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Chinese company to build modular capsule homes in Nuevo León

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vessel modular home
One of the models of the modular homes that will be built in Pesquería.

Issued with a promise of 2,000 to 3,000 new jobs, there was an announcement Wednesday that a Chinese company is going to open a plant in Nuevo León to construct modular houses.

The announcement was made on the social media networks of Simón Levy, a former deputy minister in Mexico’s Ministry of Tourism and the vice president of operations for Vessel México. Vessel will invest US $300 million in the project, according to Levy, and is a brand of the Chinese company Weisu, according to the newspaper El Financiero.

“I want to share that we have made the decision that the first Vessel plant in Mexico will be in Nuevo León,” Levy wrote, adding that it will be in the municipality of Pesquería, 33 kilometers from the state capital of Monterrey. “It will be an investment of more than $300 million to transform housing in our country.”

He said the first stage of the project would generate about 2,000 jobs, and in a second phase, the number could reach 3,000. He also said Mérida, Yucatán, was first considered as the site for the plant, but Nuevo León proved to be a better option due to the availability of labor and local suppliers.

Vessel builds high-end, sustainable capsule houses that can be used in the hotel, lodging and housing industry. From its website: “From peaks to jungles, tidal flats to desert lands, [s]cenic spots have become a new tourist interest. The significance of establishing Vessel is to break through the restrictions of various complex terrains, develop ecologically, and use intelligent ecological cabins. Vessel provides tourists the appeal of ‘living in the scenery.’”

Beyond tourism, the units can be used as single-family homes or in the agro-industrial sector.

Some features of the units include walls that capture solar energy, biometric access, floor-to-ceiling windows, air conditioning, automatic curtains and built-in 5G WiFi. “Biometric access” is something that allows for entry by fingerprint or iris identification rather than a key, card key or code.

No announcement was made on what models will be built in Pesquería, but the Vessel website shows two Model V units like the one Levy showcased in his post. One that lists a capacity of two to four people measures roughly 31 feet by 11 feet for a total of 337 square feet; another with an occupancy of two is 21 feet by 10 feet for 210 square feet. Both list a height of just over 10 feet.

The units come prebuilt, for the most part, and the Vessel website says installation can be completed in two hours as there’s “no need for on-site construction and decoration.”

Vessel is aiming to start operations in Mexico at the end of 2023, with its first houses ready for sale in 2024. Vessel has expanded to countries such as Colombia, Ecuador, Argentina, Peru and Brazil this year. Vessel already manufactures and markets in China, Hawaii, Japan and other places, according to the newspaper Reforma.

With reports from Reforma and El Financiero

200-peso enchiladas spark outrage in Michoacán

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Enchiladas
Enchiladas are not normally as pricey as those in Pátzcuaro.

Inflated enchilada prices have inflamed local authorities in the Michoacán city of Pátzcuaro.

A tourist took to social media last weekend to denounce what he felt was an outrageous price for enchiladas. They were being sold for 200 pesos per order, or approximately US $10, the visitor complained, noting that they had been sold without chicken.

The complaint got the attention of local authorities in Pátzcuaro, where Mayor Julio Arreola said his administration would take an inventory of all of the city’s food stalls in order to keep such an incident from happening again. He assured visitors that there were many delicious and affordable places to eat in town, and asked that they not let the egregious prices of a single stand diminish the city’s charm.

State Tourism Secretary Roberto Monroy also weighed in, saying the federal consumer protection agency Profeco would be called in to investigate.

“We cannot permit this kind of excess, this kind of abuse. Not only with enchiladas, but in hotels, in restaurants, in a bar, in a taxi, we have to make prices uniform and visible, that prices are public and there are no surprises,” Monroy said.

The first complaint sparked several others on social media, where customers of that stand and others accused their operators of gouging and operating under poor sanitary conditions.

The stand in question is located in the Gertrudis Bocanegra Plaza where various food stalls set up to sell to tourists and locals alike. Pátzcuaro officials emphasized that the situation reflected poorly on the city as a Pueblo Mágico or Magical Town, a special designation by the federal government given to towns in Mexico with particular historical or cultural value. Authorities said on social media that people should continue to speak up if they have similar experiences.

With reports from Agencia Informativo de México and El Sol de Morelia

Rust blamed for collapse of concrete arch in Veracruz

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The Coatzintla arch after its collapse.
The Coatzintla arch after its collapse.

The concrete welcome archway at the entrance to Coatzintla municipality in Veracruz came down with a huge crash Tuesday, narrowly missing vehicles that were on the highway beneath it at the time. There were no casualties.

Recent heavy rains and intense wind in the area are thought to have been the final straw for the structure, whose collapse was captured on video. The video, published on Twitter, zooms in to several places on the arch before its collapse where water appears to have seeped inside the structure, weakening it from within. Authorities reported after the collapse that the interior iron structure had rusted from the moisture.

The archway was designed and built in 2010 and bore stone reliefs by plastic artist Teodoro Cano Garcia. Residents have complained about pieces of the structure falling on to the roadway.

The incident blocked traffic in both directions on the Coatzintla-Martínez highway in the north of the state and traffic coming in and out of the municipality was redirected to the Bicentenario roadway.

With reports from Milenio and La Jornada

Increased criminal activity puts Zacatecas on US list of ‘Do Not Travel’ states

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US Ambassador Ken Salazar
US Ambassador Ken Salazar commented on the advisory Wednesday, congratulating Nayarit, México state and Coahuila for improved security levels.

The U.S. Department of State has released the annual update of its travel advisory for Mexico, adding Zacatecas to five holdover states from last year that have received the most severe, Level 4 warning: “Do Not Travel.”

“I congratulate Nayarit, the state of México and Coahuila and for improved security levels and therefore an upgraded level in the 2022 Travel Alert,” Ken Salazar, the U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, said in a statement after the advisory was issued on Wednesday.

Indeed, Nayarit, México state and Coahuila have improved from level 3 (“Reconsider Travel”) to level 2 (“Exercise Increased Caution”). In total, 16 of Mexico’s 31 states and the federal entity of Mexico City are at level 2, while two other states — Yucatán and Campeche —  are at level 1 (“Exercise Normal Precautions”).

But most of the media coverage in Mexico on Wednesday was focused on Zacatecas joining Guerrero, Michoacán, Colima, Sinaloa and Tamaulipas at level 4. Guerrero is listed as “Do Not Travel” due to crime, while the other five are cited for both crime and kidnappings.

Zacatecas was at level 3 last year, but was moved to the more severe rating this year “based on increased criminal activity,” Salazar wrote on Twitter.

“The states where security issues arise underscore the importance of the Bicentennial Framework between the United States and Mexico,” Salazar said in his statement. “In that framework, the United States and Mexico committed to improving security and better protecting our people. Without security, there is no prosperity. It is important to reaffirm our commitment to citizen safety by providing training and resources to Mexican justice and security institutions and deepening our cooperation.”

In its summary paragraph in the advisory, the U.S. State Department wrote, “Violent crime such as homicide, kidnapping, carjacking and robbery is widespread and common in Mexico. The U.S. government has limited ability to provide emergency services to U.S. citizens in many areas of Mexico, as travel by U.S. government employees to certain areas is prohibited or restricted. In many states, local emergency services are limited outside the state capital or major cities.”

In addition, the advisory includes added restrictions to which U.S. government employees must adhere.

In 2021, five states were at level 1 (six this year), 11 states were at level 3 (seven this year), 14 states were at level 2 (17 this year) and two states were at level 1 (the same two as this year, Campeche and Yucatán, which were both at level 2 in 2020).

Here’s the  complete list of states and the federal entity from the 2022 update. An asterisk indicates a state that was at level 3 last year:

  • “Do Not Travel To” Level 4: Michoacán, Colima, Sinaloa, Tamaulipas and *Zacatecas due to crime and kidnapping; Guerrero due to crime.
  • “Reconsider Travel To” Level 3: Baja California, Chihuahua, Guanajuato, Jalisco and Sonora due to crime and kidnapping; Durango and Morelos due to crime.
  • “Exercise Increased Caution When Traveling To” Level 2: Nuevo León, Puebla, Quintana Roo and San Luis Potosí due to crime and kidnapping; Aguascalientes, Baja California Sur, Chiapas, *Coahuila, Hidalgo, Mexico City, *México state, *Nayarit, Oaxaca, Querétaro, Tabasco, Tlaxcala and Veracruz due to crime.
  • “Exercise Normal Precautions When Traveling To” Level 1: Campeche, Yucatán.

With reports from Reforma and Milenio

Tijuana florist responds to violence by adorning city with bouquets of flowers

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Flowers carry message of peace in Tijuana.
Flowers carry message of peace in Tijuana.

After last week’s intense violence in Baja California, a florist in Tijuana had a message for the city: peace, and she spread it with flowers.

The owner of María Se Llama Mi Amor attached floral bouquets to utility poles across the city last Saturday in response to a wave of organized crime violence that engulfed the city and the country last week. They were the kind of bouquets one might buy for a loved one or purchase for a centerpiece of a dinner party but these were wrapped in brown paper bearing the words peace and paz.

On Friday of last week and into Saturday morning gangs of criminals took to the streets of Tijuana, Mexicali, Rosarito Beach, Tecate, and Ensenada to light vehicles on fire, force passengers off public transportation and generally sow terror in the local population. Authorities said the violence was the result of a supposed conflict between two criminal groups, Los Chapos and Los Mexicles. The resident population was told to get off the streets and shelter in place, and Saturday morning found the streets of Tijuana abandoned except for the soldiers patrolling.

The owner of the Tijuana flower shop decided that if she wasn’t going to sell any of her pre-made bouquets in the aftermath of such violence she could put them to better use as an inspiration for the city’s residents. She posted images to Instagram on Saturday of the bouquets around the city saying, “There are more of us who are good than bad,” calling on fellow residents to do something kind and try to make the world a better place.

There were reports of other good deeds as well. Some people offered transportation to help others get to work given that public transportation had been halted, and others opened their homes to people who couldn’t return to their own.

Authorities said 17 members of Los Mexicles were in custody after the intense gang battle, in which 11 people were killed in the region.

With reports from Telemundo 20, El Universal and San Diego Union-Tribune

Oxxos burning: Cartel terrorists demonstrate their firepower

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An Oxxo store burns
An Oxxo store burns during last week's narco attacks.

If I go out my front door in San Luis Potosí and walk in any direction — north, south, east or west — I’ll  hit an Oxxo convenience store in five minutes,10 max. According to Google maps, there are 15 Oxxos within a 1.5-kilometer radius of my address. It may be I live in an especially Oxxo-rich corner of the country, but with more than 20,000 of them nationwide, I’m no outlier.

That’s not necessarily a good thing. You won’t find much in the way of groceries at an Oxxo that isn’t ultra-processed or over-sugared or both. The kids running the place act overworked and underpaid. The stores themselves are ugly and usually clash glaringly with the surrounding architecture. Inside, they seem intentionally designed for maximum discomfort.

Still, the beer and soft drinks are reliably ice cold. Cigarettes, if you’re still into them, are well-stocked. Any Oxxo will handle your utilities payments for a nominal commission. They’re usually open when most other retailers are closed. And, as mentioned, they’re dependably close by. Oxxos are our neighbors.

Which is why last week’s terror attacks in the neighboring states of Guanajuato and Jalisco evoked more than the usual fear and despair. Armed gang members assumed to be members of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel blockaded thoroughfares, cleared out and burned up public transit vehicles, stopped private cars at random to set them on fire as the driver and passengers fled, and put dozens of convenience stores ablaze, mostly Oxxos, as well as some pharmacies and gas stations. This was no distant gangland battle or cordoned-off cop-criminal confrontation. For many, it was happening right around the corner.

Of course, innocent bystanders, in the wrong place at the wrong time, can get caught up in criminal violence. In this case, though, innocent bystanders were precisely the targets. The attack was planned with them in mind. It was coordinated, long-lasting and horrific.

Those experiencing it in real time, without the hindsight we have now, didn’t know what was going on, though they could no doubt deduce by default that it was gang-related. They had no way of knowing how long it would last, how bad it would get, and what was coming next. That’s part of the terror.

A friend texted me Tuesday from Irapuato, a medium-sized city in the state of Guanajuato that was especially hard hit, with some 20 Oxxos set ablaze there. She was bed-ridden with a flu or cold and got her information about what was happening all around her from local internet sites and social media contacts, which she relayed to me. Unsure what to do, she decided to stay where she was, pull the blankets over her head, and wait it out.

A wise decision. The terrorists never approached private homes. And the stores they destroyed were not mom-and-pop tienditas but Oxxos owned by the giant FEMSA corporation, the main bottler and distributor of Coca-Cola in Mexico. Plus, they never hurt anybody. (Which was not the case in unrelated gang violence two days later in Ciudad Juárez that left at least 10 dead, two of them in an Oxxo in that Chihuahua border city.) In Irapuato, you were safe in your home, even if it didn’t feel that way.

In the calm after the storm, the general public resorted to type, citing the event as proving the veracity of what they were saying all along. Thus, supporters of President López Obrador blamed “conservatives” (meaning all who oppose him) for undermining his security policies. His opponents pointed to the  president’s failure to tame the cartels, citing specifically his approach of favoring alternatives to trying to out-firepower them. That policy is much pooh-poohed but little understood, perhaps because few can get past the unfortunate label he put on it — “Hugs, Not Bullets” — which may be the most self-defeating slogan since “Defund the Police.”

So we turn to the security experts, who presumably have less political skin in the game than the partisans. There’s general agreement that the terror strike was a show of power, reminding authorities that “we’re here, we’re violent, get used to it.” It’s also assumed by the punditry that the action was in response to — or triggered by —  a recent (failed) attempt by the army to nab two capos by attacking a high-level cartel meeting.

Some of the knowledgeable observers go further. Noting the earlier capture of one of the most wanted drug lords, Rafael Caro Quintero, they sense that hugs are out and high-level busts are back in. The criminal organizations sense that policy change as well, and the U.S. support in the Caro Quintero arrest only ups the stakes. Last week’s attacks, in this view, sent the message that with such a shift, there will be blood.

Many security experts think it’s worth it. Their fear is that criminal control of large sections of major cities has become the new normal, a form of surrender.

That concern was underscored when Tijuana Mayor Montserrat Caballero pleaded with the narcos to spare innocent citizens after her own city suffered similar fiery violence later in the week. Her intent may have been laudable, but her wording — “We ask you to collect on your bills from those who owe them, and not from families, not from working citizens” — sounded a lot like acknowledging that the old mafia practice of extorting business owners under the threat of bodily harm was established and accepted in Tijuana. (She later said she meant no such thing.)

So if the message was aimed at the authorities, why were innocent civilians terrorized? Why didn’t they attack an army base, or a government building? The answer, says security analyst Alejandro Hope, is efficiency.

“This kind of action is repeated frequently around the country because it doesn’t require much effort or resources,” Hope wrote in El Universal. “Just a few armed guys can stop a car or bus, get rid of the people in it and set it on fire and the whole process takes less than a minute. The same goes for setting a store on fire.”

Key to success for the narcos are the roadblocks, which prevent the cops or soldiers from reaching the perpetrators. Emergency anti-roadblock equipment has worked in the past, Hope says, but for some reason have been abandoned.

Bring them back. Focus more on damage control. I don’t know if there’s been polling on the issue, but my guess is that most residents of Mexico will agree on the following: If you can’t crush organized crime, do a better job of protecting us from it.

Kelly Arthur Garrett has been writing from Mexico since 1992.

Government sets new education plan in motion with pilot in 960 schools

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students in classroom
The existing model criticized for not having been conducive to high academic achievement.

The federal government’s new curriculum model will be implemented in 960 public schools in a pilot program that will commence on October 29.

Education officials said Tuesday that the new model has provisions for teacher training and gives teachers the opportunity to co-design education programs. They also said that it allows for the development of national education strategies and will entail an “administrative transformation” of the education sector.

The new model was developed over a period of 18 months in consultation with a range of stakeholders including teachers, students, parents, indigenous people and civil society organizations. It will eventually be implemented in all preschools, primary schools and secondary schools across Mexico. The pilot program will run in 30 schools in each of the 32 federal entities.

Presenting the new education model alongside other officials, Education Minister Delfina Gómez said it was carefully designed to ensure that it brings real and lasting change to the nation’s schools. The model promotes democracy, respect for legality, self-determination and the exercising of one’s political and social rights, said Gómez, who will soon step down as education minister to contest the 2023 México state gubernatorial election as the candidate for the ruling Morena party.

According to the Ministry of Public Education (SEP), education reforms enacted by previous governments over the past 30 years fostered inequality, racism and classism. In a document outlining the new education plan, the ministry said the existing model has caused many students to leave school early and hasn’t been conducive to high academic achievement.

SEP described it as “patriarchal, colonial, scientific, Eurocentric, homophobic and racist.”

It has imposed a “hegemonic model of citizenship,” which is contrary to “a healthy life and the democratic sense,” it said.

According to SEP, Mexican schools must reclaim their roles as institutions that educate citizens to “live and co-exist in a democratic society.”

Under the new curriculum model, teachers will have “professional autonomy … to decide … their didactic exercise,” the ministry said. Schools will become “spaces where students learn values, knowledge and skills in a critical, active and supportive way.”

In summary, reported the Reforma newspaper, the new education model is characterized by its promotion of a community rather than global outlook, its elimination of concepts considered to be neoliberal (a dirty word, according to President López Obrador) and its support for teachers’ educational autonomy.

Marx Arriaga, SEP’s director of educational materials, has already overseen a process to develop new textbooks that confine neoliberalism to the dustbin of history. Teachers have played a key role in that process.

Arriaga said earlier this year that the new curriculum model will place much greater emphasis on sharing and the common good than pitting individual students against each other. The model will be “libertarian” and “humanist” and put an end to racism in the education system and “standardized tests that segregate society,” he said in late April.

With reports from El Universal and Reforma 

Body of Canadian tourist found in Puerto Vallarta along with distraught son

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The complex where a Canadian tourist died.
The complex where a Canadian tourist died.

The remains of a Canadian man were found in a vacation rental north of Puerto Vallarta alongside his 5-year-old son who was crying and in shock while lying next to his father’s decomposing body. The body was found in the Vilanova subdivision in Jarretaderas, Nayarit.

The man, 44-year-old John Poulson, was found by his neighbor, also Canadian, who was contacted by Poulson’s ex-wife when she couldn’t get in touch with him by telephone from her home in Canada. According to reports, Poulson hadn’t been seen since August 7.

A terrible smell greeted the neighbor who went to the home to inquire. Inside, he found the air conditioning running, the lights off and Poulson’s body in his bedroom, his young son lying beside him.

Authorities said the body was in an advanced state of decomposition. Officials have not announced an official cause of death. The boy is now in the care of the neighbor while authorities await his mother who was traveling to Mexico from Canada to collect him.

With reports from Noticias PV and Tribuna de la Bahía

Strengthen rule of law, end impunity the way to stop violence: advocacy group

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Maureen Meyer of WOLA.
Maureen Meyer of WOLA.

Strengthening the rule of law and ending impunity is crucial to combatting violence in Mexico, according to a senior official with the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA).

In an interview with the El Universal newspaper, the research and advocacy organization’s vice president for programs, Maureen Meyer, said militarized security strategies have failed and that the current government needs to rethink its non-confrontational “hugs, not bullets” approach to combatting violence.

The question that needs to be asked, she said, is: “What changes can [President] López Obrador implement [to improve] security and strengthen the rule of law?”

Meyer – who lived in Mexico between 2001 and 2020 and led WOLA’s Mexico program for 14 years – told El Universal that one of the reasons why there is so much violence here is impunity, which has remained stubbornly high despite the government’s commitment to eradicating it.

“You can kill someone with impunity because there are no consequences,” she said, adding that public security efforts have to be accompanied by the investigation and prosecution of criminals.

Asked whether the militarization of public security was the right way to respond to the security crisis – López Obrador announced last week that he would issue a decree to transfer responsibility for the National Guard from the civilian Security Ministry to the army – Meyer said evidence showed it wasn’t.

Studies show that the use of the military to carry out public security tasks “hasn’t worked,” she said, noting that “violence hasn’t declined.”

Former presidents Felipe Calderón and Enrique Peña Nieto both used the military for public security tasks, as has López Obrador, although the current president asserts that his strategy is different because he instructs the armed forces to avoid confrontations with criminal groups wherever possible.

Meyer reiterated that militarization “hasn’t been effective in attending to security problems in Mexico.”

Instead, it has generated “more concerns,” she said. “Police and the military are not interchangeable. They have different training, different roles and there are a lot of risks at a human rights level.”

Indeed, members of the armed forces have been accused of committing human rights abuses while carrying out public security tasks across the country. In a report published earlier this year, Human Rights Watch noted that the National Human Rights Commission received 3,799 complaints of military abuses between 2013 and 2020. Extrajudicial killings are among the alleged abuses.

Meyer asserted that López Obrador is on the “wrong track” with his plan to put the National Guard under army control, highlighting that the proposal goes against the constitution, which was modified to create the security force under civilian leadership.

As for the “hugs, not bullets” approach, not confronting criminal groups “hasn’t been an effective strategy either,” she said.

The strategy – a kind of militarization-lite approach – needs to be rethought, the WOLA VP said.

On the one hand, the government needs to decide what the role of the military is when it comes into contact with organized crime, Meyer said.

(López Obrador controversially said in May that his government looks after criminals by avoiding armed confrontations.)

On the other hand, Meyer said, the government needs to work out how to strengthen civilian police forces, including state and municipal ones. Mexican police – especially members of municipal forces – are generally paid poorly and lack training. Many haven’t passed confidence tests, and numerous police forces have been disarmed due to suspected collusion with criminal groups.

Federal authorities need to think about how to achieve “better coordination between the three levels of government to confront the security crisis … we’re currently seeing in [northern] border cities and Guanajuato,” Meyer said, referring to recent outbreaks of violence in Ciudad Juárez, Tijuana and several Guanajuato municipalities.    .

She also said the government’s security strategy has not clearly defined the role of prosecutor’s offices in the fight against violence, which remains at extremely high if not record levels.

“Since Calderón launched his [militarized] war against drug trafficking [in 2006], … what has really been lacking is [direction about] how to continue implementing the justice system and strengthen the rule of law in Mexico,” Meyer said.

She also noted that a recent survey conducted by the national statistics agency INEGI showed that the perception of insecurity among citizens is on the rise.

“There’s a generalized perception of insecurity in Mexico that is concerning and which shows that there is a need to rethink the federal government’s current security strategy,” Meyer said.

Despite that, the entire country isn’t plagued by violence, she stressed, noting that the latest statistics show that violence remains concentrated in certain states and municipalities.

With reports from El Universal 

Petition platform joins fight against international water distributor

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water rights protest in Puebla
The activists come from multiple towns in the Valley of Mexico, listed on the sign seen here.

Indigenous communities from the Cholula Valley region and the communities near Mexico’s two most famous volcanoes — Iztaccihuatl and Popocatépetl — are demanding that the multinational water company Bonafont leave their land immediately.

The latest salvo in a longstanding debate about who has rights to water — international companies or local communities — was fired by a group called Pueblos Unidos of the Cholulteca Region, which has put out a call to the international community on the activist platform SumofUs.org, asking it to help them remove a Bonafont plant from the area where they live.

The group cites environmental damages that they say are due to the company’s presence there, including contaminated water.

The Bonafont brand belongs to the French company Danone, also known as Dannon in the United States. The Bonafont brand is sold in Mexico and Brazil.

water rights protest in Puebla
“The water belongs to the people,” says this mural near the Bonafont plant in Puebla. Tamara Pearson/Green Left

Mexico currently faces extreme drought in much of the country, and the Valley of México where these indigenous communities live is constantly under the threat of running out of water as the populations of Mexico City, Puebla, Toluca and other metropolitan areas continue to demand the region’s water.

Mexico is consistently listed by several sources as one of the five biggest countries for bottled water consumption.

The activists said in their statement on SumofUs.org that they believe that last year’s sinkhole in the municipality of Santa María Zacatepec was caused by the overexploitation of the area’s aquifers. An area 126 meters across in spots and 45 meters deep collapsed in May 2021, destroying the surrounding cropland and a house nearby. The area became something of a tourist attraction until studies by the Environmental Ministry determined that the area was continuing to sink and was unsafe.

Community protesters took over a Bonafont water plant at the beginning of this month, hosting a press conference where they displayed samples of dirty water from the area’s rivers. They also blamed Bonafont for illnesses in the communities and for the drying up of the area’s wells.

Although the company was forced to stop extracting water from the area in March 2021, Pueblos Unidos wants the Bonafont plant removed from the area, saying it represents for them “the company’s plunder from other territories that they are now storing in the Cholulteca region,” which they say they cannot permit.

With reports from La Jornada del Oriente, Desinformemos and El Financiero