Tuesday, June 17, 2025

US energy firm files $667mn suit against Mexico for closure of storage terminal

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Monterra Energy's storage plant in Tuxpan
Monterra Energy's storage plant in Tuxpan was closed down last September.

A United States company whose Veracruz fuel storage terminal was shut down by the federal government five months ago announced Monday that it intends to sue Mexico for US $667 million.

The Energy Regulatory Commission (CRE) closed Houston-based Monterra Energy’s terminal in Tuxpan in mid-September.

According to The Wall Street Journal, the facility was “closed at gunpoint by the Mexican government in the wee hours of September 14 and has not been allowed to operate since.”

The closure of the terminal, which stored imported fuel that supplied privately owned gas stations, was widely seen as one of several moves to help support the state oil company Pemex.

In an opinion piece published Monday, columnist Mary Anastasia O’Grady, a regular critic of President López Obrador and his administration, reported on Monterra’s planned compensation claim and offered her assessment of the situation.

Monterra, owned by the United States-based global investment firm KKR, sent a notification to the Economy Ministry advising that its investors are seeking $667 million in compensation for the terminal closure as well as interest and legal costs.

“Yet any financial settlement that Mexico may be forced to pay is likely to be dwarfed by the damage caused to the country’s reputation as a destination for capital,” O’Grady wrote.

Monterra investors intend to submit claims to arbitration under the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) and NAFTA, the current free trade pact’s predecessor.

“What does the need to appeal to an international tribunal to recover … [KKR’s] investment say about the rule of law in Mexico? Nothing good,” O’Grady opined.

The columnist, who is also a WSJ editorial board member, said the Mexican government could respond to Monterra’s notification by allowing the company to resume its operation of the Tuxpan facility.

However, “after a 90-day cooling-off period, the company may go to arbitration before an international tribunal,” O’Grady wrote.

“Reading the investors’ 17-page notice it’s hard to tell where the sheer incompetence of AMLO’s banana-republic bureaucracy leaves off and the abuse of state power to undermine the project takes over,” she said.

“The notification suggests the local Monterra company endured a combination of both before Mexico finally expropriated the property in violation of the country’s NAFTA commitments,” O’Grady wrote.

“… The investors say the company was in communication with the Energy Regulatory Commission and complied with all documentary requirements. A September 2020 revised request for approval of storage rates received no response, which meant by law it was ‘deemed automatically approved.’”

O’Grady noted that the Monterra investors charged that the CRE “harassed” the company “with duplicative and pretextual requests for information and documents that it already had.”

“The trouble went beyond paperwork,” she wrote. “In 2020 and 2021 the investors allege ‘a series of sham inspections in search of a pretext to shut down [the local company’s] operations.’”

O’Grady also noted that the Monterra investors’ notification “says that Mexico’s accusations that the company failed to prove it had the proper permits and documentation are demonstrably false,” and “’Mexico was not interested in the legality of the product stored at the storage terminal; their only goal was to shut the storage terminal down to further Mexico’s protectionist policies.’”

Mexican courts have “turned a blind eye” and “thwarted” Monterra’s attempts to have its day in court, “placing it in a state of defenselessness,” the notification states.

“Monterra is making official what many investors already know,” O’Grady wrote before citing Neil Herrington, senior vice president for the Americas at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, who told her that foreign direct investment in Mexico had not reached 2017 levels – $65 billion – during López Obrador’s time in office.

To understand why an investment boom is not occurring in Mexico at a time when manufacturing in China is less attractive and production closer to the U.S. is favored, “look no further than the seizure of Monterra’s terminal,” the columnist concluded.

With reports from The Wall Street Journal

Army deploys armored all-terrain vehicles in Zacatecas as cartel clashes continue

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Two of three sicarios accused of the murder of five university students
Two of three sicarios accused of the murder of five university students are interrogated by members of the Sinaloa Cartel.

The army has moved at least 10 armored all-terrain vehicles into Zacatecas, the country’s most violent state last year in terms of homicides per capita.

The vehicles, which are equipped with high-caliber weapons, reached the northern state aboard semi-trailers on Monday afternoon, the newspaper Milenio reported.

The Ministry of National Defense hasn’t disclosed where the vehicles will be deployed but military sources suggested they could be headed to a mountainous area of Jerez near that municipality’s border with Valparaíso.

The Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) and the Sinaloa Cartel are engaged in a turf war in the region that has displaced residents of numerous communities.

There was a confrontation between the National Guard and armed civilians in Sarabia, a community in Jerez, last weekend that left one guardsmen and three criminal suspects dead. Further clashes were reported Monday and the army bolstered its presence in the area, Milenio said.

At a public event in Jerez on Sunday, federal Deputy Marco Antonio Flores said he would call on residents to fight the cartels themselves if the violence isn’t brought under control.

“We’re with you and if the federal government ignores us, I myself will call on people to take up arms up there,” he said, referring to the mountainous area of Jerez.

“To the displaced people of the communities … of the sierra, we want to tell you that you’re not alone, … you can count on us,” the Morena party deputy and former banda singer said.

Violence plagues many parts of Zacatecas, a state sought-after by cartels due to its location between Pacific coast ports, where drugs enter the country, and Mexico’s northeastern border with the United States.

Five Zacatecas municipalities – Fresnillo, Valparaíso, Calera, Zacatecas city and Guadalupe – were among the 50 most violent in Mexico for per-capita homicides over the past year, according to data compiled by crime monitoring website elcri.men.

The federal government announced a new security plan for the state late last year, but homicides have only increased since its implementation.

A ceremony held in February 2021 to inaugurate new National Guard barracks in Jerez
A ceremony held in February 2021 to inaugurate new National Guard barracks in Jerez, Zacatecas, where the violence continues.

There has been a spate of violent incidents in recent months, including the abandonment on January 6 of a vehicle with 10 dead bodies beneath a giant Christmas tree in front of the state government palace.

At least 18 homicides were recorded on February 5, while five university students – three men and two women – were killed after being abducted upon leaving a nightclub in Zacatecas city on February 12. Three men and two women have been arrested.

The Sinaloa Cartel appears intent on punishing the crime with its own brand of vigilante justice. In a video posted to social media, about 20 heavily armed members of the cartel stand over three young men allegedly involved in the murder of the students and two miners killed in Fresnillo on February 12.

“Good afternoon people of Zacatecas, we’ll introduce ourselves – we are the Sinaloa Cartel operation MZ,” one narco says, apparently referring to cartel leader Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada.

“Our mission is to exterminate everyone who harms the people. … We regret the events of recent days in which this trash killed some innocent students. Justice will be served,” he says.

“We don’t attack the government or citizens. We don’t make pacts with any cartel. We apologize to citizens for the collateral damage … in Jerez and Valparaíso. Don’t pay attention to extortion, we’re here to support you as is seen in the municipalities where we govern. … Our commitment is to the people. … We dedicate ourselves to working to have a better Zacatecas.”

Two of the three captured young men, one of whom is just 17, admitted to working for the CJNG. The third said he belonged to a criminal group called Los Talibanes.

A 24-year-old man who admitted to working in communications for the CJNG said the students were killed to “calentar la plaza” – to “heat up” a drug trafficking area controlled by the Jalisco cartel. He said that “Comandante Chisco” ordered the murder of the students.

The footage, which circulated widely on social media last weekend, has been viewed thousands of times.

The high levels of violence in Zacatecas – where there were 95.6 homicides per 100,000 people in the 12 months to January 31 – have instilled fear in many residents. The newspaper El Universal reported that bars in Zacatecas city were practically empty last weekend due to people’s fear of being caught up in violence.

Residents are experiencing a “collective psychosis of fear,” said Laura Torres Huerta, president of Zacatecas hospitality industry association ACEEZ.

“People didn’t go out … [last] weekend. The atmosphere was sad, bars were at 30% of their capacity,” she said.

“Because of the violence we don’t have a good reputation in Zacatecas at the moment,” Torres said, adding that the state’s precarious security situation is known both within Mexico and abroad. “We’re the flashpoint [that comes] with the warning: ‘Don’t visit Zacatecas!’”

With reports from Milenio, Reforma and El Universal 

Authorities confirm tiger on the loose in Guanajuato

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tiger
Efforts are under way to track down a tiger in the municipality. deposit photos

A tiger has been on the loose in Apaseo el Grande, Guanajuato, since December, but the mayor waited until Saturday to issue a warning.

José Luis Ontiveros Usabiaga wrote on social media to confirm the predator was at large near the town, 115 kilometers southeast of Guanajuato city.

“After a thorough analysis, gathering information and collecting the testimonies of the population of the ejidos [communal lands] and communities of Ojo de Agua, Rancho Viejo and Tierra Blanca, we can confirm the presence of a tiger,” he said.

Ontiveros said 16 cattle had been attacked and told people to watch their children, remain in populated areas and keep their livestock safe. The communities that are on alert are Comonfort, Pichacho, Potrero and Rosales.

People first reported the presence of an animal attacking their livestock in December, but the mayor said he wanted clear evidence before putting out a warning. “We decided not to communicate until we saw a footprint and an animal. We wanted to act prudently and responsibly,” he said.

The government of Apaseo el Grande has bought a drone to track down the feline and requested the help of the federal environmental protection agency Profepa and the Environment Ministry to capture it. A Guanajuato animal protection group, Conexión Animal, provided a veterinarian with knowledge of tigers along with cages and tranquilizing darts. Ontiveros said he hoped the vet would help determine how the cattle died and locate the tiger.

The mayor said the danger was particularly acute for young children who help out on ranches. “The children in those communities are sent to look after the livestock … they are children between seven and 10 years old. It is important that they know whether there is … a tiger …” he said.

The mayor also confirmed that viral videos of a tiger claiming to show the feline in question, were not to be trusted. “The images that allude to pet cats or smaller felines do not correspond to this matter and have been generated to create alarm and panic,” he said.

This is not the first time a tiger has caught the public’s attention: in November, a Bengal tiger was captured near the Tapalpa-Atemajac highway in Jalisco, and drivers stopped to take its photograph, the newspaper Milenio reported.

With reports from Milenio

Travel time from city to Felipe Ángeles in line with other major airports

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CDMX traffic
Despite the capital's notorious traffic, chilangos' new airport commute time will be about the same as those in other major urban centers.

The new Mexico City airport is much farther from the center of the capital than the existing airport, but the time needed to get to the former is not significantly different from the travel time to airports in numerous other major cities.

Located in México state, just over 50 kilometers north of downtown Mexico City, the army-built Felipe Ángeles International Airport (AIFA) will open at the end of next month. Three airlines – Aeroméxico, Volaris and VivaAerobús – have already announced that they will use the new facility.

The federal government has faced criticism for deciding to build the airport so far from the city center, and there have been reports and assertions on social media that it could take up to 2 1/2 hours to reach it by road from the traffic-clogged capital.

But at 7 p.m. during the working week, Google Maps estimates that the travel time by car between the zócalo — Mexico City’s central square — and the AIFA is 90 minutes, the newspaper Milenio said.

Shortly after 4:00 p.m. today, the estimated travel time was 35 minutes longer, at two hours and five minutes. However, by around 5:30 p.m., it was back down to slightly less than 90 minutes.

Google Maps route from zocalo to AIFA
On Monday afternoon around 5:30 p.m. local time, Google Maps predicted that driving from Mexico City’s zócalo to the new Felipe Ángeles International Airport would take nearly an hour and a half.

In a report published Monday, Milenio compared the weekday travel time to airports in or near Mexico City to the time needed to get to airports in nine other cities: Washington D.C., New York, Los Angeles, Boston, London, Paris, Madrid, Beijing and Tokyo.

The estimated travel time from the zócalo to the existing Benito Juárez International Airport at 7:00 p.m. on a weeknight is 40 minutes, less than half the time needed to get to the AIFA, while a trip to Toluca airport – about 60 kilometers away – is expected to take two hours.

Milenio noted that a new highway system scheduled for completion in the second half of 2023 will reduce travel time to the AIFA, although how many minutes will be shaved off the trip is unclear.

The federal government is also extending the Mexico City suburban train line to reach the new airport from the Buenavista station, a journey that President López Obrador recently said would take 45 minutes. Milenio said that a trip to the AIFA on the extended railroad, which is also expected to begin operations in the second half of next year, will take just 39 minutes.

As things stand, getting to the AIFA by car from the zócalo takes five minutes more than getting to the Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport from the White House. The closest airport to the U.S. president’s official residence and workplace is the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, just 18 minutes away by car, Milenio said.

From Central Park in New York, a car trip to the John F. Kennedy Airport in Queens takes one hour and five minutes at 7 p.m. on a weeknight, while the travel time to LaGuardia, located in the same borough, is a much shorter 28 minutes.

AMLO and Claudia Sheinbaum
President López Obrador and Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum testing out a planned extension of the capital’s suburban train line in December.

In the other seven multi-airport cities that Milenio considered, a car trip from a central landmark to at least one of the airports that serve Boston, London, Paris, Beijing and Tokyo takes over an hour.

By contrast, a trip from the Los Angeles City Hall to LAX takes an estimated 40 minutes, while getting to the Madrid-Barajas Airport from the Royal Palace in the Spanish capital takes just 35 minutes, according to Google Maps.

While getting to the AIFA will likely involve a long trip for many Mexico City residents, especially those who live on the capital’s south side, the location of the new airport – the Santa Lucía Air Force Base in the municipality of Zumpango – is convenient for people who live in heavily-populated México state municipalities located north of the capital itself but within its greater metropolitan area.

With reports from Milenio

3-year-old in serious condition after attack by dogs

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A woman runs after the dog that is attacking her child.
A woman runs after the dog that is attacking her child. Screenshot from security footage

A 3-year-old girl suffered serious head injuries after she was attacked by two dogs in México state.

Two pit bulls attacked the girl earlier this month in Melchor Ocampo, 96 kilometers northeast of Toluca.

In a video of the attack caught on CCTV footage, the girl is seen walking with her mother holding hands on a deserted street. They appear to be selling churros.

A pit bull standing under a store balcony jumped out at the girl and bit her near the head, dragging her about 10 meters across the street while her mother hit the dog with her bag, unsuccessfully trying to force it to let her daughter go.

On further CCTV footage another dog is seen joining the attack and they took the girl another 20 meters, behind a corner out of shot.

In this disturbing video, security footage shows how two dogs went after the child.

The mother pursued the dogs and three more people joined the chase, one of whom had a shovel. A municipal police pickup arrived seconds later.

The mother said the girl was treated in a hospital in Mexico City because local hospitals didn’t have the medicines required.

She added that the dogs weren’t strays and that their owner is paying the family’s medical expenses.

With reports from El Universal and 24 Horas

Proposal for new cruise ship wharf stirs opposition in La Paz

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Port in Pilingue, Baja California Sur
The company Aquamayan Adventure wants to build a pier to accommodate two large cruise ships in Pichilingue, a Gulf of California port 40 kilometers north of La Paz.

A plan to build a cruise ship pier in La Paz, Baja California Sur (BCS), is facing opposition from a range of organizations and collectives, including one with the peculiar name of “Let’s Bribe the Environment Ministry.”

The company Aquamayan Adventure is seeking authorization to build a new pier capable of accommodating two large cruise ships in Pichilingue, a Gulf of California port about 40 kilometers north of the city of La Paz.

BCS Governor Víctor Manuel Castro Cosío met late last week with members of various groups that oppose the project and together form an umbrella group known as “Movement for a Healthy Bay of La Paz.”

The activists submitted information about the environmental and economic risks of allowing the construction of a new pier, the BCS-based newspaper El Independiente reported. The governor requested time to review the information before responding to it.

The activists said that they have collected more than 9,000 signatures from BCS residents concerned about the prospect of large-scale cruise ship tourism in La Paz. The proposed project is currently the subject of a public consultation process managed by the federal Environment Ministry (Semarnat).

Sobornemos Semarnat
The activists opposed to the Pichilingue project, Sobornemos Semarnat, said they have collected 10,000 pesos so far for their cause.

Local scientists have claimed that Aquamayan Adventure’s assessment of the environmental impact of its project uses ambiguous concepts and is not based on the best available information. It consequently contains imprecise information about the impact that construction of the pier would have on the environment, four scientists said in a document submitted to Semarnat.

They claimed that the project would contaminate the Gulf of California with mud due to dredging as well as toxic insoluble hydrocarbons. The operation of the pier would cause additional contamination, further endangering marine life, they said.

The scientists also said that the project would encroach on the Balandra Flora and Fauna Protection Area and raised concerns about the construction of a proposed desalination plant to provide fresh water to a tourism complex that would house a new cruise ship terminal.

They said that Aquamayan’s environmental information doesn’t outline the impact the desalination plant would have on the Mogote-Ensenada de La Paz wetlands, a site protected by the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands of International Importance.

Another group opposed to the construction of a new pier in La Paz, as well as a fourth pier in Cozumel, Quintana Roo, is “Sobornemos Semarnat” (Let’s bribe the Environment Ministry).

Its members claim that Semarnat is on the side of the companies planning to build the new piers and is aiming to collect 1 million pesos (US $49,300) to “bribe” the ministry to stop the projects.

Balandra Flora and Fauna Protection Area, Baja California Sur
A group of local scientists has raised concerns that the Pichilingue project would encroach on the Balandra Flora and Fauna Protection Area, seen here. Conanp

In a tongue-in-cheek statement issued earlier this month, Sobornemos Semarnat said that it was aware that the practice of handing over money to environmental authorities has been used previously to gain support for various “megaprojects.”

“That’s why we’re now calling on the public [to donate money] so that we can ‘bribe’ Semarnat so that it decides to stop the destruction of these unique ecosystems,” it said.

The collective said it rejected “all forms of corruption” but charged that it was compelled to act in such a way due to the urgency of the situation.

“If we don’t have a direct and public channel to deliver the money collected, as well as a guarantee of compliance with the law, we will put the money at the disposal of … the collectives and organizations … opposed to the [proposed] cruise ship piers in Cozumel and La Paz,” it said.

Sobornemos Semarnat said on its Facebook page last Thursday that it had collected 10,000 pesos, or just 1% of its goal.

With reports from El Independiente and Infobae 

No prudes here: Mazatlán’s happily naked monuments to the female form

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Dolphin woman statue in Mazatlan
Mazatlán's eyecatching "Dolphin Woman" statue can be found on the malecón in the historic La Carpa Olivera area.

They come in pairs. Roughly half the population has them, while the other half’s interest in them runs from mildly fascinated to psychotically obsessed.

All societies and cultures reserve a special place of some type or other within their ruminations, meditations and celebrations for these two eminently useful and sacredly revered objects the female breasts. The internal structure is identical in all, but the morphologies are as multifariously dissimilar as individual fingerprints.

Most of us have accumulated knowledge of these wondrous objects through both observation and direct contact. In some societies, these objects are proudly displayed in all public places, but elsewhere they are shrouded as if to deny their very existence.

Many who possess these objects wish they had been endowed with a more substantial set. Those of us who escaped birth without a proper pair of them spend a good portion of our lives just trying to effectuate contact. When I grew up in the United States, these objects were never seen in public, other than at museums or art galleries. Back then, if you were not born with a pair, you needed to be an adult to gaze upon a glossy, two-dimensional image of them in a magazine.

I am now lucky enough to live in a country where these hallowed appurtenances are superbly immortalized in bronze and prominently displayed in public places. Mazatlán, no different than many other Mexican cities, has a collection of statues proudly displaying its marvelous, perfectly configured demigoddesses with their upper body parts exposed for all to enjoy.

The Fisherman's Monument, Mazatlan
The Fisherman’s Monument is a well-known statue in Mazatlán. deposit photos

As the gateway to the city center, the Fisherman’s Monument is that area’s northernmost effigy of these busty bronze beauties — a Rubenesque woman’s form decorously draped at the base of a stylized lighthouse with a curving path to the apex.

She could be provocatively adorning the guiding light to bring her man back to her home and heart. Or the pudgy woman could be assuming a seductive pose in hopes of bewitching the hapless fisherman into floundering upon the rocky shoals.

However you choose to view it, this monument’s sculptor equipped the woman with a pair that most women would kill for. The fisherman in this monument also displays his unique gender characteristics, but he has the package of a pigmy — embarrassingly diminutive.

I believe that the artist is attempting to bolster his male viewers’ self-esteem as they think to themselves, “I am more of a man than that.” Mexican culture tends to layer meaning upon meaning, so whatever the intended symbolism is, it’s hiding among numerous possibilities.

As we wander south along Mexico’s longest malecón, the next encounter is commonly called “the dolphin monument,” but the sculpted man and woman standing in a side-to-side embrace are the real show here.

Both figures display the perfect human form, reminiscent of Leonardo da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man. Both are larger-than-life and sport impressive physiology as they watch a pod of eight leaping dolphins and the man’s right arm points north.

Mazatlan monument
Some locals here discreetly refer to this one as the ‘The Dolphin Monument.’

Again, the intended symbolism is up for grabs, but after years of contemplation, a dim bulb flickered somewhere in my tequila-soaked brain: my conclusion is that the man is pointing to the poor fisherman, with his picayune package, while declaring himself amply equipped to properly pleasure his partner.

Next along our journey is the Mujer Mazatleca, (the Mazatlán woman), with her arms open wide to welcome all into her bare-chested embrace. Since this statue is on a three-meter pedestal, she is out of reach to all who pass by.

But just south of the Mazatleca, the curvilinear dolphin-woman statue you’ll find is the first with her magnificent mammary glands within reach of the general public. This fact alone makes her the most photographed statue in all of Mazatlán.

The typical photo has one or more males between the age of 12 and 30 with one or more hands on those pendulous appendages so proudly proffered.

The last bronze enchantress is a bashful little thing hiding in the bushes between the malecón and the street. Her demure and faraway gaze — as if she has lost her way back to the netherworld and will spend eternity wistfully ruminating over a square meter of soil — draws little attention from pedestrians or passing drivers. However, even with her introspective countenance and diminutive size, she is my favorite piece of bronze in Mazatlán.

So, wherever you find yourself in the land of tacos and tequila, be sure to enjoy this freedom of expression so conspicuously celebrated in timeless bronze; you will harbor no regrets.

Mermaid statue in Mazatlan
The writer’s favorite statue in Mazatlán.

The writer describes himself as a very middle-aged man who lives full-time in Mazatlán with a captured tourist woman and the ghost of a half-wild dog. He can be reached at [email protected].

Forces help displaced Zacatecas townspeople return home — for their belongings

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A soldier stands guard while Palma Alta residents pack up their belongings.
A soldier stands guard while Palma Alta residents pack up their belongings. NTR Zacatecas

Chaperoned by the army, the National Guard and state police, people who fled a small Zacatecas town last year due to violence returned to their erstwhile houses last Thursday.

But their stay was a short one – they weren’t back for good but rather to collect the possessions they left behind when they escaped in haste in early 2021.

Former residents of Palmas Altas, a community in the municipality of Jerez, returned to their old homes to pick up furniture, home appliances, tools, toys, sacks of grain and even tractors, according to a report by Reforma.

Hundreds of people had just six hours to pack up what they wanted, the newspaper said. Palmas Altas has been a virtual ghost town since the majority of residents left due to violence related to a turf war between the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) and the Sinaloa Cartel.

The displaced residents had been asking Zacatecas and federal authorities for assistance for months so they could return to their abandoned homes. One former local criticized the authorities for the operation, saying that their objective should be to recover peace in the town rather than people’s possessions.

Former residents loaded their vehicles with Former residents loaded their vehicles with furniture, home appliances, tools, toys and more, before leaving town the same day.
Former residents loaded their vehicles with furniture, home appliances, tools, toys and more, before leaving town the same day. NTR Zacatecas

“The support they gave was stupid; it was to go for belongings, they gave them six hours to pack up their lives,” Favi told Reforma.

“A man was killed three weeks ago; he and his wife were almost the only ones left. They told the lady she had one hour to leave her home,”  the woman said.

“… There’s a photo of the pickup truck of the man they killed, they painted four letters on it,” she said, referring to the infamous CJNG initials. “There are clear signs that sicarios [cartel gunmen] are there [in Palmas Altas]. Some people got to their homes and the stoves were hot, there were plates with food. Someone obviously told them the government was coming and they left,” Favi said.

Another woman who fled Palmas Altas after her boyfriend was abducted and presumably killed said that people left the town because they could no longer sleep.

“They were afraid every night that their father or daughter would be taken. Someone was abducted every night. For what? I don’t know,” Gabriela Rodríguez said.

With reports from Reforma 

Marathoner on 100-day run from Los Cabos to Quintana Roo

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Daniel Almanza arrived in Puerto Peñasco last week and took time to explore before continuing his journey.
Daniel Almanza arrived in Puerto Peñasco last week and took time to explore before continuing his journey.

A marathon runner plans to cross Mexico by foot on a 6,000-kilometer journey over 100 days.

Daniel Almanza from Nuevo León started the project — dubbed Super Human — in Los Cabos, Baja California Sur, on January 16. He aims to pass through 21 states to reach Quintana Roo by April 25.

He headed north from Los Cabos through Baja California Sur and Baja California before crossing the Sonora Desert to Puerto Peñasco, Sonora, 1,720 kilometers from the start line.

The father of one has been running marathons for 15 years and is the only Mexican to run in the Continental Challenge, which took him to Vietnam, Bolivia and Mozambique.

He hopes to exhibit Mexico’s landscapes, raise money for the food bank charity BAMX and document the trip for a Netflix show. He visited some of the main sights in Puerto Peñasco, such as the boardwalk, the salt flats and the enormous craters at the Pinacate nature reserve.

Runner Daniel Almanza.
Runner Daniel Almanza.

Super Human also aims to benefit medical research: Almanza will record the state of his health every day to see how the journey affects his body and mind. The project is supported by the Tourism Ministry and municipal councils.

The athlete said his voyage so far had been memorable. “I have had the contrasts of going to the shore, the mountains, deserts, of wind and hot days. It’s a diverse environment. We have been to magical towns, ejidos [communally held lands], many impressive tourist sites … in Puerto Peñasco they have been totally hospitable. I’m happy to be here,” he said.

The athlete added that the name Super Human is intended to inspire others to take on extreme challenges.

Meanwhile, Mexican runner Germán Silva, two-time winner of the New York marathon, completed his own 100-day cross-country journey when he arrived in Tulum, Quintana Roo, on Sunday.

The 54-year-old extreme athlete began his journey in Tijuana on November 5, running down through the Baja Peninsula before crossing the Gulf of California to Sonora and continuing southeast.

Silva’s goal: to “show the greatness” of Mexico and advance physiological research, monitoring the effects of the journey on his body, like Almanza. He announced the end of his journey on Instagram, with a quote from ancient Taoist philosopher Lao Tzu: “Gratitude is the memory of the heart.”

With reports from Milenio , Rocky Point 360 and The Washington Post

Oaxaca man dies after attack by donkey

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The animal was put down after its second fatal attack.
The animal was put down after its second fatal attack.

An aggressive donkey in Oaxaca struck again on Wednesday and killed a 79-year-old man.

The man, identified only as Juan, was the second victim of the donkey in Santa Cruz Tututepec, a village in the state’s Juquila district, a 100-kilometer drive northwest of Puerto Escondido. The first victim was a man named Marcelino, 81, who was attacked by the donkey in the same village in August 2020, the news site NVI Noticias reported.

Juan approached the donkey to tie it up when it bit him repeatedly and left him severely injured.

The 79-year-old’s family took him to a local emergency ward in Río Grande, 50 kilometers south, in a pickup truck.

But given the severity of his injuries, Juan was transferred to a hospital in Puerto Escondido by the voluntary paramedic organization ORAM. He received surgery early on Thursday in Puerto Escondido but didn’t survive the operation.

However, the aggressive donkey will not be allowed to inflict further harm: it was put down by Juan’s relatives.

With reports from NVI Noticias