Sunday, June 15, 2025

Netflix series inspired by story of 2011 massacre in Allende, Coahuila

0
One of the homes destroyed in Allende in 2011.
One of the homes destroyed in Allende in 2011.

This story was originally published by ProPublica.

Netflix will release a series next month inspired by a story that revealed the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s role in setting off a massacre in northern Mexico in 2011, leaving dozens of people dead or missing.

“How the U.S. Triggered a Massacre in Mexico” was published in 2017 by the investigative news agency ProPublica.

The series, called Somos., which means “we are,” was created by award-winning screenwriter and producer James Schamus, who assembled an almost entirely Mexican crew of writers, researchers, cinematographers, editors, actors and extras. It was written and filmed in Spanish, on sets located primarily in the Mexican state of Durango, not far from Allende, in the neighboring state of Coahuila, which was the scene of the tragic events on which the series is based.

Schamus, an Oscar nominee and former CEO of Focus Features who previously produced widely acclaimed films including Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Brokeback Mountain, and Lust, Caution, said that after reading ProPublica’s reporting on Allende he was struck by the complex story behind what had happened there and the fact that the tragedy was not more widely known, largely because systemic impunity made it dangerous for those affected to speak out about it.

He said he immediately started reflecting on ways the story could be told through a fictional narrative that centered on the experiences of the victims — and could potentially reach a wider audience. The period at the end is meant to make the title more of a universal assertion that means, “This is us.”

Somos. will give a third life to ProPublica’s “How the United States Triggered a Massacre in Mexico.” The online story, which was co-published with National Geographic, was an oral history that reconstructed a 2010 DEA case that had targeted the leaders of a vicious Mexican drug cartel.

Somos. | Tráiler oficial | Netflix

The operation erupted in violence when it was compromised by corrupt members of a DEA-trained Mexican police unit. The story relied heavily on testimonies from people responsible for the attack and those who were its victims, including law enforcement agents, cartel members, local officials and relatives of the dead and missing.

After the story was published, Audible used some of the recorded testimonies to produce a podcast featuring well-known film actors, including Cheech Marin and Danny Trejo.

It was important to Schamus that Somos. be both authentic and unconventional. Because he’d never worked in Mexico and didn’t speak Spanish, he knew he’d need to rely heavily on a team of Mexican artists to achieve his vision. Among those he enlisted as writers were Monika Revilla and Fernanda Melchor, whose earlier work had also grappled with humanity’s darker side.

They and others on the team immersed themselves for three years in the history, lives, culture and language of the northern region of the country, which has been shaped, for better and worse, by its proximity to the United States.

The pandemic and other security concerns prevented the crew from traveling to Allende, but they used Google maps, Instagram and Facebook to get to know its streets and people. Melchor said that it was by watching social media accounts of Allende’s youth football team that they learned some of the players were girls, which inspired them to create such a character in the series. Before long, Revilla said, “We knew the names of the most popular bars in town and what nights they had karaoke.”

The team also set out to make Somos. different from so many other television series about drug violence, which tend to focus on law enforcement agents and traffickers. “Instead of the narco or the cop with the gun,” Schamus said, “we turn the camera around on the extra in the corner. The people who hover around the borders of the screen, those are the people at the center of Somos.”

Revilla, whose previous work includes the popular Netflix series La Casa de las Flores (The House of Flowers), said, “As someone with a background in television, I’ve seen series after series that glamorize the traffickers, and that tell what it’s like to live in the midst of a war against drugs, but not from a point of view that has anything to do with us.”

Melchor, who is best known for her highly regarded novel Temporada de Huracanes (Hurricane Season), said that turning real people who’d suffered unspeakable atrocities into television characters without trivializing or retraumatizing them was perhaps the crew’s toughest challenge. She said that she, Schamus and Revilla wanted their characters’ stories to be realistic, but not real, out of respect for the massacre’s victims and their relatives. “We didn’t want those people to feel aggrieved,” Melchor said, “but at the same time we wanted them to feel their experiences were represented.”

Somos. stars a large collection of professional and amateur actors. One young man, Jesús Sida, who plays a central character named Paquito, was discovered working after school as a mechanic in his father’s garage.

The series is scheduled for worldwide release on June 30. Melchor said she hopes it will “start a conversation, not only about Allende, but about all the Allendes that there have been in other parts of Mexico, and the massacres that continue everywhere.”

Schamus, who has learned a considerable amount of Spanish in the last three years, said he had similar hopes for the series, but that they can only happen if viewers like it. He said that the early response has been glowing.

“I think the series could have the chance to shift discourse in Mexico and elsewhere about what has been the structural impact of the violence of the drug war,” he said. “But the reason it has any chance of having that impact is because the work by this team is awesome.”

Mexico News Daily

Cartels burn vehicles, block highways in 5 Michoacán municipalities

0
A truck burns on a highway in Michoacán Friday.
A truck burns on a highway in Michoacán Friday.

After a confrontation with members of the National Guard in Aguililla, warring cartels in Michoacán burned vehicles and blocked highways in five municipalities.

Authorities reported 11 roads blocked by vehicles, some of which were set on fire, in the Tierra Caliente region on Friday. The municipalities affected were Apatzingán, Buenavista, Parácuaro, Tepalcatepec and Aguililla.

The 11 blockades were removed and the roads reopened, authorities said. Authorities added that they were the cartels’ response to security operations carried out by state police.

The confrontation in Aguililla involved a shootout between the National Guard and members of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), and led to the CJNG burning two vehicles to prevent more security forces from entering the area, the newspaper El Universal reported. It is not yet known if there were any casualties.

National Guard and state police were also attacked with sticks and rocks by residents of El Terrero, a community in Buenavista. Then around midday, groups of presumed cartel members began to blockade the roads connecting Apatzingán to Buenavista, Parácuaro, Tapalcatepec and Aguililla.

Se registran enfrentamientos, bloqueos y queman vehículos en Tierra Caliente

CJNG rival Cárteles Unidos blocked roads in seven places in Apatzingán, Buenavista and Parácuaro. In Apatzingán, a store was burned by a group of armed individuals who threatened to burn more commercial buildings.

Later in the day the violence spread to the state capital of Morelia, where three cars were reported burned including a police vehicle.

The Tierra Caliente region has become the epicenter of a cartel turf war in recent months, forcing families from at least a dozen communities in the municipalities of Aguililla and Buenavista to flee the violence.

Sources: El Universal (sp)

Contract worth 36.6bn pesos awarded for Maya Train rolling stock

0
Maya Train design
The Mexican subsidiary of Bombardier Inc. will provide the Maya Train project with 42 trains and infrastructure.

The federal government announced this week that a consortium led by the Mexican subsidiary of Bombardier Inc. was the successful bidder in an international tendering process for the acquisition of rolling stock and rail systems for the Maya Train railroad in Mexico’s southeast.

The National Tourism Promotion Fund (Fonatur) said in a statement that the consortium submitted a bid of 36.6 billion pesos (US $1.84 billion) to supply rail systems and 42 trains. Thirty-two trains will be electro-diesel, and 10 will run solely on diesel.

The winning bid was 890 million pesos (US $44.6 million) lower than the second-lowest offer, and the consortium that submitted it achieved the highest score among seven participants in the process, according to Fonatur, which is managing the construction of the 1,500-kilometer tourist, public transit and freight railroad.

Fonatur said the consortium will design and manufacture 42 trains and build infrastructure including train control centers, maintenance workshops and depots. Testing of the trains will begin in 2023.

Fonatur chief Rogelio Jiménez Pons said Friday that the government will later acquire 57 more trains from the same consortium. They will be purchased as demand for travel on the railroad increases, he told reporters at the president’s press conference, adding that it will begin operations in December 2023.

Maya Train
The different trains that operate on the railroad will have Maya names.

President López Obrador said a lot of the work to manufacture the trains will be done in Ciudad Sagahún, Hidalgo.

“This is good news because it’s an investment of about 36 billion pesos and a lot of jobs will be created,” he said.

Jiménez said the different trains that operate on the railroad will have Mayan names. Trains offering short, regular services for locals will be called xiinbal, which means “walk,” special “restaurant trains” will be known as janal, which means “eat” and trains covering long distances will be called p’atlal, which means “stay,” he said.

“… It’s estimated that in the first years [of operation] a [regular service] train will be leaving Cancún every 15 minutes and later the number of wagons and frequencies will increase,” Jiménez said.

“… This is the type of train that will have a restaurant,” the Fonatur chief said as images of the janal were projected on a screen behind him.

“… There is great gastronomic wealth in the southeast, imagine … 10 restaurant trains, which is the number being ordered, offering food from Yucatán, Campeche, Chiapas, Tabasco …”

Maya Train
An artist’s conception of the dining car.

López Obrador says the construction and operation of the US $7.8-billion railroad will spur economic and social development in Mexico’s southeast but the project is not without its critics. Several indigenous communities have filed legal action against the project on environmental grounds, while some Maya oppose it because they believe it will bring few economic benefits to impoverished residents.

“It’s not planned for us, the common people. It’s a tourism project that will only benefit the wealthy and foreigners. We, the owners of the land, will only see the train pass by because there will be no stations in the majority of our towns. … Our communities will only see the destructive part of the project,” a collective of indigenous groups said.

The same collective also challenged the name of the project, declaring that “there’s nothing Mayan about it.”

 

Maya Train design
One of the trains whose designs were revealed today.

Mexico News Daily 

In a tiny, remote Michoacán community, Purépecha artisans embroider award-winning designs

0
Traditional cross stitched blouses from Zipiajo
Traditional cross stitched blouses from Zipiajo at the Feria Maestros del Arte. Feria Maestros del Arte

“They are some of my favorite craftspeople because they are a cooperative in the truest sense of the word. … they work together as a team trying to help each other,” says Terry Baumgart, an expert in Michoacán crafts for the Feria Maestros del Arte.

Baumgart is talking about two interconnected cooperatives in the tiny community of Zipiajo in central Michoacán. Those in the Cuanari group focus on textiles, and those in the Alfarería de Zipiajo Nana Elvia group focus on pottery.

Although handcraft production is important all over the state of Michoacán, it is particularly important for Zipiajo. Although located between Lake Pátzcuaro and the highway to Guadalajara, winding roads among cornfields means that it takes two hours to get there from the tourist towns of the lake.

This isolation means that the town has preserved a traditional way of life. Purhépecha is still spoken here, and it is known for its festival in honor of an image of the infant Jesus with many miracles attributed to it.

The driving force behind the development of Zipiajo’s crafts is María Elvia Silvia Bartolo, who has been organizing and promoting the tiny town’s crafts for over three decades.

Elvia Silvia Bartolo
María Elvia Silvia Bartolo is a tireless promoter of the Zipiajo collective’s traditional crafts. Florence Leyret

Her work has borne fruit: Zipiajo pottery is one of 13 crafts with designation-of-origin status, the same that tequila and Talavera pottery have.

The cooperatives have worked with the federal handcraft agency Fonart to formalize their businesses, including the creation of labels and catalogs. This work is even more impressive when you realize that many of the artisans are not even able to read and write in any language.

Both crafts are recognized but in different ways. Zipiajo’s pottery style is recognized by federal and state cultural authorities, but it is their embroidered garments that have won prizes.

Cuanari means “morning light” in Purhépecha. Officially, all of these textile workers are women, but Baumgart states that at least one man has worked with them secretly.

Zipiajo textiles include blouses, men’s shirts, traditional aprons and more decorated in cross-stitch. Traditional embroidery designs come from the world the artisans know such as flowers and other elements of nature, which are stitched onto muslin cloth.

Some artisans are experimenting with bringing back old motifs such as deer (not seen in these parts for a long time) and images never used before such as cats.

They have also worked on creating finer versions of their embroidery, mostly by shrinking the size of the stitches allowing for finer details. Baumgart says such dresses go for about US $200. One she owns gets her “stalked” by envious women at handcraft events.

Embroidered garments have brought the town fame through winning handcraft competitions. One of the rather unique aspects of this group is that when one member wins prize money for a crafted item, one half goes to the winner with the other half shared among other members.

The potters are organized under the name of Alfarería de Zipiajo Nana Elvia (Zipiajo Pottery of Grandma Elvia), named after the maestra who has been so instrumental for artisans here.

Zipiajo pottery is a very simple and rustic type — not in the sense of poorly made, quite the opposite —  but rather in that it lacks shiny glazes or detailed decoration.

Made from local ochre clay, Zipiajo pottery has been entirely utilitarian: pots, comales (grills for cooking tortillas) and dishes. Firing is done above ground after wood and other combustibles (including dung) have been heaped into the mound of green pottery. Despite modern pressures, including deforestation, maestra Elvia insists on firing the old way, explaining that she promised this to the town elders more than 30 years ago when she began.

The result is a matte ochre color with capricious permanent black smudges. Despite its historical importance, and strong appeal to a certain segment of collectors, these wares are rarely put into competition with Michoacán’s more ornate pottery traditions.

Traditional Zipiajo pots just after firing
Traditional Zipiajo pots just after firing showing residue from the process as well as the resulting black smudges.

That does not mean Zipiajo pottery has not experienced change. The cooperative has been working for some time on options to appeal to markets outside the local area.

Most of these have included pots with simple decorative features, particularly animals, as well as stand-alone animal figures such as deer, rabbits, turtles, squirrels and more. These have the same ochre/black smudge finish as they are created the same way.

The artisans of Zipiajo have been supported not only by Mexican handcraft authorities but by the nonprofit organization Feria Maestros del Arte in Chapala, Jalisco. They have been invited to participate multiple times in the annual event in November (before the pandemic) and are part of the organization’s online efforts as well. Their page right now has only textiles, but the site is being revamped. They can also be found by contacting Baumgart.

However, the transition to online sales has not been easy. They are isolated, and their only way to take advantage of the internet is through one member’s godson, who owns a tiny cybercafe and volunteers to send photos and other information to the Feria organization.

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.

Green vistas, big cats, caves make Sierra Lalo’s secrets worth the search

0
Volcán de Fuego volcano, Jalisco
Many points in the Sierra Lalo offer an excellent view of the Volcán de Fuego volcano.

One of the side benefits of cave exploration in Mexico is that we frequently stumble upon fascinating places that we would never find otherwise.

For example, it was only because of a cave that we ventured forth into the Sierra Lalo, an area so remote that it shows up on maps as a great blank space situated 50 kilometers due east of Colima city, yet located entirely within the state of Jalisco.

Zoom in with Google Maps and about the only thing you can discern is the little settlement of Alotitlán, population 26.

What a delight it was when we discovered that this Sierra — which covers an area of 240,000 hectares — is heavily wooded and green all year round thanks to its countless streams and springs. Naturally, this means that the forest is filled with wildlife, including foxes, lynxes and pumas.

What first attracted the Spaniards to these mountains, however, were gold, silver, iron and marble.

Sierra Lalo caver
A caver drags the survey tape to the far end of a muddy passage.

Did I forget to mention the altitude? It ranges from 1,000 to nearly 3,000 meters, making the Sierra Lalo, all in all, just as cool and inviting as the famous hills of Tapalpa, Jalisco, but without the tourists.

Perhaps the place is relatively unknown because this sierra appears on maps with a variety of spellings: La Sierra del Alo, La Sierra del Halo, La Sierra de Lalo and, finally, just La Sierra Lalo. Now, Lalo is the diminutive for Eduardo, but don’t waste your time looking for the Eddy it was named after: he may be as hard to locate as Santa Claus.

I first drove into these mountains with members of the Zotz Caving Club, and we were heading not for the metropolis of Alotitlán but for the even-less-known pueblito of Canutillo, which boasts a population of 20.

Here, believe it or not, there is a shop owned by one Doña Marta, who had, some months earlier, spoken the word cueva (cave) to my friend Mario.

“You’ll find it at a place called Rancho del Real,” she had added.

We soon located the cave, which had two entrances and 184 meters of mostly walking passages characterized by two things: once beautiful but now broken formations like stalactites and draperies up above your head, and thick reddish mud beneath your feet.

Sierra Lalo, Jalisco
The pine-covered hills of Sierra Lalo are beautiful but hard to reach during the rainy season.

We were, of course, surveying this cave, which meant that some of us were obliged to drag the survey tape to the far end of every little side passage, which could most often be accomplished only by crawling through the brightly colored mud that was actually clay that permanently dyes your clothes, clogs up your flashlight and wreaks havoc on your camera.

Naturally, we also had to crawl through plenty of bat guano, including the gooey, smelly, black excretions of vampire bats.

That evening, the owner of the ranch, Señor Juan Herrera, kindly invited us to camp on his property. After washing up in an ice-cold stream, we warmed ourselves around a roaring campfire.

Although it was still August, at 1,800 meters altitude the descending fog sent a chill through my bones. Soon, the fog had us talking about things that go Bump in the Night.

“We have a ghost here,” said Herrera. “It’s tall, dressed all in white and has no head. I’ve seen it several times, and I’m not the only one. A group of miners came here to do an assessment and slept in a trailer parked over there, just above where you are camping.”

“Well, every night,” he added, “this trailer would start to shake uncontrollably, apparently for no reason at all. The men figured somebody was behind this, so one of them decided to sleep underneath the trailer so he could catch the culprit in the act.”

Sierra Lalo, Jalisco
Sunset in the picturesque Sierra Lalo, 240,000 hectares of pine forest filling Jalisco’s southeastern extremity.

In the middle of the night, so goes Herrera’s story, the shaking started.

“The ‘watchman’ woke up and found no one else under the trailer but himself,” he explained. “He crawled out just in time to see the headless ghost go down the road and through the gate. He ran after it and found the gate — that one you see right over there — locked. That ghost went right through it!”

Of course, I got up in the middle of the night to see if I could spot the headless ghost, but no such luck. The next day, we wasted all morning trying to find another cave in the local garbage dump (only cavers would persist in such an effort) and finally decided to relax and look around.

Doña María had told us that the greatest tourist attraction they had in the area was El Puerto del Aire, which I think must be one of the highest points in the Sierra Lalo.

So, we set out from Canutillo and drove 14 kilometers uphill toward Puerto del Aire, where we planned to eat lunch. The road was awful, with deep, muddy sections. We had to cross several streams and dodge rockfall on the steep road.

In the rainy season, you really need four-wheel drive. Curiously, it began to get darker and darker as we gained altitude even though it was the middle of the day.

Cave explorer Mario Guerrero Sierra Lalo
Explorer Mario Guerrero warms up after camping in the Sierra Lalo.

When we reached the very top of the mountain, at 2,286 meters, we could hardly believe our eyes. We seemed to have changed seasons in a matter of minutes. It was August-in-Sunny-Mexico down below around Canutillo but Patagonia-in-the-Dead-of-Winter up here at the mountaintop.

Right where a sign advised us we had reached Puerto del Aire, it suddenly felt cold. A thick fog enveloped the place while a powerful wind howled across the road so loudly that we had to shout to one another. My friend Mario had a cigarette in his hand one minute and the next second it was gone.

Clothes on a line were flapping wildly like sails in a hurricane. We could barely walk in a straight line. There was a little shop up there, and we wondered how the family running it could stand this weather. It was, after all, still summer, yet the shop owner was wearing a heavy anorak.

“What must this be like in winter?” we mused as we jumped back into the truck and abandoned all thought of eating lunch at this “tourist attraction.”

However, I must say, just being there was a truly unique and therefore unforgettable experience that I would highly recommend — but only for a few minutes.

Having duly paid our respects to Puerto del Aire, we quickly drove two kilometers back down the road and — lo and behold — it was summer again: sunny, calm and peaceful. We picnicked on the roadside, watching the distant trees up on the mountaintop, still violently swaying.

Sierra Lalo, Jalisco
Speleologists make their way through the picturesque forest on their way to a cave.

I was later told that what we had experienced is known as the Venturi effect, caused by wind being squeezed into an increasingly narrow space and therefore speeding up dramatically.

If you ever visit Puerto del Aire, you’ll never forget it — unless, of course, you go there on a day the wind is not blowing!

To get to this curious spot deep inside the Sierra Lalo, I recommend you not follow Google Maps, which takes you through Pihuamo. Instead, I suggest you follow the route I show on Wikiloc, which can be done with a high-clearance vehicle in the dry season. Don’t forget to bring your kite!

The writer has lived near Guadalajara, Jalisco, for 31 years and is the author of A Guide to West Mexico’s Guachimontones and Surrounding Area and co-author of Outdoors in Western Mexico. More of his writing can be found on his website.

 

La Cueva del Real, Jalisco
Cave explorers take a bow after surveying the La Cueva del Real, filled with clay mud.

 

Puerto del Aire, Jalisco shopkeeper
Due to the altitude, a shopkeeper at Puerto del Aire sports an anorak even on a sultry summer day.

 

Puerto del Aire, Mexico
The writer experiences the fierce winds of Puerto del Aire, said to be caused by the Venturi effect.

 

Juan Herrera, Puerto del Aire, Jalisco
Juan Herrera tells visitors around a campfire the story of a headless ghost dressed in white, said to haunt the area.

‘Unethical liars:’ AMLO replies to hard-hitting editorial in British newspaper

0
AMLO
AMLO fired back today at an Economist editorial critical of his government.

President López Obrador responded on Friday to a scathing editorial by the British newspaper The Economist, describing the article as “very propagandistic” and questioning its right to advise Mexicans to vote against his party.

Published under the headline “Voters should curb Mexico’s power-hungry president” in its May 29-June 4 edition, on which López Obrador appears on the cover beneath the headline “Mexico’s false messiah,” the editorial compares AMLO, as the president is commonly known, to “authoritarian populists” Viktor Orbán of Hungary, Narendra Modi of India and Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil.

Unlike those leaders, however, López Obrador has been able to escape the limelight, the newspaper said.

This is partly because he lacks some of the vices of his populist peers. He does not deride gay people, bash Muslims or spur his supporters to torch the Amazon,” The Economist said. “To his credit, he speaks out loudly and often for Mexico’s have-nots, and he is not personally corrupt. Nonetheless, he is a danger to Mexican democracy.”

The editorial cited a long list of reasons why AMLO represents a threat to democratic government. Among them: he has held legally questionable referendums on infrastructure projects; he has entrusted a wide range of government tasks – and large sums of money – to the military; he has cut the budgets of watchdogs or stuffed them with supporters; he intends to replace the central bank governor with an economist who favors “a moral economy”; and he has threatened the National Electoral Institute. 

AMLO article
The cover of the May 29 issue of The Economist.

“The next three years will determine the depth and duration of the damage he does to Mexico and its democracy. He is barred from seeking reelection but is trying illegally to extend the term of a friendly supreme-court judge [Chief Justice Arturo Zaldívar]. Critics fear he wants to set a precedent for himself. Mexico’s institutions are strong but may buckle under sustained assault by a zealot with popular support,” The Economist said.   

It also criticized AMLO for his response to the coronavirus pandemic, for dividing the country into “the people” (his supporters) and “the elite,” for investing US $7 billion in “a diesel-burning boondoggle” (the Maya Train), for “all but banning” private investment in the energy sector, for not reducing “the stratospheric murder rate,” for failing to combat government corruption and for not spurring growth by creating an investor-friendly business environment. 

“… He has done good things, such as bumping up pensions and subsidizing apprenticeships for the young. Though a leftist, he has kept spending and debt under control, so Mexico’s credit rating remains tolerably firm. But he suffers from what Moisés Naím, a Venezuelan journalist, calls ‘ideological necrophilia’— a love of ideas that have been tried and proved not to work,” The Economist said. 

“… López Obrador is notorious for not listening to advice. His catchphrase in cabinet meetings is ‘Cállate!’ (Shut up). His disdain for expertise has made government less competent.”

Due to the risks AMLO poses, citizens participating in the June 6 municipal, state and federal elections “should support whichever opposition party is best placed to win, wherever they live,” the editorial said.

“The opposition parties should work together to restrain the president. … They should learn from him too. He is popular partly because they did a poor job of helping those left behind during the long boom that followed economic liberalization in the 1980s.”

The Economist also argued that the United States “needs to pay attention” to what is happening in Mexico.

Donald Trump did not care about Mexican democracy. President Joe Biden should make clear that he does. He must be tactful: Mexicans are understandably allergic to being pushed around by their big neighbor. But America ought not to turn a blind eye to creeping authoritarianism in its backyard. As well as sending vaccines unconditionally, Mr. Biden should send quiet warnings,” the publication said.

Responding to an unrelated question at his regular news conference on Friday, López Obrador mentioned that an “English magazine” had published a “very propagandistic article against us.” He then proceeded to offer an explanation as to why The Economist and other foreign media outlets have been critical of him and his government.

“These foreign magazines and newspapers dedicated themselves to applauding the neoliberal policies [of past governments]; they’re in favor of privatizations, and they always kept quiet in the face of the corruption that reigned [in Mexico.] They only dedicated themselves to praising the corrupt politicians in Mexico because they’re conservatives,” López Obrador said, using one of his pet words to describe anyone who opposes him.

“Now they’re annoyed because the people are supporting a transformation. So they come out with this disrespectful, very rude and, of course, deceitful cover calling me ‘the false messiah,’” he said.

“The tropical messiah” is another nickname for the president, who is a native of the low-lying, sultry state of Tabasco.

Marcelo Ebrard
Marcelo Ebrard responded formally to the criticisms in the article with a letter to The Economist’s editor. File photo

López Obrador accused The Economist of “lacking ethics” in calling upon Mexicans not to vote for the ruling Morena party on June 6.

“… It’s like me going to the United Kingdom and asking the English to vote for my friend [Jeremy] Corbyn of the Labour Party. I can’t do that because that’s a decision for the English. So why don’t they respect [us] …,” he said.

“… All those who participated or kept quiet when Mexico was being looted are now annoyed because the people said ‘Enough,’” López Obrador reiterated.

Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard also responded, sending a strongly-worded letter to the newspaper’s editor that the Foreign Ministry published on its website Thursday.

He said the opinion of the newspaper and its call for Mexicans to vote against Morena was surprising “not because of the ideological position of … [The Economist] but because of your virulence and the fragility of your arguments.”

“… Not long ago, it was predicted that it would be difficult for López Obrador to reach power and that in the case that the Mexican electorate did choose him, he would lead the country to an inexorable economic failure, characterized by devaluation, hyperinflation, debt and a direct clash with the United States. None of that has happened,” Ebrard wrote.

“On the contrary, the government of President López Obrador has kept his promise to prioritize and refocus spending toward [Mexico’s] poorest, as he always promised to do. At the same time, he has maintained fiscal discipline and healthy public finances,” the foreign minister wrote.

“… The failure of the elites to understand López Obrador seems to repeat itself in your pages today. … Maybe the most striking [thing], as absurd as it is, is the suggestion that President López Obrador has in some way undermined Mexican democracy when what he has done is precisely the opposite. A lot of your readers will remember that Mexico was until not so long ago an authoritarian country, without press freedom or free elections, that transitioned to democracy thanks to the push of many Mexicans, among whom López Obrador stands out,” Ebrard wrote.

“… We’re living in turbulent times, and without a doubt, there is still a lot to do to defeat the pandemic, achieve the definitive liftoff of the economy and comply with the promise to close the gross social gap, but the assessment of Mexicans is that we’re on the right path and we’re achieving it. Paraphrasing an article in your magazine some years ago, maybe it’s time for the exasperated elites to understand that they are not understanding,” he concluded.

Mexico News Daily 

Mexico City announces Formula 1 race will be back this year

0
Cars on the track at the Mexico Grand Prix.
Cars on the track at the Mexico Grand Prix.

After a year-long hiatus due to Covid-19, Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum has announced that the Formula 1 Grand Prix is back on track for Mexico City this year. Decreasing numbers of Covid-19 cases in the city permitted the decision, the mayor said.

The fact that buildings at the Hermanos Rodríguez racetrack are currently being used as a provisional hospital for coronavirus patients will not be an obstacle, Sheinbaum said.

“If everything stays on track and vaccination continues, in October we will be in the situation of having all adults vaccinated and all activities can take place in October, November and December,” Sheinbaum said.

Mexico City is currently yellow (medium risk) on Mexico’s coronavirus stoplight map.

Formula 1 has had to change its plans in many countries due to pandemic logistics. Mexico, the United States and Brazil are currently on the 2021 calendar. Canada, however, was eliminated due to its health restrictions, including a two-week quarantine period for everyone arriving in the country.

The Mexico City race, scheduled for October 29-31, is a popular one. Tickets were sold out two weeks before the 2019 event for the fifth year in a row.

Also in 2019, it won the award for best live sporting event at the Leaders Sports Awards in London, England. The race was selected from among 450 events in five categories from around the globe.

Source: ESPN (sp)

Federal agents arrest Romanian accused of credit card skimming

0
alleged organized crime leader Florian Tudor
Alleged organized crime leader Florian Tudor. Facebook

Federal agents on Thursday arrested a Romanian man accused of running a massive bank card skimming operation in Cancún, Quintana Roo, and other Mexican resort cities.

Florian Tudor, known as “The Shark,” was taken into custody in Mexico City by the federal Attorney General’s Office (FGR), acting on an extradition request from Romania for organized crime, extortion and attempted murder.

Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said Friday that Tudor will be extradited to Romania “very quickly.”

The FGR said in a statement that during the process of arresting Tudor one federal agent tried to prevent his detention. It also said that a lawyer for the Romanian punched the officers. Both the rogue agent and the lawyer were subdued and arrested, the FGR said.

According to authorities, Tudor and a group he worked with – among whom were allegedly other Romanians, Mexican hackers, Venezuelan cyber crime experts and the Quintana Roo cartel boss Leticia Rodríguez Lara — scammed hundreds if not thousands of people who used ATMs in Cancún inside which bluetooth devices, or “skimmers,” had been placed to steal card details.

Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard
Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said Tudor will be extradited to Romania “very quickly.”

The mafia also allegedly placed such devices on ATMs in other cities including Puerto Vallarta and Los Cabos and used cloned cards to withdraw large sums of cash from ATMs.

Tudor has maintained his innocence, claiming that he is a legitimate businessman. Despite the accusations he faces, the Romanian was given the opportunity in early March to plead his innocence to Security Minister Rosa Icela Rodríguez. The minister said that President López Obrador ordered her to meet with Tudor and hear him out.

“All we did was grant him a meeting to hear what he wanted to say, … we treated him like any other citizen,” Rodríguez said.

The meeting raised eyebrows as it took place just one month after the government’s Financial Intelligence Unit (UIF) froze 79 accounts linked to Tudor and his alleged accomplices. “[The account holders] formed part of a criminal enterprise to clone credit cards in the tourist zone of Cancún,” the unit said.

The UIF said at the time that it acted as part of a joint investigation with the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation. It said the criminal network was run by Romanians and it had detected some US $25 million in suspicious bank transfers.

While Tudor remained a free man living in a palatial home in Cancún, he took to issuing lengthy press releases in which he claimed that his human rights had been violated and that he was a victim of political persecution.

The Associated Press reported that in one 12-page document, “The Shark” claimed that a former Quintana Roo police chief and advisor to the state governor “are behind this campaign to invent the false idea of a ‘Romanian mafia,’ and have paid millions to news media to slander me.”

Tudor asserted that the fabrication was part of a plot to hurt Mexico’s ruling party, Morena, at the June 6 elections. He also claimed that federal authorities seized “safes, computers, cash, credit cards, jewels, fine watches, works of art, TVs, purebred dogs and horses and construction equipment” from him.

The Associated Press also said that a Romanian member of the skimming mafia who had a falling out with the leader was found dead in a vehicle near Tudor’s house in 2018.

Source: AP (en), Milenio (sp) 

Story of fishing tournament win by Los Cabos orphanage now on Netflix

0
A scene from Blue Miracle
A scene from Blue Miracle, based on a true story that took place after Hurricane Odile hit Baja California Sur in 2014.

In a new Netflix film, a scrappy team of youngsters enters the world’s richest fishing tournament, hoping to save their orphanage with the prize money.

It might sound like a Disney creation, but that’s exactly what happened in Baja California Sur in 2014. Now, a movie based on true events, is set to stream on Netflix.

At the time, Hurricane Odile had just hit Los Cabos, and the region was still struggling to clean up the mess. For the Casa Hogar orphanage, times were particularly difficult. They needed money. To get it, they entered the Bisbee’s Black and Blue fishing tournament, a high profile event that drew 125 teams to compete for US $2.14 million in prize money.

The first win was just getting into the elite tournament. Because of the hurricane, the tournament waived their normal, prohibitively high entry fee to allow local fishermen to enter — and Casa Hogar got a spot.

Next, the orphanage administrator, Omar Venegas, landed a 385-pound blue marlin, the biggest of the tournament, winning more than $250,000 for Casa Hogar.

Blue Miracle | Official Trailer | Netflix

Now the epic story of the team’s triumph is available on Netflix in a movie starring Dennis Quaid.

The film, which Variety describes as a “wholesomely hokey family film,” follows Venegas (played by Jimmy Gonzalez) as he pairs up with Wade Malloy (Dennis Quaid), a two-time winner of the tournament, to score a win for the orphanage.

The movie currently has a rating of 6.6 out of 10 on the Internet Movie Database while it received three stars from the newspaper The Guardian, which described the film as formulaic but charming, with an “undeniably rousing” finale.

Sources: The Guardian (en), Variety (en)

With 94 Blue Flag locations, Mexico leads the Americas

0
The blue flag flies on a Mexican beach.
The blue flag flies on a Mexican beach.

Mexico now has 94 locations that can fly the Blue Flag environmental designation, putting it among the top 10 in the world for beaches, marinas and boats that qualify.

Tourism Minister Miguel Torruco announced that 62 beaches, three marinas and 29 boats have been awarded the distinction this year, placing Mexico in 10th place out of 47 countries in the program.

The total is up from 90 last year.

The 62 Blue Flag beaches are located in nine states:

  • Baja California Sur: La Paz 1, Los Cabos 22;
  • Guerrero: Acapulco 5, Zihuatanejo 4;
  • Jalisco: Puerto Vallarta 2;
  • Nayarit: Bahía de Banderas 1, Santa María del Oro 1;
  • Oaxaca: Huatulco 2;
  • Quintana Roo: Benito Juárez (Cancún) 10; Isla Mujeres 3, Puerto Morelos 1, Solidaridad (Playa del Carmen) 6;
  • Sonora: Puerto Peñasco (Rocky Point) 1;
  • Tamaulipas: Ciudad Madero 1;
  • Yucatán: Progreso 2.

The Blue Flag program is operated by the Foundation for Environmental Education and represents a certification that a beach, marina or sustainable boating tourism operator meets its standards. The foundation is a non-profit, non-governmental organization.

Mexico News Daily