Friday, June 6, 2025

Chignahuapan makes 70mn holiday ornaments a year — one at a time

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Castillo de la Esfera, Chignahuapan, Puebla
Eduardo Rueda Caballero of the Castillo de la Esfera artisan workshop paints flowers onto an ornament's surface. He can do 60 a day. Photos by Joseph Sorrentino

With all the problems piling up in the world — worries about climate change and the continuing pandemic to mention just two of the biggest — it can be little tough to get into the Christmas spirit. But a trip to Chignahuapan, Puebla, can definitely help put you in the mood.

That’s because Chignahuapan, one of Mexico’s designated Pueblos Mágicos, located two hours north of Puebla city, boasts 400 stores and factories dedicated to making just one thing: hand-made artisanal Christmas ornaments, known in Mexico as esferas.

The art of making esferas was brought to Chignahuapan when Rafael Méndez Nuñez, a chemical engineer who had an interest in making ornaments, moved to Chignahuapan from Uruapan, Michoacán in 1966. Initially, the esferas that he made were very simple: round, silver and undecorated. Today, using the same techniques that Méndez pioneered, other artisans make ornaments that are much more elaborate.

Esferas today come in countless shapes, sizes and decorations. Some are simple bulbs painted in bright strips; some have snowflakes or other winter scenes; others are shaped like small tops; still others have been made to look like hot-air balloons.

The first step in making an esfera is transforming a long, narrow tube of glass into a globe or some other figure using a blowtorch. This is done by craftsmen known as globeadores.

Esferas Campanita, Chignahuapan, Puebla
A holiday ornament begins life at the Esferas Campanita workshop as a thin glass tube.

“The glass we use is Pyrex, which we import from Germany,” said Josué Santos Galindo, who works at Esferas Campanita, a family-owned business started by Evodio Hererra and Arminda Olvera in 1998.

“One needs to know how much temperature to use, [and one] needs to control it,” Santos said.

The glass is heated and pulled by a globeador so that there are two thin tubes connected to a larger mass in the middle. The glass is ready to be shaped into a bulb when that mass is softened and turns orange. The end of one of the tubes is then heated and sealed.

“The difficult part is when the bulb is made,” Santos said.

This is done by gently blowing into the unsealed tube. “One needs to let the air in while turning the glass, only using the lips to blow,” he said. “It is difficult to control the air.”

Shoppers can try their hand at making a bulb at the store, working under the watchful eye of Santos or another employee. But it’s a difficult skill to do well; it could take as long as two weeks to learn how to make a perfectly round bulb.

Juanita Solano Cruz has worked as a globeadora for 27 years. The esferas she makes are much more complicated than a simple bulb.

With seemingly little effort, she’s able to expertly transform a single thin piece of glass into an elaborate esfera of five differently sized bulbs. To make each of the bulbs, she first heats a small part of the glass, blows into the tube to obtain the size she wants, heats another section, then blows another perfect bulb, continuing the process until she completes the esfera.

She laughed slightly when asked how long it would take to learn how to make something like that. “It would take about a month to learn to make the smallest one,” she said. “For a large one, one needs more experience. In about two years, a person would be an expert.”

Once a bulb’s made and cooled, it’s filled with a silver nitrate solution, dipped into warm water and gently shaken to evenly coat the bulb. This makes the esfera opaque and ready for the next step, which is painting.

About a 10-minute ride from Esferas Campanita is El Castillo de la Esfera, the largest maker of holiday ornaments in Mexico, founded by Javier Tirado Saavedra in 1993. José Romero Sánchez is a pintador (painter) who has worked there for 27 years. “It is a special paint,” he explained as he gently turned the bulb while pouring the color over it.

Although this may seem like a simple step, it’s not. “The important thing is to know how to turn the bulbs,” Romero said. On a typical day, he can paint 5,000 of them.

Castillo de la Esfera, Chignahuapan, Puebla
Each ornament is also dyed by hand before it is decorated with a painted design or scene.

Once dried, the stem that’s still attached to the bulb is cut using a small emery stone. Once that’s done, the bulb’s ready to be decorated.

Eduardo Rueda Caballero sits at his workbench, focusing intently on the flowers he’s painting on a bulb. “I can decorate 60 in a day,” he said. To learn how to paint a bulb like the one he was working on takes about a week, he said. “Practicing daily.”

Nearby, Orlando Reyes painted something more complicated, el Nacimiento — a Nativity scene — on bulbs. He can make 100 of these over the course of three days, painting the scene in stages. “Although we take longer to make them,” said Carolina Vázquez, another pintadora, “we make them well.”

Both El Castillo de la Esfera and Esferas Campanita also make personalized esferas, painting whatever a customer requests on the outside or tucking a photograph on the inside. Small esferas go for as little as 50 pesos (US $2.50) per dozen, while the most expensive ones cost 500 to 600 (US $25 to $30) a piece.

“When people see esferas in a store, they do not know how much work goes into it,” said Santos. “This is why it costs more. If people knew how much work goes into it, they would value it more.”

Esferas Campanita is on the smaller side, employing 15 people in its store and — during the busy season from October through early January — another 15 in its workshop.

El Castillo de la Esfera is several times larger.

“Here, 200 families depend on the company,” said Arturo Amezcua Muñoz, who has worked there for three years as the director of online sales. “This includes salespeople, drivers, carpenters. One hundred people work in the factory.”

He said that the factory turns out “millions” of esferas a year, operating year-round. “We have to,” he said, “to prepare for this season.”

The business also offers tours of the factory. On a recent Sunday, 4,000 people passed through.

If you’re hoping to make a day of it in Chignahuapan, in addition to its multitude of stores selling esferas, has a lovely zócalo featuring a colorful gazebo. During the season, there’s a huge Christmas tree with performers decked out as Santas, Grinches and other characters.

There’s also the Basilica of the Immaculate Conception, a Baroque-style church with a beautifully painted facade and its 14-meter-tall carving of the Virgin Mary inside. For those seeking a bit more nature, there’s the Laguna Almoloya, the pueblo’s lake, as well as nearby waterfalls, rivers and hot springs.

Esferas Campanita, Chignahuapan, Puebla
Ornaments from Esferas Campanita made to look like hot air balloons. Courtesy of Esferas Campanita

It’s estimated that the workshops in Chignahuapan turn out 70 million esferas a year, every one of them made by hand — a laborious process but not one that’s going to change.

“It is important to make these by hand to preserve tradition and for employment,” Santos said. “We all have work. It helps people economically in Chignahuapan. The character of this pueblo is as a producer of hand-made ornaments.”

When asked if there were plans to mechanize the process in the future, he simply said, “No.”

Esferas Campanita has one store in Chignahuapan while Castillo de la Esfera has four in the pueblo and another two in Mexico City.

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

More than 98% of the population lives in poverty in Mexico’s 15 poorest municipalities

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A view of San Simón Zahuatlán, Mexico's poorest municipality in 2020.
A view of San Simón Zahuatlán, Oaxaca, Mexico's poorest municipality in 2020.

In Mexico’s 15 poorest municipalities – located in three southern states with large indigenous populations — more than 98% of the population lives in poverty.

A report published by national social development agency Coneval on Wednesday shows that eight of those municipalities are in Oaxaca, six are in Chiapas and one is in Guerrero.

The poorest municipality in 2020 was San Simón Zahuatlán, Oaxaca, where 99.6% of residents live in poverty. In 2019, human development in the municipality, located in the state’s Mixteca region, was comparable to that in Yemen, the United Nations said in a report.

The second poorest municipality was Cochoapa el Grande, Guerrero, where the practice of selling young girls into marriage to alleviate poverty is common. According to Coneval, 99.4% of residents in the Montaña region municipality live in poverty.

The other 13 municipalities with poverty rates above 98% were, in order, Coicoyán de las Flores, Oaxaca; San Juan Cancuc, Chiapas; San Francisco Teopan, Oaxaca; Chanal, Chiapas; San Lucas Camotlán, Oaxaca; Aldama, Chiapas; Chalchihuitán, Chiapas; San Miguel Tilquiápam, Oaxaca; Santiago Amoltepec, Oaxaca; San Miguel Mixtepec, Oaxaca; Chenalhó, Chiapas; Santiago Tlazoyaltepec, Oaxaca; and San Andrés Duraznal, Chiapas.

Five of those – San Simón Zahuatlán, Aldama, Chanal, Chalchihuitán, San Juan Cancuc – were also among the 15 poorest municipalities in the country in 2010 and 2015.

A person is considered to be living in poverty if their income is below Coneval’s poverty threshold – currently 3,898 pesos (US $187) per month in urban areas and 2,762 pesos (US $133) in rural areas – and they present at least one social deficiency out of six, among which are poor access to adequate nutrition, housing and healthcare.

A person is considered to be living in extreme poverty if their income is below 1,850 pesos per month in urban areas and 1,457 pesos in rural areas and they present at least three social deficiencies.

The 15 municipalities with the highest extreme poverty rates are also located in Oaxaca, Chiapas and Guerrero. Santiago Amoltepec ranked first in that category with 84.4% of residents living in extreme poverty.

Coneval also identified the municipalities with the highest number of residents living in poverty and extreme poverty last year.

León, Guanajuato, headed the former list with almost 817,000 impoverished people.

San Pedro Garza García, Nuevo León, a municipality in the Monterrey metropolitan area, had the lowest poverty rate in the country in 2020.
San Pedro Garza García, Nuevo León, a municipality in the Monterrey metropolitan area, had the lowest poverty rate in the country in 2020.

Five other municipalities had more than half a million poor people in 2020, when poverty levels rose due to the pandemic. They were Ecatepec, México state; Iztapalapa, Mexico City; Puebla city; Nezahualcóyotl, México state; and Toluca, México state.

Acapulco, Guerrero, had the highest number of people living in extreme poverty – more than 126,000 – while León, Iztapalapa, Toluca and Ocosingo, Chiapas, also had more than 100,000 extremely poor residents.

Coneval said that half of all Mexicans not considered poor live in just 46 urban municipalities, located mainly in the country’s central and northern states.

San Pedro Garza García, Nuevo León, an affluent municipality in the metropolitan area of Monterrey, had the lowest poverty rate in the country in 2020 with just 5.5% of residents considered poor. Human development there in 2019 was comparable to that in France, the U.N. said.

Eleven of the 15 municipalities with the lowest poverty rates last year – all 11% or lower – are in Nuevo León. The ten others are Parás, Agualeguas, Marín, Higueras, Melchor Ocampo, Abasolo, Los Herreras, General Treviño, San Nicolás de los Garza and Cerralvo.

The four other municipalities among the 15 with the lowest poverty rates last year are Benito Juárez, Mexico City; Huépac, Sonora; Riva Palacio, Chihuahua; and Abasolo, Coahuila.

A report published earlier this month said that Mexico is one of the most unequal countries in the world. The top 10% of income earners in Mexico earn over 30 times more than the bottom 50%, said the World Inequality Report 2022, completed by the World Inequality Lab.

Mexico News Daily 

Zihuatanejo mayor says homicides down 33%

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Zihuatanejo Mayor Jorge Sánchez.
Zihuatanejo Mayor Jorge Sánchez.

Intentional homicides are down 33% in Zihuatanejo, the mayor told a Wednesday afternoon security meeting.

Jorge Sánchez Allec shared the news at a meeting that included Guerrero Governor Evelyn Salgado Pineda along with other civil and military leaders.

Sánchez said the decrease in homicides is due to a coordinated effort between federal, state and municipal security forces, including a special strategy focused on eliminating violence against women.

He also said that a greater number of crimes have been prosecuted, thanks to efforts to follow up on reported crimes.

Governor Salgado offered her continued support in the efforts to reduce crime, and said the state Public Security Ministry and the Ministry of Women will continue to coordinate with municipal authorities.

With reports from Milenio

Camera reveals semi carrying migrants went through immigration checkpoint

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The semi-trailer filled with migrants passed through a toll plaza where immigration agents were stationed, just 5 kilometers before the deadly crash.
The semi-trailer filled with migrants passed through a toll plaza where immigration agents were stationed, just five kilometers before the deadly crash.

A tractor-trailer carrying 160 migrants that crashed in Chiapas last week passed through a toll plaza where immigration agents were stationed, contrary to statements by federal officials.

Fifty-seven migrants were killed in last Thursday’s accident on the Chiapa de Corzo-Tuxtla Gutiérrez highway and more than 100 others were injured.

Footage from state government security cameras shows the truck passing through a toll plaza approximately five kilometers from where the accident occurred. It disproves claims by officials, including President López Obrador, that the semi-trailer didn’t pass through any government checkpoint.

The National Immigration Institute (INM) agents at the location are assumed to have been deployed there to prevent people smuggling. Two INM vehicles parked next to the lane the truck was in before reaching the toll plaza can be seen in the footage.  The semi was not subjected to any revision.

The migrants, mostly Guatemalans, had paid smugglers up to US $13,000 to get to the United States, the newspaper El País reported.

The chaotic scene from the December 9 crash.
Scene of the December 9 crash.

Deputy Interior Minister Alejandro Encinas said this week that the people allegedly responsible for smuggling the migrants had been identified. The federal Attorney General’s Office has opened an investigation into the accident and the smuggling operation, he said.

Of more than 110 migrants hospitalized after the crash, over 40 have been discharged, according to the Chiapas government.

The INM has offered humanitarian visas to some of the migrants whose planned northward journey came to an abrupt halt when the trailer they were traveling in detached from the tractor unit and overturned. But most didn’t accept the offer.

The news website Infobae reported that 27 visas were offered but only three Guatemalans and one Dominican Republic national accepted them. Twenty migrants opted to return to their countries of origin while three others remained in Mexico and were weighing their options.

Some other migrants involved in the accident are missing, according to their families and friends. Relatives of Guatemalan migrants said they have received phone calls from men who claim they kidnapped their missing loved ones. The alleged abductors have demanded ransoms of up to US $3,000, they told the newspaper Milenio.

“They’ve been calling us and saying they have information about my missing friend, they’re asking for $3,000 to release him because they kidnapped him. But how are we going to pay if we can barely get together 2,000 quetzales [US $260] to go to Chiapas,” said Pedro Méndez, whose brother was injured in the accident and is also missing.

He said he is collecting donations from neighbors, relatives and friends in order to pay to travel to Chiapas to search for missing migrants.

Elvira Alguá Morales, whose 17-year-old brother is missing, recounted a similar story. “We don’t know anything about him and [the presumed kidnappers] have been calling from Mexican telephone numbers asking us for $2,000 or $3,000 for … information about where he is,” she said.

With reports from El País, Infobae and Milenio

Organ donor saves lives of six people in Guerrero

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organs for transplant
In an unrelated case, organs for transplant are rushed into a Mexico City hospital following their donation in Sonora.

A young father’s tragic death gave six people a new lease on life in Acapulco this week, thanks to his decision to be an organ donor.

The 30-year-old, identified only as Ricardo, had said since he was a teenager that he wanted to be an organ donor, his family said.

“I want to give life after my life,” his mother Rosalinda recalled him saying.

A father and construction worker, Ricardo also regularly donated blood until a motorcycle accident on December 5 left him with a severe traumatic brain injury.

With few options, the family decided to honor Ricardo’s wishes and gave their approval for the donation of his organs.

“I’m about to say goodbye to my son as a hero, not a fantasy hero but a real hero,” Rosalinda said.

A multidisciplinary team of specialists prepared the organs for transport on December 13 at an IMSS hospital in Acapulco. Family, friends and medical staff gathered to applaud Ricardo’s sacrifice as he went into surgery. His heart, kidneys, liver and corneas were flown out to be transplanted immediately to six other patients in need.

Rosalinda said that she hopes the organ recipients will “take full advantage of the blessing … that they live their lives, that they be happy and find fulfillment; [the gift] is being given from the heart.”

With reports from Milenio

There is no longer corruption or nepotism in judiciary, declares chief justice

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Supreme Court Chief Justice Arturo Zaldívar gave his third annual report as head of the federal judicial power on Wednesday.
Supreme Court Chief Justice Arturo Zaldívar gave his third annual report as head of the federal judicial power on Wednesday. Defensoría Pública Federal

There is no longer institutionalized corruption or nepotism in the federal judiciary, Supreme Court Chief Justice Arturo Zaldívar declared Wednesday.

Delivering his third annual report as head of the federal judicial power, Zaldívar said that corruption is no longer tolerated and that only “isolated” cases remain.

There have have been countless cases over the years in which judges have taken or allegedly taken bribes in exchange for favorable rulings. Some judges have been found to have ties to powerful criminal organizations such as the Jalisco New Generation Cartel.

Zaldívar acknowledged that he has previously spoken about shady dealings between judges and suspected criminals.

“A few years ago at this very place I said that the federal judicial power faced a significant corruption problem. I annoyed a lot of people when I said it and the assertion still makes people uncomfortable today. But when it comes to public institutions, which belong to the people, dirty laundry isn’t aired at home,” he said.

“… [Now] I can categorically declare that there is no longer tolerated or institutionalized corruption in the federal judicial power. There is no longer corruption endorsed or sponsored from above. The cases of corruption that exist are isolated and are no longer due to the existence of mafias of corruption that used to operate from within. A change of behavior has been generated because there are no longer [judicial] leaders who protect corruption schemes,” Zaldívar said.

Speaking to an audience that included his Supreme Court colleagues, President López Obrador, members of the federal cabinet and lawmakers, the chief justice said the only way to overcome problems such as corruption is through self-criticism.

“Acknowledging our problems is a duty of justice for those who have suffered corruption and for the vast majority of public servants who are honest and honorable,” said Zaldívar, who is considered an ally of the president, although the two men have clashed.

He said that nepotism within the judiciary was a common practice for years.

“For a long time the opportunities to enter and be promoted in the federal judicial power didn’t depend on merit. There was a generalized practice in which the heads of jurisdictional bodies gave appointments to family members, … which generated significant inequality for access [to positions] and promotion as well as conflicts of interest and influence peddling,” Zaldívar said.

“With … the implementation of the Comprehensive Plan to Combat Nepotism, we’ve put an end to this phenomenon. Today there are clear rules that govern hiring and which prevent situations of conflicts of interest and influence peddling. Thanks to the application of these rules we’ve eradicated nepotism in all jurisdictional bodies,” he said.

“… Today we’re a new judicial power that provides justice that is more humane and effective … than ever,” Zaldívar affirmed.

“… The people of Mexico are crying out for justice that has historically been denied … [because the judiciary] has always been at the service of power and privilege. The changes we’ve achieved will begin to be felt soon. The people will know they have federal judges who will defend them and make their demands for justice a reality.”

The federal government has sought to do its bit to clean up the judiciary, passing reforms designed to eliminate corruption, nepotism and harassment in the court system.

López Obrador attempted to extend Zaldívar’s term as chief justice by two years, arguing that only he is capable of implementing the government’s laws to overhaul the judicial system. The Congress approved the initiative, but the Supreme Court revoked the law last month, ruling that it was unconstitutional.

With reports from Milenio

Mexico’s Canelo Álvarez named boxer of the year

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Saul Canelo Alvarez
World Boxing Council 2021 boxer of the year Saúl "Canelo" Álvarez, left, with his manager Eddy Reynoso. Eddy Reynoso/Twitter

Boxing champion Saúl “Canelo” Álvarez added to his accolades of a stellar 2021 on Tuesday when he was named the boxer of the year by the World Boxing Council (WBC). 

The event of the year also went to Canelo, for his knockout victory over the American, Caleb Plant, in November. The Guadalajara-born Álvarez became the first undisputed super middleweight champion when he stopped Plant in the 11th round.

“He made history, and now he’s boxer of the year,” the WBC tweeted to congratulate the red-headed athlete.

His other fights in 2021 were knockout victories against Turk Avni Yildirim in February and Briton Billy Joe Saunders in May. 

Eddy Reynoso, his trainer, won the award for Coach of the Year. Reynoso also guided American Andy Ruiz and Mexican Óscar Valdez to triumph this year.

With an extraordinary job in 2021. With multiple champions in his camp, Eddy Reynoso is the trainer of the year,” read the WBC’s congratulatory tweet. 

The men’s fight of the year, a separate category, was given to Briton Tyson Fury and American Deontay Wilder III for their heavyweight bout in October, which Fury won.

With reports from Uno TV 

Originally Mesoamerican, the piñata keeps evolving through the centuries

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girls at posada in Mexico City
Children enjoy a piñata at a posada celebration in Mexico City. Yavidaxiu/Creative Commons

Few things evoke Mexico in our minds as does the traditional star-shaped piñata.

Piñatas are extremely important to Mexican popular culture. They are ubiquitous at birthdays, for example, but the most traditional ones are associated with Christmas.

But did they originate in Mexico?  The answer is mostly yes …. and a little no.

Modern Mexican piñatas are a combination of two cultural lineages: the breaking of a container with something special inside was part of various Mesoamerican cultures. The Mayan version even had a blindfolded participant hit the pot. But the direct ancestor of the modern piñata was the Aztec version.

It honored the birth of Huitzilopochtli, the god of the sun and of war and the principal deity on the winter solstice, considered to be his day of birth. This date was also the first day of the new year, as the sun returned from the longest night of the year.

statue in Acolman, Mexico state
Statue of a monk hitting a piñata at the town of Acolman, México state, considered the home of the piñata. Alejandro Linares García

For this version of the piñata, an old clay pot was decorated with feathers to represent the god. Feathers were important because Huitzilopochtli was said to have been conceived due to his mother absorbing a ball of feathers into her abdomen, and so he was born with feathers on his body. In the ritual, the pot was broken and the fruits of the season and other edibles were shared.

Way over on the other side of the world, the Chinese had developed a similar tradition to mark their new year, celebrated in the early spring. Their version made a vessel in the shape of a cow or ox decorated with symbols and colors meant to bring luck for the coming growing season.

It was filled with seeds and hit with a stick. After being broken, the remains were burned and the ashes kept for good luck.

By the time the Spanish had reached the Americas, Europeans had brought the Chinese tradition west and were breaking decorated clay pots filled with edibles. They had adapted it culturally by making it a tradition for the first Sunday of Lent. So, where does the name piñata come from?

It has its origins in the Italian pignatta, which means “clay cooking pot.” The Spanish version used a plain clay vessel and decorated it with ribbons, tinsel and colored paper.

One of the first undertakings after the conquest was to convert the indigenous Mexica (Aztecs) to Catholicism. As was the case in Europe centuries earlier, this was achieved with a combination of force, political maneuvering and, at times, co-opting native traditions and symbolism to the conquerors’ religion.

piñata in Tlaxcala
The star version of the piñata has evolved into a general Christmas decoration like this one in Tlaxcala. Isaacvp/Creative Commons

Because of the importance of Huitzilopochtli and his birthday, the last option was taken. Evangelists at the monastery in Acolman, México state — today considered the home of the piñata — are credited with mixing the two clay pot traditions and adding some new elements.

European piñata making and breaking was moved to the days before Christmas to coincide with the indigenous festival. But the innovation came with the “new” piñata’s design and symbolism.

Seven cones or points were added onto the pot, along with the colored paper. These represented the seven deadly sins of Catholicism, and the piñata itself represented evil.

The blindfolded person represented faith in God, and the hitting of the piñata with the stick the struggle of man against evil. Breaking the piñata and the release of the edibles inside represented the success and rewards of winning this battle.

In some early traditions, the blindfolded person was turned 33 times, once for each year that Jesus is said to have lived.

Piñatas were the main event in a series of pre-Christmas get-togethers called posadas (lodgings), which today are still done to reenact the biblical story of Mary and Joseph looking for a place to stay before Jesus was born. Originally, the purpose of the posada tradition was to overwrite the whole Huitzilopochtli festival.

Aztec god Huitzilopochtli Borgia Codex
An image of Huitzilopochtli as depicted in the Borgia Codex.

Now, if you thought that breaking a piñata by some kid wielding a stick while blindfolded was dangerous enough, can you imagine what it was like to scramble among other greedy little ones among shards of pottery?

In very few places, Christmas piñatas are still made with clay pots. Piñatas are made all over Mexico, in almost any shape, but now mostly use papier-mâché for the hollow container. While paper piñatas are certainly safer, the change is more likely due to economics than concerns about injury.

It is unknown how, when or why the piñata broke its temporal confines of the December holidays to become part of one of the most often performed party rituals. I suspect that it has a lot to do with the strong appeal to the human psyche in scrambling against others for stuff.

The original star-shaped piñata, today with anywhere from five to nine points, is still found almost exclusively in December. These same ones can also have “feather-like” tissue paper streamers as decorations.

Perhaps Huitzlopochli hasn’t disappeared entirely.

Leigh Thelmadatter arrived in Mexico 18 years ago and fell in love with the land and the culture in particular its handcrafts and art. She is the author of Mexican Cartonería: Paper, Paste and Fiesta (Schiffer 2019). Her culture column appears regularly on Mexico News Daily.

US offers $5 million reward for arrest of each of El Chapo’s 4 sons

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Three of the four sons of El Chapo
Three of the four sons of El Chapo for whom rewards were announced.

The United States government has announced rewards of up to US $5 million each for information leading to the arrest and/or conviction of four sons of imprisoned drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán Loera.

The Department of State announced the rewards Wednesday for the arrest of Ovidio Guzmán López, Ivan Archivaldo Guzmán Salazar, Jesús Alfredo Guzmán Salazar and Joaquín Guzmán López, also known as Los Chapitos.

“All four are high-ranking members of the Sinaloa Cartel and are each subject to a federal indictment for their involvement in the illicit drug trade,” the Department of State said in a press release.

It provided details on how information about the four men can be forwarded to authorities, including by telephone, email and encrypted messaging services.

The Department of State said its new reward announcements complement the Department of Treasury’s designation of 25 individuals and entities under a new executive order (E.O.) – Imposing Sanctions on Foreign Persons Involved in the Global Illicit Drug Trade – signed by United States President Joe Biden on Wednesday.

“Under the new E.O. … the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) today designated 25 actors (10 individuals and 15 entities) in four countries for having engaged in, or attempted to engage in, activities or transactions that have materially contributed to, or pose a significant risk of materially contributing to, the international proliferation of illicit drugs or their means of production,” the Department of Treasury said.

In Mexico, Treasury designated Los Rojos and the Guerreros Unidos for the first time, and added additional designations to 12 individuals and entities that had already been designated under the Kingpin Act and/or a 2011 E.O.

“Los Rojos DTO [drug trafficking organization] is a splinter group of the Beltrán Leyva Organization (BLO), which in recent years has risen to become one of Mexico’s most powerful criminal organizations. In addition to driving violence in Mexico, the Los Rojos DTO is responsible for trafficking numerous illicit drugs, including heroin, into the United States,” Treasury said.

“Guerreros Unidos (GU), a DTO based in Guerrero, Mexico, was originally a splinter group from BLO and through violence expanded its role in the heroin trade. GU collaborates with the Mexican narcotics trafficking organization, Jalisco New Generation Cartel, and shares the same transportation networks to move drug shipments into the United States and to return drug proceeds to Mexico.”

The Guerreros Unidos is also implicated in the abduction of the 43 students who disappeared in Guerrero in 2014.

The Mexican entities and individuals that received an additional designation under the new E.O. were:

• The Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG).

• CJNG leader Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes.

• The Sinaloa Cartel.

• Sinaloa Cartel leader Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada.

• The leaders of the Los Chapitos faction of the Sinaloa Cartel – Ivan, Jesús and Ovidio Guzmán.

• The Beltrán Leyva Organization.

• Fausto Isidro Meza Flores, a BLO operator in northern Sinaloa.

• The Gulf Cartel.

• The Juárez Cartel.

• Los Zetas drug cartel.

• Miguel Treviño Morales, who the DEA considers the head of Los Zetas.

• Omar Treviño Morales, Miguel’s brother and a leader of Los Zetas.

• La Familia Michoacana drug cartel.

“As a result of today’s action, all property and interests in property of the designated individuals that are in the United States or in the possession or control of U.S. persons must be blocked and reported to OFAC,” Treasury said.

Mexico News Daily 

Feds announce 10bn pesos for infrastructure projects in Cancún

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The proposed bridge
The proposed bridge, whose plans will have to be scaled back, according to the governor.

The government is set to invest 10 billion pesos (about US $470 million) in Cancún, Quintana Roo, to upgrade infrastructure in the tourist destination, President López Obrador announced this week.

The Caribbean city will receive funds for the Nichupté Bridge, a new 8.7 kilometer road connection over the Nichupté Lagoon linking the city to the hotel zone, and for renovations to the Luis Donaldo Colosio avenue, which connects the hotel zone to the airport and the city. 

The president said it was high time the avenue was attended to, and explained how it would be funded: “We are going to improve that avenue, Colosio, which is the principal one and is in very bad condition, totally destroyed. We have already made the commitment to redo it … with hydraulic concrete, taking care that the drainage and water systems are also reconstructed. It is a project that we are going to do jointly between the state government and the federal government,” he said. 

The government’s financial commitment to the Nichupté Bridge means a previous funding plan, a public private partnership, will be scrapped.

Governor Carlos Manuel Joaquín said the change in funding for the bridge would reduce the investment and force the project to be scaled back. “It is an issue that we are going to present in the next visit that the president makes; it will no longer be a public private partnership. The bridge had very broad goals. In addition to vehicle lanes, it included bicycle lanes, and maintenance schemes during the years of the concession, but now, faced with the possibility of being a public project, they will be lost. The goals of the project will have to be reduced,” he said. 

The president also announced a 300 hectare recreational park in Tulum called The Park of the Jaguar, near an archaeological reserve, through which he aims to protect the area from over-development.

Quintana Roo has benefited from high levels of government investment. A new airport is under construction in Tulum, and it is one of five states where the $8-billion Maya Train project will run once completed, which is scheduled to start operating in 2023.

With reports from El Economista