Claudia Sheinbaum will present a security plan today that could mark a departure from the policies of her predecessor Andrés Manuel López Obrador. México's first female president will be proposing to lower homicide figures in certain enclaves where levels of violence attributed to organized crime are irrational, such as the bloody cities of Colima, Tijuana, Acapulco, and Celaya. In Guerrero, a dismal state where ten years ago the trail of 43 young student teachers was shamefully lost, the mayor of Chilpancingo, its capital, was brutally murdered on Sunday. His head was left exposed on the top of a van. The dead mayor feared for his life according to requests he made shortly before he died for his security to be reinforced. His government secretary was murdered a few days earlier.
Sheinbaum will also allocate resources to protect the population of Chiapas, in some cases relocated in Guatemala and other places, displaced by fierce clashes between criminal groups. The now-retired AMLO's security strategy was to prioritize social programs as a way to prevent young people and other vulnerable from being forced to get involved with gangs, adding to the idea that directly confronting the latter would end up generating more chaos and violence. “Hugs, not bullets,” was the phrase that summed up the veteran leader's security policy. While I understand this as a weakness and a sign that the Mexican State is failing in certain points of the Aztec geography, history has shown that, in the end, what López Obrador said is true. The most recent case that demonstrates this is the inability of the security forces to stop a wave of violence with over a hundred deaths in the state of Sinaloa, based on the shady capture in the United States of a historic druglord who never set foot in a Mexican jail.
Not again, please
VIDEO: Mexico police urge evacuation of beach areas before Hurricane Milton landfall.
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) October 8, 2024
Police drive around the port of Progreso, on Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, urging people to evacuate the beach area before Hurricane Milton makes landfall as a potentially catastrophic Category… pic.twitter.com/OG2vDDGCMf
The Latam connection with the Middle East crisis
The government of Lula da Silva extracted yesterday, Monday, a second group of Brazilian nationals from Beirut, the capital of Lebanon, in an emergency move seeking to make them safe from the deadly Israeli onslaught against Hezbollah. Tel Aviv seeks to erase any threat to its security from groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah, supported by Tehran. The flight, with a stopover in Lisboa and coordinated by the Brazilian Air Force, carried about 230 citizens of the South American giant, including about 50 minors. The first flight arrived in Sao Paulo last Sunday, and the returnees were received by the president himself.
Lebanon is home to the largest community of Brazilians living in the Middle East, an area experiencing a humongous crisis as the ultra-conservative government of Benjamin Netanyahu continues to punish Gaza for the deadly attack perpetrated by the armed wing of Hamas last October. Lebanon-based Hezbollah has been exchanging fire with Israel ever since in declared solidarity with the battered enclave, which has seen 42,000 people killed, two-thirds of them innocent civilians according to Israeli estimates. Ten Peruvians were evacuated yesterday from Lebanon as well with the support of the Chilean air force.
During the last few days, there have been multiple demonstrations in the region related to the Middle East drama, which could be hours away from boiling over if Israel and Iran exchange direct retaliations. Most of them were in protest against Israel's disproportionate response to the Hamas attack. Colombian students demonstrated yesterday shouting 'It's not a war, it's a genocide'. Similar protests were reported in Argentina, where the government of Javier Milei has resolutely supported Israel, without any reservations about the unjust toll of innocent lives. The Paraguayan President Santiago Peña has also supported this position. In a new attack in the last few hours, a score of people died in central Gaza, including five children and two women.
Regional X
The never-ending nightmare
Displaced victims of Haiti's latest gang attack mourned the loss of family members as they awaited food handouts after being driven from their homes with few belongings pic.twitter.com/XCYlOJZXT4
— Reuters (@Reuters) October 7, 2024
Please let it rain
Bolivia is experiencing its worst-ever fire season, and the hardest-hit area has been the wealthy farming region of Santa Cruz, where around 17 million acres have been reduced to cinders https://t.co/9giIw1T49v pic.twitter.com/cq0j69azKo
— Reuters (@Reuters) October 8, 2024
And this is all for our report today. I have referenced the sources dynamically in the text, and remember you can learn how and where to follow the LATAM trail news by reading my work here. Have a nice day.