in dollars, no less — than she herself was able to earn with her online job that required a college degree to perform.

“Mexicans still make good-for-Mexico wages here, but how can they afford anything in this city when everything is priced for Americans?” she frequently asks.

That’s a question I have too.

The answer is, of course, that they live with less general financial stability as well as a lesser ability to enjoy some of the fancier amenities that one’s community has to offer. Sure, there are things that are always out of reach until you hit a certain income level. But what happens to a society when those things are out of reach by 100 meters instead of just 10?

What happens when people far richer than you can ever even hope to suddenly arrive in droves to make your place their own?

In Mexico, this usually plays out as foreigners arriving at a new “it” place, but of course, it’s not the only way that this happens. It’s simply a more complicated way, piling on cultural and linguistic issues atop regular economic ones.

It’s comparable to the phenomena we’re witnessing in the U.S., in which highly paid remote workers move to places like Spokane, Washington, thus rapidly increasing the cost of living in those places, including housing prices.

It’s what many of us have done here. I myself work for “U.S. wages” that would keep me under the poverty line and forever unstable in my home country, but they stretch well enough here that I can afford a comfortable, middle-class lifestyle in Mexico.

Still, the presence of foreigners with foreign currency and (often) the best intentions certainly shuffles things around in the local economy a bit once a certain number arrive.

Some well-off immigrants arrive to truly immerse themselves in the culture and language and live the way locals do; they consciously try to blend in and not make waves. Others come without much intention of integrating at all; they come to make their money stretch further, similar to a move someone might make from San Francisco to Oklahoma City.

Exploring Mexico and integrating themselves are priorities much further down the list.

Immigrants everywhere face this tension: to what extent do you try to simply blend in with your new environment and to what extent do you try to preserve (and perhaps impose) the things and values you’re used to?

Tensions regarding this question have been increasing for a while now — please take the Mexico News Daily poll if you haven’t yet! — many of them centering around the ethics of money and what responsibility we as generally rich immigrants have to our host communities.

I know some will recoil at the thought of being considered rich, but an income of US $2,700 a month or more puts you in the top 10% of earners in Mexico. Whether that allows you to live like a king or not depends on where you live.

Two recent fights in a local group that my tourist-city friend told me about were about pay for domestic help and tipping.

On one side were well-meaning foreigners who insisted that if one could afford to pay the same price as in the United States for comparable service and didn’t, it was stingy and criminal, even if that price was more than the going rate — end of story.

On the other side were other well-meaning foreigners, most of whom had integrated to some degree into their Mexican communities. Those who lived in touristy areas often pointed out that when such high payments came to be expected in a community, then the average citizen was priced out of accessing those services — kind of like my friend looking for domestic help.

The battles were fierce, and plenty of insults and ugly words were exchanged.

Though I wasn’t part of it, it’s something that I think about a lot: what’s my responsibility to pay a little more if I can? I already do, I suppose, although not to the extremes promoted in that conversation.

Whether we want to affect a local economy or not isn’t the point; we simply do.

San Franciscans who move to a new, cheaper city aren’t trying to raise the cost of living of their new communities; it just happens when there’s more money to be spent.

So where does that leave us? Is there a way to be generous without drastically changing a local economy? One of us doesn’t make that much of a difference. But what happens when all our little drops become a wave that pushes other people further from accessing what we ourselves enjoy?

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

Snap, crackle, pop — it’s amaranth!

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amaranth
The possibilities for using this nutritious superfood are almost endless.

Like many other so-called superfoods we’re just “discovering,” amaranth has a long and storied history.

The Aztecs cultivated it thousands of years ago on the same scale as maize, and it was considered one of their prime sources of protein and energy as well as an integral part of spiritual and seasonal rituals. In fact, it was so important to their civilization and health that the Spanish outlawed the cultivation and consumption of it. (Tsss …)

Thankfully, once they were gone, amaranth popped up its pretty head again.

You’ve undoubtedly seen alegrías — bars of amaranth candy — in markets and candy shops throughout Mexico. This traditional sweet uses a simple syrup to bind the amaranth seeds and sometimes other nuts and seeds into a tasty energy bar, full of protein and, surprisingly, vitamin C. It’s been shown to lower cholesterol and is naturally gluten-free.

It’s also fun to eat and work with; could that be why the candy is called alegría, the Spanish word for happiness? And it’s laughably inexpensive: I bought a quarter-kilogram of amaranth to test some of the recipes for this story — about eight cups — for a whopping 20 pesos.

amaranth-crusted tuna steaks
Add a satisfying, crunchy mouth-feel to seared tuna steaks with an amaranth crust.

The bushy, easy-to-grow plants have big, beautiful upright catkins of flowers that range from green to deep red and everything in between. (They’re beautiful in vases too!) It’s from those flowers that the tiny whitish-beige seeds are harvested. The leaves of some amaranth varieties are also edible and can be cooked like chard or spinach in soups and stews.

With more than 50 types of amaranth, the flowers come in a dazzling array of shapes and colors, and most likely, you’ve seen some of them like the tiny, purply globe amaranth, the deep red “love lies bleeding” variety or the trailing foxtail in flower stores and supermarket arrangements.

The possibilities for using amaranth — and reaping its benefits — are almost endless. Mix into any breading, for fish, chicken, veggies, burgers, whatever.

Add amaranth to granola, muffins, cookies and breads as well as tortillas, empanadas, salads and uncooked “energy bite”-style snacks. Flavor-wise, it’s almost invisible, but the distinctive pop and crunch announce its presence delightfully. Cooked in stock, as in the polenta recipe below, amaranth absorbs the flavor and provides a perfect base for other more flavorful ingredients.

Alegría (Amaranth Bars)

  • ½ cup amaranth seeds
  • ¼ cup pumpkin seeds
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 1 Tbsp. honey or molasses

Line a 9×9-inch pan with parchment; set aside. Heat a medium pot over medium-high heat. Add 1 Tbsp. amaranth to the hot pot; cover with lid and shake pot constantly as grains pop. (The pot is hot enough if the seeds begin popping within a few seconds. If it takes longer, it’s not hot enough and seeds will burn before popping.)

Once popping slows, remove lid and pour popped seeds into large bowl.  Repeat popping process 1 Tbsp. at a time until you’ve popped all the amaranth. Add pumpkin seeds to popped amaranth.

Heat sugar in a deep pot over medium heat. As sugar slowly melts, add honey/molasses; stir to mix.

Remove from heat. Immediately add popped amaranth and pumpkin seeds. Mix well. Quickly transfer to prepared pan and spread evenly with a spatula. Cool slightly, then cut in squares. Cool before serving.

Chocolate Alegría    

  • ½ cup amaranth
  • 3 Tbsp. honey, heated so it’s pourable
  • 2 Tbsp. cocoa powder
  • ½ tsp. vanilla extract
  • Pinch salt
  • 1/3 cup chocolate chips

Line 9×9-inch pan with parchment. Pop amaranth as described in Alegría recipe above.

Stir honey, cocoa, salt and vanilla in a cup or small bowl until smooth; pour over popped amaranth. Add chocolate chips. Stir well until evenly coated. Scoop mixture into prepared pan, pressing evenly and firmly. Cut into squares. Remove from pan and store in airtight container.

Amaranth-Crusted Tuna

  • 4 tuna steaks, about 1 inch thick
  • ¼ cup toasted sesame seeds
  • ¼ cup soy sauce
  • 3 Tbsp. rice vinegar
  • ½ cup amaranth
  • 1 Tbsp. black sesame seeds
  • 3-4 Tbsp. olive oil
  • Salt and pepper

Mix soy sauce, rice vinegar and toasted sesame seeds; set aside. Combine amaranth and black sesame seeds on a plate.

Season tuna fillets with salt and pepper; then press both sides of each fillet into sesame/amaranth mixture. Heat oil till hot. Sear tuna 1–3 minutes on each sides. Bathe in sauce and serve.

tabouli
Amaranth makes a seamless, protein-filled substitute for bulgar wheat in tabouli.

Amaranth Tabouli

  • 1 cup cooked or popped* amaranth, cooled
  • 1 cup minced curly parsley
  •  ½ cup diced red onion
  • 1 tomato, diced
  • Salt to taste
  • 1 lemon or 2 limes, juiced
  • ¼ cup olive oil

*See Alegría recipe for popping directions

In large bowl, mix all ingredients. Refrigerate at least 30 minutes to blend flavors.

Amaranth Porridge

  • 1 cup amaranth
  • 2 cups water
  • Pinch salt

Boil water; stir in amaranth and salt. Turn heat to low, cover and cook 25 minutes, stirring occasionally. When water is absorbed, remove from heat.

Serve like any hot cereal with fruit, nuts, etc.

Popped Amaranth Cereal

  • 3 Tbsp. amaranth

Pop amaranth as directed in Alegría recipe above. Eat with milk, fruit, nuts, etc. like any other cold cereal.

 Amaranth Polenta

  • 3 cups chicken stock
  • 1 cup amaranth
  • 4 Tbsp. butter
  • ½ cup grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese, plus more for serving
  • Salt and pepper
  • 2 Tbsp. finely chopped parsley

In saucepan, bring stock to boil. Whisk in amaranth, reduce heat to low and cover. Simmer 25 minutes, stirring occasionally, until liquid is absorbed and amaranth is tender.

Remove from heat, stir in butter and cheese; season to taste with salt and pepper. Garnish with additional cheese and parsley.

Energy Bites

  • ½ cup uncooked oats
  • ¼ cup shredded unsweetened coconut
  • ¼ cup natural peanut butter
  • 2 Tbsp. chocolate chips
  • 2 Tbsp. honey
  • ½ Tbsp. chia seeds
  • ¼ tsp. vanilla
  • 1 cup amaranth

Pour amaranth onto a shallow plate. Combine remaining ingredients; roll into small balls, wetting hands with warm water if needed. Roll in amaranth to coat. Refrigerate one hour to set.

amaranth energy bar
This protein-filled energy bar is a snap to make!

Tuna, Avocado & Amaranth Ceviche

  • ½ cup popped amaranth (see Alegría recipe above)
  • 1 tomato, chopped
  • 1 Tbsp. chopped parsley
  • 1 Tbsp. chopped mint
  • ½ red onion, minced
  • 2 Tbsp. olive oil
  • 1 Tbsp. lime juice
  • 1 avocado, halved
  • 1 tuna filet, cubed
  • Salt and pepper to taste

In large bowl, mix 3 Tbsp. amaranth, parsley, mint, onion, tomatoes and tuna. Add lemon juice, olive oil, salt and pepper.

Pour remaining amaranth onto a plate; coat back sides of avocado halves. Stuff avocados with tuna mixture; sprinkle with amaranth.

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

War in Europe and a tour of the palace: the week at the morning press conferences

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President López Obrador speaks at his Friday morning press conference in Colima.
President López Obrador speaks at his Friday morning press conference in Colima. Presidencia de la República

Itchy feet AMLO, known more formally as President López Obrador, was in four states in as many days on a long weekend tour. He presented the morning press conferences from Baja California and Chihuahua on Thursday and Friday before heading to Coahuila for Armed Forces Day on Saturday and then down to a notoriously violent part of Guerrero on Sunday. He awoke to the splendor of Mexico City’s National Palace on Monday.

Monday

Security Minister Rosa Icela Rodríguez was in place for the monthly security update. She said federal crimes were down more than 41% in January compared to when the administration started, the lowest they had been in seven years.

She added that January recorded the lowest number of homicides for any month in five years, 14.4% lower in annual terms.

Her deputy, Ricardo Mejía Berdeja, listed some recent high profile catches. Among them were Don Carlos in Jalisco, El Pitufo (The Smurf) in Querétaro, El Johnny in Mexico City, El Tartas (Cakes) in Zacatecas and last but not least, a human trafficker known as the Mujer Maravilla (Wonder Woman).

Later in the conference, a journalist informed the president of the investigation into his son, José Ramón López Beltrán, who is living a not entirely austere lifestyle in Texas.

AMLO took the news lightly. “I have no information … but in the event that the investigation is opened, there’s no problem. We all have to be subject to authority. He who owes nothing, fears nothing,” he said.

Tuesday

The Deputy Health Minister, Hugo López-Gatell, reported on the COVID pandemic.

“Fortunately we have two consecutive weeks of reduction in deaths … 32 states with a drastic reduction of the epidemic, it’s practically finished,” López-Gatell said.

Deputy Health Secretary Hugo López-Gatell painted a rosy picture of the pandemic's course on Tuesday.
Deputy Health Minister Hugo López-Gatell painted a rosy picture of the pandemic’s course on Tuesday. Presidencia de la República

On the press, the president said the lack of uproar about Julian Assange, the jailed investigative journalist, was a sign of the failings of the fourth estate.

“All those journalists, none demand the freedom of Assange from WikiLeaks, who’s imprisoned. None, because strictly speaking they are not journalists, they do not confront oppressive power, they do not confront those who fight against oppression,” AMLO said.

On his living arrangements, he assured viewers that his setup was relatively austere, in presidential terms: “Yes, it is a palace, but I live in an apartment that [former presidents] Calderón and Peña kept for leisure.”

To prove it, he invited journalists to tour the modest abode.

Wednesday

AMLO remembered Francisco I. Madero on Wednesday. The revolutionary and former president was assassinated on February 23, 109 years previously. Mexico’s current president blamed the elites of the day: “They showed joy for those abominable acts,” he said.

After a short warning about dangerous cancer drugs, Elizabeth García Vilchis whizzed through the fake news. She said a concession hadn’t been paid near the Maya Train project, the president’s son was clean and the government’s figures on airport construction costs were correct.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken had expressed concern about the killings of journalists. AMLO was swift in response: “I think he doesn’t know, he’s not well informed about this situation because there are no state crimes anymore,” he said.

The president added that Austria were firmly in his bad books for not returning a historical artifact. The president’s wife had a reportedly “very unpleasant” meeting with Austrian authorities about the headdress of Moctezuma, the last Aztec emperor.

As promised, the president finished with a tour of the National Palace, accompanied by journalists.

Thursday

Russia launched a full scale invasion of Ukraine on Thursday and the president called for a peaceful resolution.

A group of Ukrainian citizens protested outside the Russian embassy in Mexico City on Thursday.
A group of Ukrainian citizens protested outside the Russian Embassy in Mexico City on Thursday.

“In terms of foreign policy we are going to continue to … promote dialogue. No use of force, no invasion. We are not in favor of any war. Mexico is a country that has always spoken out for peace and for the peaceful settlement of disputes,” he said.

He added that the government and the peso were prepared for volatile fuel markets due to the conflict.

A journalist from Sonora mentioned a statement by the head of the Supreme Court, Arturo Zaldívar, who claimed there was a cover-up when a fire killed 49 children at a kindergarten in Hermosillo in 2009.

“I believe him, because he is a righteous person. I consider him a person of integrity,” the president said.

AMLO then pointed directly to the two last presidents, accusing them of complicity in reaction to tragedies.

“What moral authority can a president have who orders that such regrettable events … be hidden? … There’s no way that president Calderón gave the order to burn the nursery, or that president Peña gave the order to disappear the young people [in Ayotzinapa] … But at the same time, if they didn’t order those inhuman acts … then why cover them up?”

Friday

The president was on volcanic ground on Friday in Colima city.

Governor Indira Vizcaíno, who interrupted more than 70 years of Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) power in June’s elections, thanked the president for his visit on some 10 occasions.

The diminutive state has been plagued by violence in recent years, including a recent wave of murders amid fighting between cartels.

Defense Minister Luis Cresencio Sandoval confirmed the worst: the state was number one for property theft and homicides. He added that 200 million pesos (US $9.8 million) was going to be spent on the Colima prison that recently saw a riot that killed at least eight inmates.

On the situation in Ukraine, the president reiterated his opposition to invasions. But for AMLO, it was personal: “The military invasions that we have suffered. The Spaniards invaded us and imposed a colonial system that dominated us for three centuries … the French invaded us twice … then, the Americans invaded us. First, they promoted the separation of Texas and then they invaded us … and took away half of our territory. Then the French invaded us again,” the Tabascan lamented, shortly before striding away to attend to the nation.

Mexico News Daily

Don’t miss your last chance to see Petatán’s awe-inspiring pelican show

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Pelicans at Petatan
With a little hop, a pelican takes flight over Lake Chapala.

Antes de petatearte, hay que ir a Petatán,” I was once told by an inhabitant of that small town tucked away at Lake Chapala’s eastern end in Michoacán.

This means “Before they roll you up in a petate, you must visit Petatán,” referring to the pre-Hispanic custom of rolling up a cadaver for burial in a thin sleeping mat (petate) made of reeds that grow along the shores of most Mexican lakes.

I wholeheartedly agree with this saying because little Petatán, Michoacán, offers visitors an experience quite unlike any other each year: the arrival of 10,000–20,000 American white pelicans who migrate south from Canada.

The arrival of the monarch butterflies in Michoacán is something marvelous, but the sight and sound of 10,000 huge, white birds rising into the air all at once here is truly a unique spectacle.

Ana Manso, the mayor of nearby Cojumatlán de Régules, says, “Everyone knows the phenomenon of the monarch butterfly, but the pelicans are a bit forgotten.”

Pelicans at Petatan
A pelican in Petatán, Michoacán, prepares to land.

Mayor Manso is reminding the world that March is your last month to see what she and all the local people refer to as los pelícanos borregones, “the flying white sheep.”

They have this moniker not only because of their habit of doing everything together but also because Pelecanus erythrorhynchos is really big — the largest flying bird in Mexico.

American white pelicans live and breed at several Canadian lakes. Every year, they make a nearly 4,000-kilometer journey south to their favorite haunts in the United States, Mexico and Central America, and for decades, Lake Chapala has been among their favorite places to winter.

Why? No doubt because of the huge quantities of fish scraps dumped into the lake at the end of every workday by several filleting maquiladoras (factories) that process fish imported from Guanajuato and México state.

Several hours before feeding time, the pelicans begin to make their way toward Petatán from all over Lake Chapala. They appear in the distance like white, black-fringed ribbons in the sky.

Despite their weight (up to seven kilos), their flight is utterly graceful and they love soaring inches above the water for long distances. Not quite so graceful is their landing technique, which involves sticking their feet out straight in front of them as they hit the water: a braking maneuver as comical as it is effective.

fish processing plant workers, Petatan, Michoacan
Local workers fillet great quantities of fish, and the pelicans get the scraps.

The workers of Petatán and Cojumatlán de Régules shovel truckloads of stripped fish into the water every day, and thousands of pelicans show up for the feast. One might expect the result to be an absolute madhouse of squabbling birds and flying feathers. Instead, they patiently wait their turn in line like Englishmen in a bus queue.

This sounds unbelievable, but as I observed the feeding procedure, I saw that each bird eats two fish — neither more nor less — and then instantly turns around and leaves. This process makes for maximum buffet-style efficiency except for the occasional interruption when a motorboat appears.

The flying sheep then become a flying carpet that instantly rises straight into the air with an audible whoosh, filling the sky with thousands of birds. It’s a sound and sight you’ll never forget!

This mass pelican feed takes place between 4 p.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Saturday. Amazingly, they don’t show up on Sundays, when the maquiladoras are closed.

“How do they know it’s Sunday?” I asked one of the men shoveling fish into the lake.

No tengo ni idea,” was the reply, but when I put the same question to naturalist-photographer Jesús Moreno, he gave me an odd look.

Pelicans at Petatan
Like Englishmen in a queue, the pelicans wait their turn, take fish and move aside.

“Why do you suppose they can’t count?” he asked. “They have a better sense of the passage of time, of the sequence of days and nights, than you do.”

So you now have an even more compelling reason to go see the real snowbirds in Petatán: not only are they beautiful, they are smart as well.

The American white pelican’s wingspan, which can reach as long as three meters (9.8 feet) is the second largest of any North American bird after the California condor, according to the United States Fish and Wildlife Service. These huge creatures can measure up to 1.75 meters (5.7 feet) in length. When no fish filleters are around to give them a free lunch, they work cooperatively to find food.

Unlike their brown cousins who employ kamikaze-like dives to catch fish, white pelicans coordinate their swimming to drive schooling fish toward the shallows. Once the fish are corralled, the pelicans easily scoop them up in their massive beaks.

Says Tony Burton, who wrote a must-have guide to the state of Jalisco: “It is great fun watching them fan out into a semicircle and then slowly close in on lunch, dipping their cavernous beaks into the water at the same time in perfect synchronicity. There is a clear lesson here for us: working together is far more efficient than working independently.”

Another curious thing about these pelicans: they have no call or song but instead have developed complex gestures to communicate.

Pelicans at Petatan
Feeding time’s over.

As chicks, however, they squawk inside the egg, expressing discomfort if conditions are too hot or cold. After hatching, they crawl within two weeks and walk by three. The moment they hit the water they can swim.

As for flying, they start out running about while flapping their wings, and then, at around 10 weeks, they take to the air.

From Guadalajara, the most restful and picturesque road to Petatán is Highway 15, a drive of little more than two hours.

Since the pelicans eat between 4 p.m. and 5 p.m., you might end up driving home in the dark, so I suggest instead you spend the night at Igloo Kokolo, located just a half hour from Petatán.

You might find sleeping in their super-adobe “igloo” almost as unique as encountering 10,000 pelicans. And with its near-perfect Airbnb rating of 4.97 stars, you can expect a great night’s sleep.

If you’d rather not drive at all, owner Salvador “Chava” Montaño assures me that he can arrange for transportation not only to and from Petatán but also between Guadalajara and Igloo Kokolo, given a bit of lead time. Call him from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. at 376-690-0915 or message him at 331-835-8026 or 331-903-8629 — and, yes, he speaks English!

Igloo Kokolo Airbnb
Igloo Kokolo, an Airbnb and showcase for ecological solutions 30 minutes from Petatán, makes for a unique overnight stay.

Don’t wait too long! The pelicans leave around the beginning of April, but it could be a lot sooner. Contrary to what you would expect, say Petatán residents, the pelicans eat little the day before their departure.

Early the next morning at sunrise, after a winter of fun in the sun and free meals, they spiral up into the air in long, orderly queues of 500 or so and start their 3,876-kilometer journey back to British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario and Manitoba.

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.

 

Pelicans at Petatan
Pelicans know that humans in Petatán are happy to feed them.

 

Pelicans at Petatan
A boat’s arrival sends the pelicans into the sky.

 

Pelicans at Petatan
Pelicans make good partners in contemplation.

 

Pelicans at Petatan
And into the air they go…

 

feeding pelicans at Petatan
If you want to feed the pelicans, you must bring your own bag.

 

Pelicans at Petatan
This many birds in one place should make quite a racket, but American white pelicans use gestures to communicate.

Military flight to repatriate Mexicans fleeing Ukraine

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Mexican citizens board a bus in Ivano-Frankivsk, Ukraine on Friday, bound for Siret, Romania.
Mexican citizens board a bus in Ivano-Frankivsk, Ukraine, on Friday, bound for Siret, Romania. Twitter @m_ebrard

The Mexican Air Force will fly to Romania to pick up Mexicans who have fled Ukraine and wish to return to Mexico, Foreign Affairs Minister Marcelo Ebrard announced Friday.

He said on Twitter that President López Obrador had ordered a special flight to transport families who are being evacuated from Ukraine and wish to be repatriated.

“I am grateful for the support of [Defense] Minister Luis Cresencio Sandoval,” added Ebrard, who said Thursday that Mexico “vigorously condemns Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

A group of 22 Mexicans left the western Ukraine city of Ivano-Frankivsk on Friday to travel 190 kilometers south to the Romanian city of Siret.

“Guillermo Ordorica, our ambassador in Romania, tells me he’s already in Siret, on the border with Ukraine, to wait for and support the first 22 Mexicans who will arrive with the support of the protection protocol organized in conjunction with Olga García Guillén, [Mexican] ambassador in Ukraine,” Ebrard said on Twitter late Friday morning.

The foreign minister later posted a video showing Odorica thanking Romanian Prime Minister Nicolae Ciucă for his support.

Romania’s ambassador to Mexico said on Twitter that Mexicans will always be welcome in Romania.

“The Romanian government is working to welcome people of all nationalities who are fleeing this unjust and immoral war,” Mariuz Lazurca wrote.

In another Twitter post, Ebrard said that Ambassador García had informed him that she and other diplomatic staff were unable to enter the Mexican Embassy in Kyiv because there was an explosion in an adjoining building.

He said she was working from her residence and acknowledged her “extraordinary courage” in continuing to provide assistance to Mexicans in the country.

A 36-year-old Tamaulipas man who lives in Kyiv with his wife told the newspaper El País they were having trouble getting out of the Ukrainian capital.

Ivette Rossano, left, and Alex Ricalday, right, are two of roughly 200 Mexicans in Ukraine who had to weigh whether to stay or go in light of the Russian invasion.
Ivette Rossano, left, and Alex Ricalday, right, are two of more than 200 Mexicans in Ukraine who had to weigh whether to stay or go in light of the Russian invasion.

“We’ve been trying to leave Kyiv for days, my wife is six months pregnant,” Alex Ricalday said Wednesday. “… [But] there are no train tickets, we can’t find flights on any airline. … We thought we would have more time,” he said.

Ricalday said he finally managed to reserve a rental car and planned to drive to Lviv before crossing the border to Poland.

A 41-year-old Chihuahua woman told El País that she was hunkering down in Kyiv with her husband and nine-year-old step-son, who don’t have travel documents to leave the country.

“For me this is something completely new,” Ivette Rossano said. “I’m Mexican and although we have some conflicts with the cartels I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t afraid.”

More than 200 Mexicans who live in Ukraine registered their details with the Mexican Embassy, and at least 50 requested assistance to leave the country.

In addition to Romania and Poland, people fleeing Ukraine are also heading to Hungary and Slovakia. All four countries belong to the North American Treaty Organization, or NATO, and their security is thus guaranteed by the other member nations.

With reports from Sin Embargo, El Universal and El País

Navy assumes responsibility for security at Mexico City airport

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Marines on duty at the Mexico City International Airport.
Marines on duty at the Mexico City International Airport. SEMAR

The navy has taken over responsibility for security at the Mexico City International Airport (AICM), assuming the work previously carried out by the National Guard.

The takeover is the start of a new trend: President López Obrador announced Friday that the military will assume responsibility for security at all airports across Mexico.

The Navy Ministry (SEMAR) announced in a statement Tuesday that 1,500 marines would collaborate with tax, customs and immigration authorities to carry out “surveillance, inspection, support and control” operations in the airport to counteract the illegal trafficking of weapons, drugs, cash, illicit merchandise and people as well as theft of luggage and other belongings.

It said that López Obrador ordered the navy to cooperate with other authorities to guarantee security at the airport, Mexico’s busiest.

SEMAR also said that the National Immigration Institute and the Federal Civil Aviation Agency had trained 69 marines to act as airport commanders and immigration officials.

The president announced the military's new airport security responsibilities at his Friday morning press conference in Colima.
The president announced the military’s new airport security responsibilities at his Friday morning press conference in Colima. Presidencia de la República

The navy is now responsible for security in all areas of the AICM, including both terminals and outside areas. SEMAR said that 23 vehicles and 16 dogs would support the marines’ security work.

“We have to cover the whole airport, … we can’t leave any space without personnel. We even have to check the bathrooms,” a navy captain told his subordinates in Terminal 1 earlier this week, according to Reforma.

One woman who works as an airport security guard for a private security company told the newspaper that the marines were watching over them.

“They stand behind you, they’re scary; sometimes they come with a trained dog, … they watch our inspection process and sometimes suggest that we check a bag or suitcase; they’re very arrogant,” she said.

“They don’t talk much. They arrived, placed themselves over there at the doors and just watch us. It’s uncomfortable,” a customs agent said.

A navy commander told Reforma that the navy was deployed to the AICM because airport employees as well as Mexico City and federal officials are under investigation for smuggling drugs, weapons and cash through the airport.

A marine supervises airport staff at a screening area.
A marine supervises airport staff at a screening area. SEMAR

Reforma reported that failures in security operations at the airport while it was under the control of the National Guard were also a factor in the decision to put the navy in charge. For instance, two men were shot outside Terminal 2 last October.

Asked about the deployment at his regular news conference on Friday, López Obrador told reporters  that security will be the responsibility of either the navy or the army at all airports in Mexico.

The navy will be deployed to some airports and the army will be dispatched to others “to guarantee there’s no corruption in customs and that passengers are treated well,” he said.

The National Guard was slated to oversee the security work of 1,610 military police at the Felipe Ángeles International Airport, which will open north of Mexico City next month, but the president’s remarks appear to place that plan in doubt.

The deployment of the military to the nation’s airports will add to López Obrador’s already heavy reliance on the armed forces.

Even though he pledged to remove soldiers and marines from the streets, López Obrador has perpetuated the militarization of public security, assigning the construction of major infrastructure projects, including the new Mexico City airport, to the army and putting the military in charge of the nation’s ports and customs offices.

In addition, the military has played a role in the distribution of COVID-19 vaccines, nurtured saplings for the government’s tree-planting employment program and delivered textbooks, among other nontraditional tasks.

López Obrador has defended his reliance on the armed forces, casting the military as an honest institution and an essential ally in the fight against corruption.

With reports from El País, Reforma and El Universal

Mexican-made nano robots will be sent to explore the moon this year

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An illustration of a nano robot on the lunar surface.
An illustration of a nano robot on the lunar surface.

Five tiny robots developed by researchers at the National Autonomous University (UNAM) will depart for the moon in June to carry out a range of unprecedented lunar measurements.

Weighing less than 60 grams each and with a diameter of just 12 centimeters, the two-wheeled, disc-shaped nano robots will travel more than 380,000 kilometers to the moon on a rocket supplied by Astrobotic Technology of the United States.

The United Launch Alliance Vulcan rocket would be the first U.S. spacecraft to land on the moon in almost half a century.

During their month-long mission, the Mexican made and designed robots will take unprecedented lunar plasma temperature, electromagnetic and regolith particle size measurements, according to an article published in the UNAM gazette in early February.

Gustavo Medina Tanco, a UNAM scientist who is leading the project, told the news agency Reuters that the robots – made from stainless steel, titanium and space-grade aluminum and equipped to collect lunar minerals – will work together like a swarm of bees once they are on the moon, communicating with each other as well as a command center on Earth.

For that reason, the endeavor is called the Colmena, or Beehive, Project. Some 200 engineering, math, physics and chemistry students have contributed to the project, which began almost four years ago, while the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Mexican Space Agency and the state of Hidalgo have also collaborated.

“This is a small mission where we’ll test the concept, and afterwards we’ll undertake other missions, first to the moon and then on to asteroids,” Medina told Reuters.

“No one has done this, nobody, not just in Mexico,” he said. “We can make a difference in the technology and for international cooperation that can then lead to important joint ventures to study the minerals or undertake other scientific exploration.”

With reports from Reuters 

Journalist murdered in Sonora is the sixth to die this year

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Jorge Camero
Jorge Camero published a news site in Empalme.

Jorge “El Choche” Camero, founder of the Sonora news site El Informativo, was murdered Thursday night while working out at a gym in the city of Empalme. The 28-year-old is the sixth practicing journalist murdered this year, a list that doesn’t include a former television host in Mexico City and the founder of a now-defunct Tijuana news portal who were also killed.

Armed men on motorcycles arrived at the Spartan gym around 8 p.m. and shot Camero at least three times. When Red Cross paramedics arrived at the scene, he was already dead.

The motive for Camero’s murder remains up in the air, and may be unrelated to his journalistic work. Less than two weeks before his death, he had quit his job as personal secretary to Luis Fuentes, the mayor of Empalme, after government colleagues accused Camero of being involved in criminal activity. The state Attorney General’s Office noted that in addition to his colleague’s allegations, he was a person of interest in a murder investigation.

It was only after leaving government employment earlier this month that Camero returned to journalism and El Informativo, a news page he had founded in 2018  to cover Empalme and nearby areas, including Guaymas.

Camero is the second person associated with the Empalme municipal government to be murdered this year. Daniel Palafox, an Empalme IT worker, disappeared in January and was found dead, with signs of torture, in early February.

After Palafox’s death, a video of an apparent interrogation circulated on social media in which he confessed to helping an armed branch of the Sinaloa Cartel install internet and video surveillance systems. In the video, Palafox also mentioned a man named Jorge who went by “El Choche,” apparently a media worker employed by the same band of criminals, and two online news portals, Sonora Informativo and El Informativo.

Camero started his career with XEPS, a radio broadcasting group he founded in Empalme, before working at a station in Guaymas. He also owned a publicity and vehicle-mounted loudspeaker advertising company.

With reports from El Universal and Infobae

Another student rescued from cartel recruitment through online video game

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Free Fire screenshot
Criminals recruited the girl via the online multiplayer video game Free Fire, which can be played for free on a cell phone.

Another young person has been rescued from a cartel’s most recent recruitment strategy: befriending children and adolescents through online video games, then luring them away from home based on their relationship with the kidnapper or with promises of work.

This time, the victim was a young woman from the municipality of Santa Cruz Xoxocotlán in the Oaxaca city urban area. Like previous targets, her kidnapper befriended her through Free Fire, a popular online-only shooter video game.

The man contacted her through the game and gained her trust over an extended period, even visiting her in Oaxaca. He convinced her to meet him in México state, where he took her to Naucalpan, a municipality just outside Mexico City. From there, he planned to take her north, where she would join a criminal group.

An investigation coordinated by the attorney generals’ offices of Oaxaca (FGEO) and México state (FGJEM) foiled the plan and located her within 24 hours.

Her family reported her missing on Monday after she claimed to be going out with friends but did not return home. Initial investigations quickly uncovered the connection she had formed online with her kidnapper, the FGEO said in a statement.

In coordination with México state law enforcement, the FGEO located the woman on Tuesday afternoon and turned her over to officials from her home state who continued investigating the incident while coordinating her return to her family.

It is the third known case of criminal groups recruiting young people through digital platforms. Two weeks ago, a 12-year-old boy from Tlaxiaco, Oaxaca, was kidnapped by a presumed cartel recruiter he met online. The other incident involved a group of boys kidnapped from Tlacolula de Matamoros, Oaxaca. All the children were found and returned home safely.

All three cases involved the Free Fire video game. The federal government has also warned parents to beware of recruitment efforts through other violent online video games, including Grand Theft Auto V, Gears of War and Call of Duty.

With reports from Milenio and El Universal

More than 10,000 forced from their homes by gang violence in Jerez, Zacatecas

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Parral de las Huertas
Parral de las Huertas, one of the Zacatecas communities from which residents have fled.

More than 10,000 residents of Jerez, Zacatecas, have been displaced due to a turf war between the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) and the Sinaloa Cartel, according to municipal authorities.

Jerez government secretary Marco Antonio Vargas said people have been forced from their homes in 18 communities in the municipality, located west of Zacatecas city.

“They are communities in the sierra area adjacent to two municipalities with an insecurity problem – Fresnillo and Valparaíso,” he said.

Among the communities that have become virtual ghost towns are Palmas Altas, Ermita de los Correa, Sarabia and Parral de las Huertas.

Most of the displaced people are now living in the homes of friends or relatives in the town of Jerez or Zacatecas city, although some have traveled to the northern border to seek asylum in the United States.

The newspaper Milenio reported that the 33-kilometer road between Jerez and Palmas Altas is littered with spent bullet casings, remnants of battles between Mexico’s two most powerful cartels.

The facades of some of the houses in Palmas Altas are emblazoned with threatening messages from the feuding criminal organizations.

“It’s an issue that doesn’t allow us to be at ease,” Vargas said, referring to the bloody turf war that made Zacatecas Mexico’s most violent state last year in terms of homicides per capita.

“Our objective … [is] for people to be able to return to their homes and communities. We need the support of the Mexican army and National Guard,” he said.

One former Palmas Altas resident told Milenio that his father died of grief a year ago after his brother was abducted and presumably killed. He said that numerous people were kidnapped in the small town and most were never seen again. Those who did return had had their ears mutilated, he said.

The man, a farmer who wasn’t identified for security reasons, was the last Palmas Altas resident to abandon the town, Milenio said. He is now trying to start a new life in Jerez but hasn’t been able to find a job.

Homicides have increased over the past six months in Zacatecas despite additional efforts by the federal government to bring insecurity under control. The army this week moved at least 10 armored all-terrain vehicles into the state, a sign that the authorities intend to further ramp up their fight against organized crime.

With reports from Milenio