Foreign Policy Blogs

Mexico

The Council of Bishops Report

A report issued on Monday by the Mexican Council of Bishops expressed concern over the militarization of many Mexican cities and venality among law enforcement. Human rights, the report argued, were increasingly at risk of violation because of the protracted presence of federal troops in Cuidad Juarez, and elsewhere. The report comes in the wake […]

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Calderon the Accomplice

On Sunday 15 people were murdered in Cuidad Juarez. Thirteen were teenagers. In the wake of the “high school massacre” the culprit in waiting is the president. Shortly after the tragedy families of the murdered erected a banner outside of the house of the slayings: “Until we find who is responsible, you Mr. President are […]

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Santa Muerte

She drinks tequila, smokes pot, and is worshipped by perhaps two million throughout Mexico. Santa Muerte, or Saint Death, is showing some wear from her years of hard living: instead of the angelic likening usually afforded to saints, her depiction is a hooded skeleton, often accompanied by a globe and scythe. The message of her […]

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The Rescue of Ena Zizi

Despite the odds, people are still being rescued from the rubble in Haiti. Yesterday 69-year-old Ena Zizi was extracted from the collapsed National Cathedral in Port-au-Prince. She told the AP: “I talked only to my boss,  God. And I didn’t need any more humans.” Javier Vázquez, who first reached Zizi, recalls, “I felt her grab […]

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Castaneda's Err Apparent

In a recent article on Project Syndicate, Jorge Castañeda equates President Calderón’s war on drugs to President Bush’s invasion of Iraq. He argues: “Just like Bush’s invasion of Iraq, Mexico’s drug war was a war of choice. It was a war that Calderón should not have declared, that cannot be won, and that is doing […]

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"Sin Nombre"

Scanning the FPB site a few days back, I couldn’t help peeking at the Global Film Blog. In his last post Sean Patrick Murphy deemed “Sin Nombre” the best film he has reviewed over the past year. I just happened to watch it over the holidays, and I can’t think of an equal. The flick […]

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Year in Review

Overview Mexicans could be forgiven for thinking they were in hell on earth last year. The economy skidded into recession while drug violence ravaged Juárez and other major cities, leaving more than 5,000 dead. North of the border there was scuttlebutt of Mexico becoming a failed state. Turns out 2008 may have only been purgatory, […]

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Aid, Delayed

US military officials ceremoniously handed over five helicopters to the Mexican air force on Tuesday, part of the Merida Initiative. Aircraft account for half of the $1.3 billion aid package, signed in 2007, designed to help the Mexican government combat drug traffickers. But 15 other aircraft slated for delivery likely won’t arrive until 2011. As […]

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"The Company"

"The Company"

Times are hard in Mexico. Even, it seems, for drug traffickers. Thanks to stepped-up law enforcement on both sides of the border, drug gangs are increasingly looking beyond their traditional revenue streams of trafficking and extortion. The Dallas Morning News reports that Los Zetas, one of Mexico’s largest drug syndicates, are expanding their presence along […]

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Currency Rise Does Not a Recovery Make

Currency Rise Does Not a Recovery Make

The peso has strengthened this week amid signs that the Dubai World crisis will not transmit contagion throughout emerging markets. The Mexican currency has rallied more than 7% against the dollar over the past two months, leading the 16 major currencies tracked by Bloomberg. At 12.85 pesos to the dollar, the peso is now up […]

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Veracruz's Abortion Ban

Mexico seemed to be on a progressive track this year: the centrist PRI wrestled legislative power from the center-right PAN in mid-term elections; personal drug use of everything from pot to heroine was decriminalized; and major investments in wind farms were made in Baja. Such overtures stop short of abortion rights, however. Last week the […]

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Good Riddance, Lou Dobbs, For Now…

More than a few viewers were caught off-guard Wednesday night when Lou Dobbs announced the broadcast would be his last on CNN. The self-described “defender of the working man” has been a vocal critic of Hispanic immigration and international trade since 9/11. Instead of informed analysis, Dobbs’ commentaries often reverted to racism and showed an […]

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Backdoor Guests Aren't Always the Best

Two trends converge along Mexico’s southern border. One concerns the US recession, which has shocked the Mexican economy. The peso’s buying power is greatly diminished. Capitalizing on the peso’s decline against the Guatemalan quetzal, Mexican migrants flock south to sell toys, clothes, and foodstuffs. One popular route stretches from Cuidad Hidalgo, a city in the […]

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Real Envy

The Economist reports that Mexican business leaders envy Brazil. Mexicrats must have been miffed when Goldman Sachs anointed the ‘BRIC’ without including a ‘M’. At the time (2001) there was reason to protest. In the previous half decade Mexico’s GDP growth more than doubled Brazil’s: 4.5% versus 1.9%. Mexico had just joined Chile as the […]

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Musoleum

An elaborate resting place. A celebration of perspective. Two years ago the National Museum of Death opened in Aguascalientes to chronicle cultural approaches to the end of life. “Mexicans have death imprinted all over their art and culture.” So says Jose Antonio Padilla, the museum’s director. It is the moribund product of Octavio Bajenero Gil, who had too […]

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