1020936644

PUERTO VALLARTA: They try to sneak up across the American border late at night, hearing gunshots, and then they are met with US Border Patrol asking them to surrender, but that’s just for fun.
How? Because those young Mexicans are tourists and the voice talking to them is a man playing the role of an anti-immigration officer as part of a Night Walk experience offered by EcoAlberto theme park four hundred miles south of the actual US-Mexico border.

Cirilo Jerónimo, the man playing officer, landed his job at the park after getting caught crossing the border into the US.

"I try to act based on what I saw the Border Patrol doing when I was crossing the line," he said.

With many of its population having immigrated to the US, El Alberto was becoming a ghost town in 2004, up until local entrepreneurs created EcoAlberto, used for kayaking and mountaineering during the day and for illegal immigrant simulations at night.

Participants pay 250 pesos ($16 US) to play migrants sneaking across rough terrain, trying to evade border guards, thieves and dangerous drug traffickers, reported the Telegraph.

Organizers say, the drill is to raise awareness of the perils of immigration, including being caught by the "migra" or fall prey to criminals.

According to Pew’s analysis of Border Patrol statistics, 229,000 Mexicans were apprehended by Border Patrol in 2014, while 257,000 non-Mexicans were nabbed.

The US government recorded 307 deaths among illegal immigrants in the 12 months to September 2014, down on previous years.

vallartatodaysource

reportproblem

mexico nuclear

Mexico issued an alert late Wednesday for several of its states after potentially deadly radioactive material was stolen from a truck this week. Mexico’s interior ministry said iridium-192 had been stolen from a truck in the southern state of Tabasco.

"This source could cause permanent injuries to the person who handles it or who has been in contact with it for a brief time (minutes or hours)," the ministry statement said, according to Agence France-Presse. "Being close to this quantity of unprotected radioactive material for hours or days could be fatal."

The alert was issued for Tabasco and the nearby states of Campeche, Chiapas, Oaxaca and Veracruz, as well as the federal police, army and navy. Civilians were warned to avoid contact with suspicious materials or objects.

This is not the first incident of radioactive material being stolen in Mexico. In 2014, another load of iridium-192 was abandoned in a stolen pickup truck in a Mexico City suburb. In 2013, a group of thieves were hospitalized after they had been exposed to unshielded cobalt-60. The highly radioactive material was stolen near Mexico City, causing the International Atomic Energy Agency and the United States to raise an alert till the highly radioactive material was found.

vallartatodaysource

reportproblem

7916123

PUERTO VALLARTA: Are you ready for a vacation at a place that’s beautiful, promises great eats, cultural attractions, fantastic beaches and enough adventures for any adrenaline junkie? It can be a bargain too.

Welcome to Mexico. According to Trivago, which tracks hotel prices around the world, rates in Mexican resort destinations like Puerto Vallarta, Cabo, and Playa del Carmen have been going down — while they’re going up on Caribbean islands like Jamaica and Barbados.

At the same time, Expedia says that flight fares to destinations like Cabo and Cancun are also down from last year.

But is Mexico safe, you wonder? I think so, especially in the resort areas. Consider that most cities in central Mexico have lower murder rates than Orlando. The main tourist destinations for U.S. citizens are geographically far from areas that have been affected by drug violence, which are primarily along the U.S.-Mexico border. The distance between the U.S.-Mexico border, where the majority of violent acts occur, and Cancun, for example is more than 1,400 miles.

Experts hired by Puerto Vallarta, on Mexico’s Pacific Coast, to consider that question concur after interviewing everyone from police to tourism officials, visitors and local business owners. Some people don’t even lock their doors.

Quintana Roo, the state where Cancun is located, is one of the safest states in Mexico, officials say. Those in Los Cabos note that their state has the fifth lowest crime rate of all Mexico states. I certainly felt safe when I visited there.

Riviera Nayarit has an entire team of Tourism Police who patrol beaches, towns and highways and Punta Mita, where you’ll find resorts like The Four Seasons and St. Regis, is a gated community.

I know the temptation when you’re in Mexico is just stay at your all-inclusive resort and they certainly are getting ever more elaborate and luxurious. But you should feel safe to venture out in the resort areas. And I know from experience you’re missing a lot if you don’t. You’ll miss excellent scuba diving, exploring caves and Mayan ruins, swimming in an underground cenote (deep water-filled sinkholes), maybe learning to cook mole — or try a local specialty.

How about a fried grasshopper? I popped one right in my mouth in Oaxaca which is famous for its markets—that’s where the grasshoppers were being sold—its chocolate and its mole, along with its artisans.

It tastes kind of like bacon and is seasoned with chili and salt. Not bad! We also spent a memorable day at Seasons of the Heart cooking school. There are ruins to explore, carvers to meet, bike rides on dirt roads past farmers on donkey carts. (here’s what I wrote about our experience.)

If you are in Cancun or along the Riviera Maya, you’ve got to visit Tulum where during Mayan times, those with the most knowledge — astronomers, priests, doctors — lived closest to the temples in the last cities inhabited by the Mayans just 75 miles south of Cancun. Many people I met love staying in Tulum with its laid back vibe, gorgeous beaches and tiny hotels, some with just 15 or 20 rooms.

If you want a little more action, consider Playa del Carmen. I loved its signature pedestrian area, the musicians, the beaches and the outdoor cafes. Check out the new Hyatt Playa del Carmen in the heart of the town where room rates start at under $200 a night and you will feel totally safe wandering around.

I’m excited for my trip next month to Puerto Vallarta and Riviera Nayarit on the Pacific Coast. I don’t know what I’ll want to do first — hit the beach or explore Puerto’s regional eats. There are the galleries at San Pancho, the cultural capital of the state of Nayarit and I’ve got to see the crocs and the birds in La Tovara National Park – home to 80 per cent of the Pacific migratory shore bird populations.

Maybe I better add a few more days….See you there!


Eileen Ogintz is a nationally syndicated columnist and creator of TakingtheKids.com. Her new Kids Guide to Boston is available online and from major booksellers, along with the Kids Guides to NYC, Washington, DC, Orlando, LA and Chicago. Coming later this year: San Diego, San Francisco and Denver

vallartatodaysource

reportproblem

1020865509

Mexican authorities have rescued up to 250 workers subject to labor abuse on export farms.

PUERTO VALLARTA – Mexican authorities have rescued up to 250 workers subject to labor abuse during raids on export farms in recent weeks, the Los Angeles Times reported.

The raids revealed that the farms violate Mexican law and retailers' rules by withholding workers' wages until the end of the harvest and systematically denying them social security benefits.

The raids followed an increase in public awareness of labor camp life, and have been widely covered by the media, LA Times said.
However, the newspaper cited Mexican human rights advocate Margarita Nemecio as saying that the government launched raids only to give the public an impression of a fight against the practice.

She argued that current measures are ineffective, since most raids are announced in advance, allowing growers to clean up their facilities.
The Mexican inspections of export farms started in early March. Since then, at least three labor camps have been raided by authorities.

vallartatodaysource

reportproblem

Meyer 231x300Susanna Meyer ’15, of Philadelphia, Pa., has been awarded a 2015 Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship to Mexico

A double major in Africana and Latin American Studies  and Geography, Meyer has twice taught English in Mexico on brief summer programs, and she has worked for a nonprofit providing services to the Mexican immigrant community in Philadelphia.

“I was exposed to Spanish language and Mexican culture from an early age because my Quaker elementary school supported an exchange program with a private school in Cuernavaca, Mexico. I lived with my pen-pal, Palom
a, for two weeks and she came to live with me in Philadelphia for two weeks later in the year,” Meyer said. “I continued to take Spanish language classes and I created an independent project in which I taught English in Puerto Vallarta, traveled to Oaxaca, and taught English in a resource-poor school on the outskirts of the city. I also earned some valuable experiences teaching English as a second language to the Mexican immigrant community in Philadelphia.”Meyer is a varsity athlete on the women’s crew team , a member of Delta Delta Delta , and is the Colgate Crossword Puzzle Club founder.

Building on her involvement in sports, Meyer enjoys incorporating movement and physical activity into her teaching.“Susie has impressive teaching experience in a diverse range of classrooms, and she has extensive academic and personal knowledge of Mexican history and culture,” said Kim Germain, Colgate’s assistant dean for fellowship advising,  a close adviser to Fulbright applicants.  “She’s also incredibly warm and engaging, and I’m confident that she’ll be highly successful in Mexico and have a really meaningful cross-cultural experience.”Meyer’s future plans include continuing her work with the Mexican community in Philadelphia and also, in the longer term, building a career that relates to immigration policy and aid for immigrant communities.

The Fulbright Program is the flagship international educational exchange program sponsored by the U.S. government and is designed to increase mutual understanding between the people of the United States and the people of other countries. Recipients of Fulbright grants are selected on the basis of academic achievement, as well as demonstrated leadership potential in their fields.

PUERTO VALLARTA – The Mexican government has announced a two-year suspension of commercial fishing with the gillnets, trawl nets or nets with multiple hooks used on small fishing boats at the northern end of the Gulf of California, in order to protect the vaquita, an endangered species of small porpoise.

The accord reached by the Agriculture, Stockraising, Rural Development, Fishing and Food Secretariat (Sagarpa) and the Environment and Natural Resources Secretariat (Semarnat) was published Friday in the Official Federation Journal.

The document establishes a two-year ban on vaquita fishing in a natural protected area known as the Upper Gulf of California and the Colorado River Delta, whose western part is the area declared a refuge in 2005 for the small vaquita porpoise (Phocoena sinus).

Environmentalist groups had asked the Mexican government in recent months to declare a total ban on fishing with nets of that kind, warning that the cetacean risks becoming extinct by 2018.

According to the International Committee for the Recovery of the Vaquita, or CIRVA, there are now fewer than 100 specimens remaining of this porpoise species, which is found only in a small area of the Gulf of California.

Sagarpa said in a communique that the ban does not include fishing for the gulf corvina ((Cynoscion othonopterus) between Feb. 1 and April 30 every year, “which can be practiced in conformity with existing administrative regulations.”

Through the application of regulatory measures, the Mexican government seeks to contribute to the protection and recovery of the number of vaquita specimens and reduce the risk factors for the species, Sagarpa said.

vallartatodaysource

reportproblem

 8854Grupo Radio Centro cadena tres

PUERTO VALLARTA – Grupo Radio Centro, one of two recent winners of nationwide, free-to-air digital TV channels in Mexico, has failed to make a required payment for its 20-year concession, the company said in a filing with the Mexican Stock Exchange.

The group “did not make the payment stemming from the awarding of an over-the-air broadcast license; it therefore will cover the (bid security deposit) through previously contemplated liquidity operations,” Friday’s filing read.

The telecommunications regulator, known as the IFT, had set a Friday deadline for Radio Centro to make the payment.

The IFT said after Radio Centro’s announcement that the company had forfeited its concession by not complying with its payment obligations.

The regulator also said it will claim the company’s 415-million-peso (some $27.3-million) bid security deposit and will soon analyze its next steps related to the frequency bands that once again have become available.

The IFT announced March 11 that Grupo Radio Centro and Cadena Tres were awarded licenses for the two channels in a process aimed at ending the duopoly of Mexico’s No. 1 broadcaster Televisa and smaller rival TV Azteca.

Radio Centro bid 3 billion pesos ($201.2 million) and Cadena Tres 1.8 billion pesos ($118.9 million), while both offered to provide service to 106 million inhabitants, or roughly 94 percent of the population.

The bid process was part of a broadcast TV overhaul aimed at opening up a sector dominated by Televisa and TV Azteca, which together control nearly all of Mexico’s broadcast television market.

The IFT was created as part of that same overhaul, which was proposed by President Enrique Peña Nieto’s administration and approved in 2013.

The overhaul established, among other things, that dominant operators in any sector will be subject to asymmetric regulation to avoid market distortion.

Televisa was declared a dominant operator in the broadcast television industry in March 2014.

vallartatodaysource

reportproblem

 

PENA

Private developer Grupo Vidanta fueling job growth and attracting millions of tourism dollars with new luxury resorts, golf courses and theme parks animated by Cirque du Soleil

RIVIERA MAYA, Mexico, April 10, 2015-- Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, Mexico Secretary of Tourism Claudia Ruiz Massieu and Governor of the Mexican State of Quintana Roo Roberto Borge Angulo were on hand Thursday at the Vidanta Theater to help announce Grupo Vidanta's $1.3 billion investment in new tourism projects. The luxury resort and tourism developer will bring new attractions including premier golf courses, additional luxury resorts and theme parks animated by Cirque du Soleil to Mexico. The site of JOYA by Cirque du Soleil – launched late last year by Grupo Vidanta and already one of Mexico's fastest growing tourist attractions – served as the backdrop for Mexico's government leaders to share their vision for the future of international tourism growth in Mexico.

Grupo Vidanta, founded by Daniel Chavez Moran in 1974, has grown its workforce from 12,000 to 15,000 employees in the last three years and plans to add an additional 3,000 employees across the company's architecture, design, construction and operations practices by 2018 through jobs created in the development of new tourism projects.

Pena Nieto praised the investment of Grupo Vidanta and noted that Mexico needs more success stories like Grupo Vidanta and founder Daniel Chavez Moran, so that more Mexican people can find opportunity for personal fulfillment.

Annually, Grupo Vidanta attracts more than 700,000 visitors – 500,000 of which travel from foreign countries – to premier resort properties at Nuevo Vallarta, Riviera Maya, Los Cabos, Acapulco, Puerto Penasco, Puerto Vallarta and Mazatlan. Grupo Vidanta's development of the world's first theme parks animated by Cirque du Soleil are expected to draw an additional 2.5 million annual visitors with the first park's inauguration in 2019.

Grupo Vidanta recently celebrated the grand opening of its newest luxury resort, The Grand Mayan Puerto Penasco, and Vidanta Golf – already the largest operator of golf courses in Mexico – will add a new premier golf course for visitors in The Greg Norman Golf Course at Vidanta Nuevo Vallarta in 2015.

QUOTES

Said Grupo Vidanta founder Daniel Chavez Moran, "Mexico is a place for opportunities. With over 40 years of experience as a driver of Mexican tourism, Grupo Vidanta has learned the best results for Mexico are achieved when we work collaboratively to recruit the world's top brands in travel and entertainment as partners and create unique vacation dreams in Mexico that rival that of any destination in the world. That strategy has allowed Grupo Vidanta to sustain annual visitation growth of 15 percent at our developments, serve more than half a million foreign visitors, and achieve revenues of nearly $700 million each year."

Said Mexico Secretary of Tourism Claudia Ruiz Massieu, "Today is one of the most important announcements of investments in this sector in recent years. An announcement that shows there is confidence in Mexico, in its government and its people. This investment represents more than a number or amount, it represents the conviction of Grupo Vidanta that the tourism sector will continue to grow, will continue to gain ground against other international competitors; that it will continue to produce smiles for visitors and opportunities for thousands in our regions."

Said Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, "I commend you for what you have achieved, for the achievements that have been obtained with daily effort to become an exemplary group within the tourism sector."

For more information on Grupo Vidanta, visit grupovidanta.com.

About Grupo Vidanta
Grupo Vidanta is a full-service tourism developer in Mexico and Latin America with practices in property architecture and product design, construction and operations. The company specializes in the development and operation of luxury resort and hotel brands in Mexico and counts AAA Five Diamond Award-winning Grand Luxxe Nuevo Vallarta and five AAA Four Diamond Award-winning resorts – Grand Luxxe Riviera Maya, The Grand Bliss Nuevo Vallarta, The Grand Mayan Nuevo Vallarta, The Grand Mayan Riviera Maya and The Grand Mayan Acapulco – among its impressive portfolio of more than 25 resorts and hotels.

Grupo Vidanta's visionary approach to the development of luxury beach destinations brings vacation dreams to life via membership-based resorts and mega-resorts on the coastlines of Mexico's most sought-after locations – Nuevo Vallarta, Riviera Maya, Los Cabos, Acapulco, Puerto Penasco, Puerto Vallarta and Mazatlan – with brands including Grand Luxxe, The Grand Bliss, The Grand Mayan, The Bliss, Mayan Palace, Ocean Breeze and Sea Garden, and more in development.

The company, which employs more than 15,000 individuals dedicated to design, development, construction and operations, is consistently recognized as one of the most revered employers in Latin America. Vidanta Golf is the largest operator of golf courses in Mexico, the real estate division has built and sold more than 2,000 vacation luxury homes, and the company is responsible for developing Mexico's first privately built and owned airport, Mar de Cortes International Airport in Puerto Penasco.

Grupo Vidanta was founded by Daniel Chavez Moran in 1974 and operates two foundations to enrich the lives of Latin Americans. For more information about Grupo Vidanta, visit http://www.grupovidanta.com.

About Daniel Chavez Moran
Daniel Chavez Moran has been a leading visionary in the Mexico tourism industry for more than 40 years. Now retired, Chavez Moran founded Grupo Vidanta in 1974 after developing his first hotel, Paraiso Mazatlan, and grew the Grupo Vidanta to include expert practices in design, development, construction and operation for many of Mexico and Latin America's top luxury beach resorts, megaresorts and hotels. Under Chavez Moran's leadership, Grupo Vidanta diversified an influence in tourism infrastructure to include the largest collection of golf courses operated in Mexico, construction and sale of more than 2,000 vacation homes, and the first privately built and owned airport in Mexico, Mar de Cortes International Airport in Puerto Penasco. Forbes recognized Chavez Moran for his contributions in 2013, naming him one of the 12 most powerful investors in tourism in Mexico.

Under Chavez Moran's guidance, Grupo Vidanta has grown into one of Latin America's most revered employers, with a staff of more than 15,000 employees and consistent selection to the Great Place to Work Institute's list of "Best Companies to Work," including a ranking as the No. 1 hospitality organization to work for in Mexico in 2014 and 2015.

Commitment to philanthropy is a major component of Grupo Vidanta's mission to inspire generations of happiness. Today, Chavez Moran leads two foundations focused on philanthropy in Latin America including The Fundacion Vidanta, which promotes culture and fights poverty by awarding financial resources to individuals and organizations each year, and The Fundacion Delia Moran, created with the support of the government of Nayarit, which promotes education opportunities in the region and operates a free school and after-school programs for children.

Daniel Chavez Moran was born in Delicias, Chihuahua, and graduated from the University of Guadalajara with a degree in civil engineering in 1971. He is recognized by CNN as one of the 100 most important businessmen in Mexico.

Media Contact:

Greg Miller
214-891-7668
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Customer Service
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Photo - http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150410/197738

vallartatodaysource

reportproblem

 medi

Health officials closed a dozen plastic surgery clinics in Tijuana, a border city in the northwestern Mexican state of Baja California, the Federal Commission for Health Risks Oversight, or Cofepris, said.

Expired and unregistered medicines were seized in the raids by Baja California health inspectors.

Health officials shut down 10 clinics and two other establishments that were selling expired and unregistered medical products with English labels.

Massage oils, creams, hypodermic needles and improperly handled botox products were seized in the raids.

The federal agency recommended that people looking to have plastic surgery verify that the clinic they visit is properly licensed, the doctor is a specialist, the facility follows proper medical protocols and the equipment is registered with the health department.

vallartatodaysource

reportproblem

Mexico

PUERTO VALLARTA: One of my absolute favorite destinations in the world is Guanajuato, a city in Mexico’s Colonial Highlands. It’s a place where every interest is catered for. Every time I return I throw myself into the wealth of cultural activities it offers: concerts, exhibitions, theater, food festivals, book fairs…Even Guanajuato’s street scene is lively. Walk down to the Jardin (Garden) area any given night, and you’ll see strolling locals and expats, bustling outdoor cafes, student troubadours, and mariachi groups making music, and more.There’s actually so much choice for things to do that, truth be told, it sometimes stresses me! I worry that, if I go to a symphony concert at the Teatro Principal one night, I may miss a great gallery opening that same evening.
 
Or if I attend that lecture at the Cervantes Institute, I’ll have to pass on a wine tasting or a restaurant outing.Whenever I feel myself getting stressed like that, I remind myself that there’s alwayssomething (or several somethings) going on in Guanajuato, so it’s not the end of the world if I miss something; I can afford to be blasé.As elsewhere in Mexico, it’s all very affordable. Most tickets to cultural events are only $5 to $7—when there’s a fee at all. Other prices are equally low.
 
comida corrida—Mexico’s lunch special—typically runs $3.50 to $7. $20 or so a person gets you dinner, with several courses and wine, in Guanajuato’s finest restaurants.For such a relatively small city (central Guanajuato has a population of about 70,000), there’s plenty to do and see. And for big-city shopping, warehouse stores, outlets, and top-notch hospitals, the city of Leon (population about 1.6 million) is just an hour’s drive away—and the Leon international airport, El Bajio, is less than half an hour.For special treats, I have the rest of Mexico to explore. When I’m in the mood for beach fun and some of the country’s finest dining, I can head to expat destinations like Puerto Vallarta or Cancun. I can go for culture in Guadalajara and for the famous bargain shopping in Tlaquepaque, the little town on its outskirts. I head to handcrafts towns like Oaxaca and San Cristobal de las Casas whenever I want to see or buy something artisan and one-of-a-kind.Mexico is rich in interesting, colorful, historic towns and cities.
MexicoWalk down to the Jardin (Garden) area in Guanajuato, Mexico any given night, and you’ll see strolling locals and expats, bustling outdoor cafes, and mariachi groups making music, and more.
 
It’s especially rich in small cities like Guanajuato—places with populations around 100,000 that offer small-town comfort and big-city goodies. Each has their own flavor (which I’ll tell you more about in person at the Ultimate Retire Overseas Conferencethis June). A favorite with expats is San Miguel de Allende, only 90 minutes from Guanajuato. It’s been drawing artists and creative people—particularly Americans—since just after the Second World War.Other expats flock to the Lake Chapala area, for relaxed living in beautiful surroundings. Little towns dot all along the lake’s north shore, giving you a wealth of options for a place to live.
 
Prefer to be by the beach? Then head to the Riviera Maya, south of Cancun, to lively tourist favorites, like Playa de Carmen and Tulum.You can see why I feel so spoiled for choice in Mexico. And because my life in this diverse country is so affordable, I have the extra money to visit all of the places I told you about above…and more.
 
It’s a common theme among expats who live here.
 
Not only do we enjoy a relaxed, comfortable, more affordable life than we had back home, we have a big, beautiful, complex, and exciting country to explore. That fact enriches our lives in ways I think none of us fully expected before we came.So whenever I feel a niggle of stress over my many choices in Mexico, I remind myself how lucky I am that my biggest problem is choosing how best to enjoy myself tonight…
 
 
vallartatodaysource
reportproblem
 

ae006121223ceb32680f6a70670075f0 c0 0 4324 2520 s561x327

PUERTO VALLARTA.- North Korea is demanding that Mexico return a detained ship found to be in violation of U.N. weapons sanctions.

The Mu Du Bong of North Korea’s Ocean Maritime Management company has been detained since July after running aground.

“Because the company has avoided the sanctions imposed by the U.N. Security Council, the Mexican government is acting on the basis of its international obligations as a responsible U.N. member state,” the Permanent Mission of Mexico to the United Nations said Wednesday, CNN reported.

North Korea’s An Myong Hun, North Korea’s deputy ambassador to the United Nations, asserted Wednesday that the ship “is a peaceful, merchant ship and it has not shipped any items prohibited by international laws or regulations,” CNN reported.

CNN reported that Ocean Maritime Management has been blacklisted by the U.N. Security Council since July due to its role “in arranging the shipment of concealed arms and related materiel” to Panama in 2013. Authorities found MiG fighter jets, anti-aircraft systems and explosives under thousands of bags of sugar on the merchant ship Chong Chon Gang.

vallartatodaysource

reportproblem

pemex oil rig fire

PUERTO VALLARTA. - Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex) confirmed they will reach the South-West Marine Region original goal production by 2015, despite the fire on the Abkatun, platform in Campeche, which occurred on April 1.

Pemex general director of exploration and production (PEP), Gustavo Hernández, said that they will achieve the original goal of 646 thousand barrels per day of crude oil and a thousand 442 million cubic feet of gas.

"It will be possible to achieve, by next week, 80% of the production that was recorded even before the accident on the Abkatun platform A. This was the only platform damaged by the fire of April 1. The Process Center is structurally in good conditions to restore and to continue with its operation", explained the director general of PEP.

He said that the Abkatun temporary platform will be in operation by the third week of April, which will give them the capability of doing the segregation and flow of oil, and it will increase the process of the mixtures for exportation.
Gustavo Hernández also said that throughout the company, environmental auditing and security, including the follow-up of the special safety recommendations, which were done last year, have been performed without any problem.

[readon1 url="index.php?option=com_sobipro&pid=1&sid=703:mar&Itemid=212"]Source:www.VallartaToday.com-by MAR Translation Services[/readon1]

reportproblem

mirrreyes 8x

PUERTO VALLARTA – The two-minute video started with a casting call and a chance at winning an invitation to the Instituto Cumbres graduation – the social event of the year at one of Mexico City most expensive schools. It went on to feature five male students auditioning models, who dance, flirt and wash their feet – all as the boys sip liquor, look disinterested and tend to a jaguar on a leash.

The video went viral in Mexico, offering a rude reminder of the insensitivities of the upper crust in a country where half the population is poor, social mobility is scant and political connections can count for more than talent job competitions. It also offered a glimpse at the attitudes of the country’s future leaders – a frightening prospect for many columnists and commentators.

“What message did they want to give everyone? Basically that they have lots and lots and lots of money. And that’s why they absolutely don’t care what any of us thinks of them,” columnist Susana Moscatel wrote in the newspaper Milenio. “The sad thing in all of this is that it is precisely the prototype of boys that will end up as political party leaders or other variations of that and keep the party going.”

The scandal once again brought attention to the mirrey phenomenon, in which children of the elites, enabled by social media and society magazines, are increasingly accused of exhibitionism and flaunting their power, privilege and possessions – in ways that exceed the excesses of the entitled generations of “juniors” coming before them.

The word, “Mirrey” – “My king” – began as a greeting in the Lebanese community, but came to describe young men of privilege prone to partying, wearing their shirts unbuttoned and showing off status – with crooner Luis Miguel seen as the model mirrey.

“It was clear by 2007 that you have a new urban tribe,” says author and academic Ricardo Raphael, who recalls, “I heard my kids talking about the smell of ‘mirrey’ after a party.”

Raphael started investigating the subject at around the same as the hit Mexican movie Nosotros los Nobles was released in 2013. It featured a rich father tricking his indolent children into thinking that family fortune evaporated in bankruptcy to teach them about the real world.

The movie, Rafael told Fox News Latino, showed “this guy, who is not an adult, he’s between 17 and 30 years old, spoiled kid (and) good for nothing. … When I started looking at what was going on with the Mexican elite, I found these people.”

He calls current age and the rise of mirreyes, “The Mirreynato,” or “Mirrey rule,” in which money is the main value, while impunity is the norm.

“The mirrey doesn’t belong to another urban tribe: he aspires to be the chosen tribe, which places itself above all others,” Raphael writes in his recently released book Mirreynato, The Other Inequality. The juniors of past years – whose exhibitionism was kept in check by the elites’ origins in the political regime coming out of the Mexican Revolution – were arrogant, Raphael says, “But today it’s become more notorious, the same with impunity, corruption, discrimination and inequality.”

The rise of the mirreyes is causing disquiet in Mexico, where they’re seen as the heirs to a country still struggling with issues such as inequality, impunity and discrimination – and addressing the deep disenchantment with the transition to democracy over the past three decades.

Their ascendance is seen in society magazines – which have mushroomed in Mexico over the past 15 years, as the nouveau riche show off and the old money types try stay in the status seeking game – and on social media sites such as Instagram and Facebook.

The motives are more than mere vanity, Raphael says, “because people are going to protect you if you show off.”

He gives examples such as police officers not pulling over cars traveling in convoys with heavy security.

Friends with the rights connections, meanwhile, can lead to jobs and contracts later in life – and possibly riches.

“Friends and family [in Mexico] substitute for a rule of law that works,” says Manuel Molano, deputy director of the Mexican Institute for Competitiveness, a public advocacy think tank. “Among friends, it’s easier for you protect each other or become accomplices.”

Such friendships are often formed as schools such as Instituto Cumbres – an academy belonging to the Legionaries of Christ, a Catholic order founded in Mexico and famed for courting the rich. (Its founder, Father Marcial Maciel, died in disgrace, having fathered children and been accused of sexually abusing seminarians.)

These schools perform only slightly better than public schools on standardized tests, according to Raphael, but offer parents the opportunity to have their children befriend the offspring of elite families.

“It’s not so much the academic level, rather they bring together the children of very prominent people,” said Bernardo Barranco, a commentator of Catholic matters, who describes the Legionaries of Christ’s institutions and schools as “clubs.”

Barranco sees a change in the elites as the old money is joined by the new money made by politicians, union bosses and possibly even narcos. “They don’t have the culture of work that the old generations of rich people in Mexico did,” he said.

For those lacking the social connections, there are attempts at mimicking the mirreyes.

“There is the ‘mirrey’ that has had money all of his life and the ‘wannabe,’” said Pepe Ceballos, founder of the website, Mirrreybook, which posts photos of mirreyes – many of which are submitted by mirreyes themselves – at the beach, in nightclubs and, increasingly, on private planes. “They’re the same. It’s a person that has this need for you to see them, whose personal value is in these valuables.”

The need to show status stretches through society, say some observers, who question if the mirreyes are not a symptom of something societal in Mexico.

“The graduation parties of the middle and upper classes and the quince años of the popular classes,” analyst Genaro Lozano wrote in the newspaper Reforma, “both are rituals of a society enamored with simulation, spending and status anxiety.”

David Agren is a freelance reporter living in Mexico City.

vallartatodaysource

reportproblem