Tag Archives: Mexico

From Planton to Occupy

December 9, 2011

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From Planton to Occupy

Occupy movement finds its roots in Mexico By David Bacon     When Occupy Seattle called its tent camp “Planton Seattle,” camp organizers were laying a local claim to a set of tactics used for decades by social movements in Mexico, Central America and the Philippines. And when immigrant janitors marched down to the detention center [...]

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The Meaning of the Michoacan Election

December 2, 2011

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Frontera NorteSur     What began as a chorus of loud denunciations ended in a round of resigned whimpers. The discourse of Michoacan gubernatorial candidate Maria Luisa “Cocoa” Calderon, who seriously challenged the legitimacy of the November 13 state election, soon took a radical turn when the sister of President Felipe Calderon and the standard-bearer of [...]

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Is a Woman President ‘Macho’ Enough for Mexico?

November 23, 2011

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Is a Woman President ‘Macho’ Enough for Mexico?

By Louis E.V. Nevaer New America Media MERIDA, Mexico – In less than nine months, Mexicans will go to the polls to elect a new president, and already the tantalizing question has set social media here all abuzz: Is Mexico ready to elect a woman?     Mexico has had a black president in Vicente Guerrero, [...]

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A Decade of Shame, Cover-up and Impunity

November 11, 2011

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Frontera NorteSur     In a Ciudad Juarez ceremony, a mid-level Mexican official asked forgiveness for the Mexican state’s negligence in the murders of three young women a decade ago.     “Because of its non-compliance in investigating and guaranteeing the rights of victims, and for violating access to justice and protection, the state recognizes its responsibility,” [...]

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Newspaper burned to the ground by armed attackers in Veracruz state

November 11, 2011

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    The offices of the Mexican daily El Buen Tono in the city of Córdoba in the south-eastern state of Ver-acruz were almost totally destroyed in an early morning arson attack two days ago, barely a month after it was launched.     “A description obtained by Reporters Without Borders from the newspaper’s publisher, Julio Fentanes [...]

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Letter from Oaxaca

October 28, 2011

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Letter from Oaxaca

Story and Photos by David Bacon   If there’s one experience that Mexicans have in common more than any other, more even than hatred and repudiation of the mutual violence of the narcos and the government, it’s migration. In Oaxaca, 18% of its 3.7 million people have left for other parts of Mexico, and especially for [...]

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Mexico Leans to the Right on Abortion

October 7, 2011

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By José Luis Sierra New America Media JUAREZ, Mexico – A recent ruling by Mexico’s supreme court on right-to-life amendments in two northern states has pro-choice supporters fearful of a dangerous precedent that could fly beneath the radar of the country’s upcoming presidential elections. The decision by the eleven-member court, after just two days of [...]

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Report: Border Patrol Abuses on the Rise

September 30, 2011

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By Valeria Fernández New America Media PHOENIX, Ariz. – The number of apprehensions of undocumented immigrants on the U.S.-Mexico border has dropped, but reports of abuses against immigrants are on the rise.     Those are the findings of a new report released by the Arizona humanitarian aid organization No More Deaths.     The report, “A [...]

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Mexico’s Supreme Court grapples with the question of ‘right to life’

September 30, 2011

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By Mariana Martinez     Mexico is in turmoil this week over the start of deliberations on the constitutionality of reforms made to 18 state constitutions regarding the right to life from conception. The rejection of such reforms is seen as success for human and reproductive rights of women.     The discussion is centered on two [...]

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La Corte Suprema de Mexico discute sobre “el derecho a la vida”

September 30, 2011

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Por Mariana Martinez     Esta semana inicio la discusión en la suprema corte que podría dar marcha atrás a las legislaciones de 18 estados de México que prohíben el aborto en todas sus formas, lo que significaría un triunfo de los acuerdos internacionales firmados por México en materia de derechos humanos y reproductivos.     La [...]

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Gold Diggers, Gamblers, Gun Dealers and GMO Exporters

September 23, 2011

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 Frontera NorteSur     A slew of press reports offers glimpses at a few of the trends that have transformed the Mexican economy during the past decade, a time when the future of the national petroleum industry saw the writing on the wall and the factory employment boom promised by the North American Free Trade Agreement [...]

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Mexico’s “Indignados” Have Had It Up To Here

September 16, 2011

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Mexico’s “Indignados” Have Had It Up To Here

By David Bacon MEXICO CITY— Last week Mexican President Felipe Calderon gave the fifth state of the nation speech since his (many say fraudulent) election in 2006. He didn’t have an easy time finding a positive spin for the escalating toll exacted by his war on drug gangs — 50,000 dead, mostly innocent civilians, in [...]

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Mexicanos tienen una negativa impresion de la administracion de Calderon y la Guerra de drogas

September 2, 2011

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Por Mariana Martinez      Tres cuartos de la población de México dice estar descontento con el rumbo que lleva el país, menos de la mitad de los mexicanos creen que el gobierno este teniendo avances en contra del narcotráfico, y casi un tercio considera que no solo no hay avances sino serios retrocesos.     Esto [...]

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U.S. intervention in Mexico will make things worse

August 26, 2011

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Guest Editorial: By Justin Akers Chacon    The increasing involvement of the United States in Mexico’s drug war is only going to make a bad situation worse.    It will likely lead to more deaths. It will be a drain on our treasury. And it’s unlikely to stem the flow of drugs. This is because [...]

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How the Drug Lords Took Over Mexico

August 19, 2011

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How the Drug Lords Took Over Mexico

By José Luis Sierra New America Media     They command an army of thousands: men, women, even children north and south of the US-Mexico border. They build tunnels, and dispatch submarines and customized armored vehicles. They load planes, trucks, and railroad containers with drugs and other illicit cargo. In bulk, they buy arms and political [...]

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‘Fast and Furious’ Gun Tracking Operation Is Slow and Dithering

August 12, 2011

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‘Fast and Furious’ Gun Tracking Operation Is Slow and Dithering

Perspective By José de la Isla Hispanic Link  MEXICO CITY—Two military-grade weapons were found alongside the murdered body of U.S. Border Patrol agent in December. The guns were part of an arsenal ATF agents were presumably tracking but lost track of.     Evidently, similar weapons were allowed from Houston and Tampa.     About 2,000 weapons [...]

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The Roots and Resilience of Organized Crime

August 5, 2011

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Frontera NorteSur     Mexico’s ongoing spasm of violence and mayhem is frequently portrayed in the US media as a Mexican phenomenon that threatens to spill across the nation’s borders and sweep up hapless cities in the relentless expansion of powerful, foreign criminal organizations.     Looking south, many US citizens gasp in horror as they watch [...]

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