Violence in Mexico stirs worries over spring break tourism

Mexico News Daily

Coca-Cola shuts center due to lack of security

Distribution facility in Guerrero closed indefinitely after armed attacks

Mexico News Daily | Saturday, March 24, 2018

Police at the Coca-Cola distribution center, scene of two attacks.

Coca-Cola Femsa has closed its distribution center in the Tierra Caliente region of Guerrero due to insecurity following months of threats and aggression against its employees.

There were two armed attacks this week on the facility in Ciudad Altamirano.

In a statement released yesterday, the company said that the decision to shut down indefinitely its operations in the city, effective yesterday, is “consistent with the fundamental objective of preserving the security and safety of its [160] employees.”

“The current lack of the necessary conditions to efficiently and safely operate within this part of the state of Guerrero, as exemplified by the recent unjustified assault on one of our employees, led the company to make this decision,” the statement explained.

(AP Photo/Alejandrino Gonzalez)

At about 3:00 am yesterday, a truck transporting a group of 20 armed men crashed into the main gate of the plant.

According to state security officials, the men intended to set the distribution center on fire but Federal Police officers managed to foil the attack. However, when they arrived at the scene the armed men shot at the National Gendarmerie personnel and a confrontation ensued.

One of the aggressors was arrested but the others managed to escape, leaving behind a pickup truck, a firearm, bullet casings and plastic containers filled with gasoline, the Guerrero Coordination Group (GCG) said.

Two days earlier, the distribution center was targeted in another attack.

In that incident, armed men shot at company employees who were reopening the plant’s sales section, which had been closed since January due to extortion threats. One Coca-Cola worker was seriously wounded in the assault.

In yesterday’s statement, the company said that since the start of the year “its employees at its distribution center in Ciudad Altamirano have received constant threats and acts of aggression from organized crime.”

Shutting down operations due to violence against Coca-Cola in Guerrero, one of Mexico’s most violent states, is not unprecedented.

In August 2014, the bottler temporarily ceased operations in the municipality of Arcelia, located 50 kilometers east of Ciudad Altamirano, after four of its delivery trucks were torched during a dispute between the criminal organizations La Familia Michoacana and Guerreros Unidos.

In February 2015, it shut down its storage facility in the state capital Chilpancingo for two weeks after a company manager and assistant manager were abducted and held hostage by students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers’ College.

At the time, the students said that setting the employees free was conditional on the release of two of their fellow students who had been detained by police for looting a Coca-Cola delivery truck.

The students attended the same school as 43 students who disappeared in Iguala, Guerrero, six months prior to the kidnapping in September 2014.

In June 2015, the company once again shuttered its operations in Arcelia because of constant threats from organized crime.

Yesterday’s decision by the world’s largest Coke bottler brings an end to more than four decades of operations in the Tierra Caliente region of Guerrero, an area plagued by violent cartel crime.

Last weekend, the army sent in more than 1,200 troops to the same region in Michoacán.

Source: Milenio (sp)

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Cancún violence stirs worries over tourism

Spring break visitor numbers expected to be down this year

Mexico News Daily         March 16, 2017

Spring breakers: numbers are down.

Increasing violence in Cancún is leading to increased worry in the tourist industry, which is currently seeing a decline in the number of spring break visitors.

Security specialists say local police need better training and that the situation needs to be brought under control quickly.

One police officer was executed and three others wounded in two separate incidents on Tuesday in the latest outbreak of violence in Cancún.

Orlando Camacho of México SOS, an organization that specializes in justice and security issues, stressed the need for immediate action.

“What we are saying is that it’s necessary to act now, immediately, because the feuding between gangs can carry on multiplying and becoming more complicated, as has been seen in other parts of the country.”

He said hotel owners have met with México SOS and are very worried.

María Elena Morera of another non-governmental organization, Causa en Común, or Common Cause, says the outbreak of violence is not isolated and urged strengthening local police forces and implementing more intelligence efforts.

“Certainly fewer tourists are going to come to [Quintana Roo],” she said, but pointed out that security measures also worsen the perception. “. . . students arrive and see soldiers everywhere; this doesn’t leave a good impression either.”

Those students are traveling to the state for spring break, but their numbers are down, say hoteliers. Cancún hotels association president Carlos Gosselin Maurel said 40,000 visited the city in 2016 but he expects they won’t even see 30,000 this year.

He estimated the number of Canadian “spring breakers” is down 40% due to violence in the city. They are traveling instead to the Dominican Republic and other Caribbean destinations, Gosselin said.

The majority of spring break tourists come from the U.S. Last year they represented about 85% of the total, while Canadians numbered some 8%.

Gosselin noted that those who travel despite the threat of violence must deal with the threat of extortion once they arrive. He said he has heard of more than a dozen cases of spring break visitors being victims of extortion or bribery, with demands that they pay between US $50 and $100.

Spring break is a mixed blessing for many tourism operators. Many don’t like the market because it brings a low economic return while being a hotbed of drug and alcohol sales.

Source: Reforma (sp), El Financiero (sp) 

At least six U.S. corporations paid their CEO more than 1,000 times their typical worker last year.

U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders — US Senator for Vermont

March 25, 2018

At least six U.S. corporations paid their CEO more than 1,000 times their typical worker last year. That is a disgrace. Institute for Policy Studies

CEO vs. Typical Worker

At least six U.S. corporations paid their CEO more than 1,000 times their typical worker last year. That is a disgrace. Institute for Policy Studies

Posted by U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders on Friday, March 23, 2018

Many proud gun owners believe in gun reform

NowThis

March 25, 2018

Don’t let the NRA fool you: Many proud gun owners believe in gun reform — and they attended the #MarchForOurLives to let the nation know why

Gun Owners Explain Why They Attended the March for Our Lives

Don't let the NRA fool you: Many proud gun owners believe in gun reform — and they attended the #MarchForOurLives to let the nation know why

Posted by NowThis on Sunday, March 25, 2018

March for our Lives – Edna Chavez

MoveOn.org
March 24, 2018

Edna Chavez tells her personal story of living with gun violence in South L.A. One of many powerful moments at today’s March for our Lives.

A Teen's Personal Experience with Gun Violence in L.A.

Edna Chavez tells her personal story of living with gun violence in South L.A. One of many powerful moments at today's March for our Lives.

Posted by MoveOn.org on Saturday, March 24, 2018

Japan’s school lunches v. America’s

ATTN:

America Versus
America Vs Japan: School Lunches

America Vs Japan: School Lunches

Japan's unbelievable school lunches are surprisingly educational.

Posted by ATTN: on Friday, March 23, 2018

March for Our Lives demonstrations in Washington, D.C., and around the world

Yahoo News

Live: March for Our Lives demonstrations in Washington, D.C., and around the world

Dylan Stableford, Senior Editor       March 24, 2018

Hundreds of thousands of people are taking part in March for Our Lives demonstrations around the world on Saturday to call for an end to gun violence. The protests were sparked by a string of deadly school shootings, including the massacre in Parkland, Fla., last month. Organizers say they expect nearly a million in Washington, D.C., alone. Yahoo News is covering the events live from the nation’s Capitol and several other locations. Watch a livestream in the video player above and follow the blog below for the latest updates.

Protesters fill Pennsylvania Avenue during the “March for Our Lives” rally in Washington, D.C., on Saturday. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

Kelli Grant

A protester displays a sign at the “March for Our Lives” rally in Washington, D.C., on Saturday. (Aaron P. Bernstein/Reuters)

 

The cover of next week’s @Time magazine. https://t.co/ee5AOww0Eo

Kelli Grant

Former Beatle Sir Paul McCartney joins the “March For Our Lives” rally in New York City on Saturday. (Shannon Stapleton/Reuters)

Kelli Grant

Young girls wave down at marchers from the balcony of the Newseum building as students and gun control advocates hold the “March for Our Lives” rally in Washington, D.C., on Saturday. (Leah Millis/Reuters)

Kelli Grant

Protesters gather for the “March for Our Lives” rally along Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., on Saturday. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Christina Gregg #MarchForOurLives protesters steadily funneling down Central Park West. https://t.co/xZvyw5PgZC

Kelli Grant

Protesters gather for a “March For Our Lives” rally outside the U.S. Embassy in London. (Stefan Rousseau/PA Images via Getty Images)

Kelli Grant

Activists wear red robes and white bonnets based on “The Handmaid’s Tale” before the “March for Our Lives” rally in downtown Houston, Texas, on Saturday. (Loren Elliott/Reuters)

 

Dylan Stableford: “My sister doesn’t have a voice anymore because she was slaughtered in her classroom.”

— Carlos Soto, whose sister, Victoria Soto, a teacher at Sandy Hook Elementary School, was killed in the 2014 massacre in Newtown, Conn., speaks to CNN at the “March for Our Lives” rally in Washington, D.C.

Kelli Grant

American students and expats hold signs in a solidarity rally with “March For Our Lives” in front of the European headquarters of the United Nations, in Geneva, Switzerland. (Martial Trezzini/Keystone via AP)

The Companies Offshoring Jobs at a Record Pace Under Trump

The Companies Offshoring Jobs at a Record Pace Under Trump

Eric Schall         March 23, 2018

donald trump wearing a USA hat and a windbreaker against an american flagTrump has not saved many U.S. jobs from outsourcing since taking office, the record shows. | Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

You may remember these words from Donald Trump when he was running for president: “A Trump administration will stop the jobs from leaving America.” But U.S. companies sent thousands of jobs overseas in his first year as president. And many of the companies responsible for offshoring jobs received fat government contracts. In fact, according to employment data charted by Good Jobs Nation and Public Citizen, federal contractors alone outsourced 10,269 jobs while taking over $19 billion in government money.

Never before in U.S. history have federal contractors sent so many jobs overseas. Here are the contractors that are offshoring the most jobs under Donald Trump, including parent company of Carrier (page 7).

1. General Motors

President Donald Trump meets with CEO of General Motors Mary Barra (L), CEO of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles Sergio Marchionne (3rd R) and Fiat Chrysler Head of External Affairs Shane Karr (2nd R) in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on January 24, 2017 in Washington, DC.Auto executives won’t be adding U.S. plants any time soon. | Shawn Thew/Getty Images

  • Trump administration contracts: $323 million
  • Outsourced jobs: 2,781

Trump carried Michigan in the 2016 election, largely on the hopes of a manufacturing revival there. The CEOs of the Detroit automakers went to the White House in January to discuss the many promises Trump made to the industry and they, in turn, made to their employees. Well, those three automakers eliminated over 9,000 jobs since Trump’s victory in November 2017.

GM offshored the most jobs of any top federal contractor in America. Considering the company landed $323 million in government money from Trump, we imagine someone needs to check the receipts.

2. Boeing

Paul Ryan sits with the Boeing CEO at the company plant in WashingtonHouse Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., speaks during a town hall with Boeing Company CEO Dennis Muilenburg and employees at the company’s plant on August 24, 2017. | Stephen Brashear/Getty Images

  • Trump administration contracts: $9.46 billion
  • Outsourced jobs: 2,681

In terms of federal contracts under Trump, Boeing made about half what the rest of the top 100 did combined: $9.46 billion in less than a year. Maybe that’s why House Speaker Paul Ryan took time out of his schedule to visit the Boeing plant in Washington. Ryan was pushing the tax reform plan that would supposedly open up the floodgates for hiring. Apparently, Boeing really need such a tax break because it offshored 2,681 jobs since Trump’s election victory.

3. United Technologies

View of President-elect Donald Trump speaking at the Carrier plant in Indiana in November 2016.Donald Trump speaks to workers at Carrier air-conditioning and heating. | Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

  • Trump administration contracts: $1.07 billion
  • Outsourced jobs: 1,414

In December 2016, Trump went to a Carrier plant in Indiana to boast of the 1,100 jobs he was saving in exchange for a $7 million tax credit to the company. A year later, several hundred workers in that plant had lost their jobs. Worse, United Technologies — the company that owns Carrier — basically laughed in the administration’s face by sending another 700 jobs to Mexico in 2017. All told, United Technologies offshored 1,414 jobs while raking in $1.07 billion in federal contracts. If that’s “the art of the deal,” America’s workers are worse off than we imagined.

4. Pfizer

US President Donald Trump shakes hands with Ian Read (R), CEO of Pfizer, during the announcement of a a newly designed, Made in America pharmaceutical glass bottle jointly developed by Merck, Pfizer and Corning during a Made in America Week event in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, DC, July 20, 2017Donald Trump shakes hands with Pfizer CEO Ian Read during a Made in America Week event in July 2017. | Saul Loeb//AFP/Getty Images

  • Trump administration contracts: $1.07 billion
  • Outsourced jobs: 1,200

You may recall the eventful “Made in America Week” at the White House over the summer. During that week in July, America’s CEOs touted their companies’ achievements in getting things done in the U.S. One business leader on hand was Pfizer CEO Ian Read, whose firm received $1.07 billion in federal contracts under Trump. Despite that windfall, the company offshored 1,200 jobs and faced no consequences.

5. General Electric

Mary Barra of GM sits with Jeff Immelt of GE in June 2017.General Motors CEO Marya Barra sits with General Electric CEO Jeffrey Immelt at a an event for Trump administration job efforts in June 2017. | Mark Wilson/Getty Images

  • Trump administration contracts: $1.2 billion
  • Outsourced jobs: 921

After leaving Trump’s Economic Advisory Council in August, General Electric CEO Jeffrey Immelt made a strong statement. “The Committee I joined had the intention to foster policies that promote American manufacturing and growth,” he said. With $1.2 billion from the Trump administration, we’re guessing the company had the cash to make it happen, too.

Instead, GE outsourced 921 jobs while Immelt blew $250,000 on personal air travel. We’re not sure you can put workers any further down on the priority list while benefiting more from taxpayer-funded contracts. But hey, the administration and the companies it deals with have several years to go.

6. IBM

IBM HeadquartersA sign outside IBM corporate headquarters in Armonk, New York | Chris Hondros/Getty Images

  • Trump administration contracts: $1.55 billion
  • Outsourced jobs: 527

While the Trump administration may not be able to reverse global trends, the people in his Cabinet and Congressional majority certainly can control who gets federal contracts. Sadly, that power of the purse has not been used by Trump and his team. In the case of New York-based IBM, 527 jobs already left America since Trump won the election. Meanwhile, the fabulously wealthy corporation racked up $1.55 billion in federal contracts.

7. Merck

RAHWAY, NJ - NOVEMBER 29: A man walks by a sign at a Merck plant November 29, 2005 in Rahway, New Jersey. U.S. pharmaceutical giant Merck, announced plans to cut some 7,000 jobs, or 11 percent of its global workforce, by the end of 2008. More jobs left New Jersey-based Merck despite the $1.6 billion in federal contracts from the Trump administration. | Marko Georgiev/Getty Images

  • Trump administration contracts: $1.62 billion
  • Outsourced jobs: 254

Things are about the same, only worse, for the workers at the second U.S. company with New Jersey headquarters on this list. Merck won $1.62 billion in federal contacts since Trump took office. Unfortunately, there were no guarantees about keeping that money — or the U.S. jobs it would theoretically create — in the country. According to jobs data, at least 254 Merck jobs left America since Trump’s election.

8. Honeywell

American Airlines airplane taking off at Dallas - Ft Worth (DFW) Airport in Texas.Shipping jobs overseas? | Aneese/iStock/Getty Images

  • Trump administration contracts: $1.65 billion
  • Outsourced jobs: 202

If you look at the mission statement of New Jersey-based Honeywell, you will read about the company’s “global focus to achieve double-digit earnings growth.” Part of that process involves sending work overseas in order to keep the returns coming for investors.The math worked out pretty well in 2017. For the $1.65 billion in federal contracts, Honeywell offshored 202 jobs.

9. Hewlett Packard

  • Trump administration contracts: $1.04 billion
  • Outsourced jobs: 125

Hewlett Packard is a multinational computer company, with headquarters in Palo Alto, California. It struggled to keep pace with the ever-changing tech world over the past decade and continues to cut expenses when possible. In September 2017, Bloomberg reported Hewlett Packard plans to cut 5,000 jobs, or about 10% of its job force. It’s also No. 9 in terms of federal contractors offshoring jobs.

These veterans want assault-style weapons off the streets

NowThis Politics

March 23, 2018

These veterans have seen what assault-style weapons can do in combat, and they want them off the streets

Veterans for Gun Reform Ad

These veterans have seen what assault-style weapons can do in combat, and they want them off the streets

Posted by NowThis Politics on Friday, March 23, 2018

Keep a beehive in your house.

Thrillist

February 22, 2018

Keep a beehive in your house.

BEEcosystem

Keep a beehive in your house.

Posted by Thrillist on Thursday, February 22, 2018