Tag Archives: mexican

Epic copter escapes

(CNN) — The spectacular, airborne escape of two Canadian inmates Sunday stunned witnesses and showcased the illicit ingenuity behind one of the more creative styles of prison breaks.

But while astonishing, helicopter escapes are not unheard of. For decades, crafty inmates have fled into the sky — some with more success than others.

Here are five epic helicopter escapes:

1. The French lovebirds

Nadine Vaujour was so determined to get her husband out of prison she took helicopter flight lessons just for the escape.

Her husband, Michel Vaujour, was serving a lengthy sentence for attempted murder and armed robbery. In May 1986, he forced his way to the roof of a Parisian prison by wielding nectarines painted as grenades.

His wife then picked him up in the helicopter and fled to a football field, where they drove away.

But their luck soon ran out.

Nadine Vaujour was discovered and arrested in southwestern France, and Michel was shot in the head during a failed bank robbery.

2. The American in Mexico

In 1971, Joel David Kaplan hopped on a chopper in a Mexican prison yard, never to return again.

Kaplan, who was convicted for the death of his business partner in Mexico City, always insisted he was innocent.

The New Yorker’s daring escape inspired the book “The 10-Second Jailbreak: The Helicopter Escape of Joel David Kaplan” and the 1975 movie “Breakout.”

3. The frequent flier

Pascal Payet holds the record for planning the most number of escapes by helicopter, according to the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association.

The Frenchman first used a helicopter to flee from a Luynes prison in 2001.

Two years later, while still a fugitive, he helped inmates from the same prison escape by chopper.

He was eventually caught, but then escaped for the third time from another prison using a helicopter hijacked by four men.

Payet and his accomplices fled, and the pilot was not harmed.

4. The Belgian flock

When Nordin Ben Allal dreamed up his escape, he didn’t mean for others to join him.

In 2007, when Ben Allal’s accomplices landed at a Belgian prison, other inmates tried to jump on board.

The chopper spun out of control, injuring the pilot and several of the prisoners, The Telegraph reported.

Ben Allal managed to escape — only to get recaptured.

5. The Greek foil

In February, accomplices swooped over a prison in Greece and tried to whisk away convicted murderer Panagiotis Vlastos with a rope.

The accomplices reportedly unleashed a hailstorm of bullets from AK-47 assault rifles toward prison guards, who fired back.

Vlastos was shot, and the chopper eventually landed on the prison parking lot.

13 killed in firework truck explosion


13 dead, many injured in Mexican religious fireworks explosion

By Michael Martinez, CNN

March 16, 2013 — Updated 0643 GMT (1443 HKT)

Mandela in hospital for routine checkup


Nelson Mandela hospitalized for routine checkup

From Kim Norgaard, CNN

March 9, 2013 — Updated 1803 GMT (0203 HKT)

Nelson Mandela, shown here in 2009, was hospitalized for a lung infection in early December.

Nelson Mandela, shown here in 2009, was hospitalized for a lung infection in early December.

Johannesburg (CNN) — Former South African President Nelson Mandela has been hospitalized again, but officials say it’s only for a routine checkup.

“Doctors are conducting tests and have thus far indicated that there is no reason for any alarm,” according to a statement from the presidential office Saturday.

In January, Mandela completed his recovery from a lung infection and gallstone surgery and gradually returned to his normal routine, officials said at the time.

Mandela, 94, who has not appeared in public since 2010, had continued receiving treatment at his home in Houghton, a suburb of Johannesburg.

Mandela was hospitalized for a lung infection in early December and a week later underwent surgery to remove gallstones. He was discharged from the hospital after a two-week stay.

During the time of apartheid in South Africa, Mandela was convicted of sabotage and was imprisoned for 27 years until 1990.

He and former President F.W. de Klerk, who dismantled apartheid, shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993. A year later, Mandela became the nation’s first black president.

In November, South Africa issued banknotes bearing Mandela’s picture.

Despite his rare public appearances in recent years, Mandela retains his popularity and is considered a hero of democracy in the nation.

Mandela’s impact has extended far beyond the borders of his own country. After he left office in 1999, he was involved in mediating conflicts from Africa to the Mideast.

Mandela also was treated for an acute respiratory infection in January 2011. The next month he had surgery for an abdominal hernia.

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Mandela in hospital for routine checkup

Bayern stretch lead to 20 points


Bayern stretch lead to 20 points as Dortmund falter

March 9, 2013 — Updated 1927 GMT (0327 HKT)

Jerome Boateng heads Bayern Munich to victory against Dusseldorf at the Allianz Arena on Saturday.

Jerome Boateng heads Bayern Munich to victory against Dusseldorf at the Allianz Arena on Saturday.

(CNN) — Jerome Boateng scored an 86th-minute winner as Bayern Munich came from behind twice to beat Dusseldorf 3-2 at the Allianz Arena on Saturday and extend their lead at the top of Bundesliga to 20 points.

Bayern’s eighth straight league win was far from routine as the visitors took a early lead — Mathis Bolly scoring in the 16th minute — before Thomas Muller equalized on the stroke of halftime.

Despite monopolizing possession for much of the game, Bayern found themselves trailing again in the 71st minute when midfielder Andreas Lambertz scored.

But the lead didn’t last long. Franck Ribery levelled the scores in the 74th minute before Boateng headed the home the winner with four minutes remaining.

The win gives Bayern 66 points from 25 games and leaves them in confident mood ahead of the second leg of their last-16 Champions League tie against English Premier League side Arsenal next Wednesday.

Jupp Heynckes’ side won the first leg 3-1 at the Emirates and are strong favorites to progress.

Bayern’s nearest league rivals both lost on Saturday. Second-placed Borussia Dortmund going down 2-1 away to Schalke while third-place Bayer Leverkusen lost 1-0 at Mainz.

With only nine matches remaining, Bayern seem destined to secure 23rd league title long before the end of the season.

At the foot of the table, Greuther Furth suffered a 3-0 defeat at home to Hoffenheim and claim a unwanted record, becoming the first Bundesliga team not to win any of their first 13 home league games.

Elsewhere, Wolfsburg moved up to 12th in the table after a resounding 5-2 win at Freiburg.

Meanwhile in England, the FA Cup quarterfinals took center stage with Wigan the first to book a place in the semifinals with a comprehensive 3-0 win over Everton at Goodison Park.

Three strikes in three minutes downed the Toffees as Roberto Martinez’s team move into the last four — their best ever performance in the historic English cup competition.

A 31st-minute goal from Honduran defender Maynor Figueroa was followed up a minute later by Callum Mcmanaman with Jordi Gomez adding another immediately to leave home fans stunned.

Carlos Tevez scored a hat-trick as Manchester City thrashed Championship side Barnsley 5-0 at the Etihad Stadium to claim a semifinal berth.

The two other quarterfinals will be played on Sunday and see Manchester United take on Chelsea at Old Trafford while Championship sides’ Blackburn Rovers and Millwall square up at the Den.

Four Premier League matches were played on Saturday. Bottom-of-the-table Queens Park Rangers recorded a valuable 3-1 win over Sunderland.

The win moves Harry Redknapp’s side up to 23 points, level with fellow strugglers Reading, who lost 2-1 to Aston Villa — who rise to 17th with 27 points.

West Bromwich Albion are up to seventh after a 2-1 win over Swansea. Norwich City and Southampton drew 0-0 at Carrow Road.

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CNN Football Club

Be part of CNN’s coverage of European Champions League matches and join the social debate.

March 6, 2013 — Updated 1345 GMT (2145 HKT)

A red card for Manchester United’s Nani during Tuesday’s loss to Real Madrid sparks huge social media reaction.

February 26, 2013 — Updated 1225 GMT (2025 HKT)

A real human brain being displayed as part of new exhibition at the @Bristol attraction is seen on March 8, 2011 in Bristol, England. The Real Brain exhibit - which comes with full consent from a anonymous donor and needed full consent from the Human Tissue Authority - is suspended in large tank engraved with a full scale skeleton on one side and a diagram of the central nervous system on the other and is a key feature of the All About Us exhibition opening this week.

Footballers have a battery of physios, fitness trainers and doctors all striving to fine-tune their physique — but are they missing a trick?

February 26, 2013 — Updated 1424 GMT (2224 HKT)

No Englishman has won the EPL title in over 20 years, while a leading manager reveals that English coaches are now “not respected abroad.”

February 21, 2013 — Updated 1601 GMT (0001 HKT)

Football supporters demonstrate in front of Italian TV RAI after the match between A.C.Milan and Lazio Roma was cancelled 11 November 2007. The spectre of football violence resurged in Italy on Sunday as the shooting dead of a fan sparked nationwide disturbances which forced the suspension of several Serie A matches. Banner reads 'Racism can stop League but death of tifosi has no signification.

Hardcore Italian football “ultra” Federico is a Lazio supporter who happily admits directing monkey chants at black players.

March 5, 2013 — Updated 1123 GMT (1923 HKT)

When Jupp Heynckes made his Bundesliga debut as a player in 1965, the name of Bayern Munich was a new one for the nascent German league.

February 19, 2013 — Updated 1902 GMT (0302 HKT)

Football’s world governing body FIFA has confirmed it will use goal-line technology at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

February 19, 2013 — Updated 1403 GMT (2203 HKT)

Match-fixing has become a worldwide issue, with hundreds of matches under investigation — but how do you actually fix a football game?

February 18, 2013 — Updated 1700 GMT (0100 HKT)

U.S soccer star Robbie Rogers has “come out” as gay on the day he retired from the game, making the announcement on his blog.

February 12, 2013 — Updated 1220 GMT (2020 HKT)

It started with a trickle. It ended with a dream washed away by an unstoppable tidal wave.

February 11, 2013 — Updated 2231 GMT (0631 HKT)

The wealth of owners like Chelsea’s Roman Abramovich often fuels success, but for other clubs such backers prove a mixed blessing.

January 31, 2013 — Updated 1740 GMT (0140 HKT)

Brand Beckham is moving from the “City of Angels” to the “City of Light” as the football icon signs a short-term deal and offers to give away his pay.

January 31, 2013 — Updated 1247 GMT (2047 HKT)

Fireworks inside his own house, a car crash in his first week at Manchester City, that iconic t-shirt — the EPL will miss Mario Balotelli.

January 30, 2013 — Updated 1342 GMT (2142 HKT)

The Secret Footballer reveals the complex issues surrounding racism in the English Premier League.

January 30, 2013 — Updated 1543 GMT (2343 HKT)

The death of 73 football fans in Port Said tragedy continues to haunt Egypt.

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Bayern stretch lead to 20 points

Pakistan: Christian homes set on fire


Dozens of Christian homes set on fire by Muslim mob, Pakistani authorities say

From Nasir Habib, CNN

March 9, 2013 — Updated 1918 GMT (0318 HKT)

An angry Pakistani demonstrator torches Christian's belongings in Lahore during a protest over a blasphemy row.

An angry Pakistani demonstrator torches Christian’s belongings in Lahore during a protest over a blasphemy row.

(CNN) — The arrest of a Christian man accused of making remarks against the Muslim prophet Mohammed wasn’t enough to appease an angry mob in Pakistan this weekend.

More than 100 homes of Christians were set on fire by outraged Muslims in the Badami Bagh community in Lahore on Saturday after police arrested Sawan Masih, a Christian in his mid-20s accused of speaking against Mohammad, officials said.

“Mob wanted police to hand them over the alleged blasphemer,” said Hafiz Majid, the senior police official in Badami Bagh.

The mob also looted some shops run by Christians, he said.

Majid said Christians have fled the area for fear of being killed.

If convicted, Masih faces the death penalty. He denies the allegations made by the two men who filed the blasphemy complaint against him with police on Friday, Majid said.

Masih says the three got into an argument while drinking and that the other two men threatened to publicly accuse him of blasphemy, according to Majid.

“The attack is yet another shameful incident against a vulnerable community and further confirmation of the slide toward extremism in society on the one hand and, on the other hand, the apathy and inaction that has become the norm among the police,” the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said in a statement.

The group accused police of arresting Christians in the incident “while those who went on a rampage and can easily be identified from television footage have gone scot-free.”

Pakistan’s blasphemy laws were first instituted to keep peace between religions. But they have been criticized by human rights advocates who say the laws enable legal discrimination against religious minorities. At time, the laws have been misused to settle personal differences between Muslims and Christians.

There have been about 1,400 blasphemy cases since the laws were first enacted in 1986, according to U.S.-based Human Rights Watch. There are more than 15 cases of people on death row for blasphemy in Pakistan, and more than 50 people have been killed while facing trial for the charge, according to the organization.

Last year, a Pakistani court dismissed blasphemy charges against a Christian teenager whose case prompted international outrage.

Her detention stirred up religious tensions in the predominantly Muslim country. It also generated fierce criticism of Pakistani authorities and renewed debate over Pakistan’s blasphemy laws.

President Asif Ali Zardari issued a statement Saturday on the most recent “unfortunate incident.” He noted that the country’s constitution protects the rights of all Pakistani’s, and that “such acts of vandalism against minorities tarnish the image of the country.”

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March 8, 2013 — Updated 2035 GMT (0435 HKT)

Since 1379, every pope has been selected from the College of Cardinals. But how does the conclave work? Explore our interactive guide.

March 8, 2013 — Updated 1736 GMT (0136 HKT)

The poor, usually marginalized by Latin American politicians, became Chavez’s main weapon.

March 8, 2013 — Updated 1115 GMT (1915 HKT)

It’s the war that never really ended — leaving the Korean peninsula splintered in 1953. The brutal war that raged 60 years ago still matters.

March 7, 2013 — Updated 2344 GMT (0744 HKT)

CNN’s Barbara Starr reports on the amount of drone attacks the U.S. carries out as criticisms of the program rise.

March 8, 2013 — Updated 1157 GMT (1957 HKT)

Global warming has propelled Earth’s climate from one of its coldest decades since the last ice age to one of its hottest — in just one century.

On International Women’s Day, find out whose words inspired you the most with CNN’s interactive.

Students in Hong Kong stood on campus for 27 hours to raise awareness of modern-day slavery, in a campaign that ended on Thursday. Why?

March 8, 2013 — Updated 0528 GMT (1328 HKT)

Any climber’s dream is reaching the peak of the world’s highest mountain once in their lifetime. Chhurim Sherpa did it twice — in a week.

March 7, 2013 — Updated 1602 GMT (0002 HKT)

The injudicious use of antibiotics is allowing bacteria the opportunity to develop resistance to drugs, a medical expert warns.

March 7, 2013 — Updated 1439 GMT (2239 HKT)

With the election of a new pope, many church watchers wonder if Catholic teachings could change to end the church’s celibacy requirement.

Cricketer Basil D’Oliveira unwittingly walked into one of sport’s most controversial and shameful sagas.

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Pakistan: Christian homes set on fire

Accusations grow of vote-buying in Mexico election

A woman shows her pre-paid gift card while waiting in line at a Soriana supermarket in Mexico City, Tuesday July 3, 2012. Many of the people at the supermarket say they went to redeem pre-paid gift cards they said were given them by the party that won Mexico’s presidency and at least a few cardholders were angry, complaining they didn’t get as much as promised, or that their cards weren’t working. The incidents are inflaming accusations that the election was marred by massive vote-buying. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

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(AP) — Thousands of people rushed to stores Tuesday to redeem pre-paid gift cards they said were given to them previously by the party that won Mexico’s presidency, inflaming accusations that the weekend election was marred by widespread vote-buying.

At least a few cardholders were angry, complaining that they didn’t get as much as promised or that their cards weren’t working. Neighbors at one store in a poor neighborhood on the outskirts of Mexico City said the unusually large crowds prevented them from doing their daily shopping.

Some people shopping at the store said that they were told the cards would be valid only during the two days after Sunday’s election and that they had waited to cash them in until Tuesday because the store was packed Monday.

Under Mexican election law, giving voters gifts is not a crime unless the gift is conditioned on a certain vote or meant to influence a vote. However, the cost of such gifts must be reported, and cannot exceed campaign spending limits. Violations are usually punished with fines, but generally aren’t considered grounds for annulling an election.

Some of the people lined up to use gift cards said they got them for supporting the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, whose Enrique Pena Nieto won Sunday’s presidential election, according to the preliminary official vote count. Some wore red T-shirts and baseball caps or carried tote bags with Pena Nieto’s name printed in white.

Maria Salazar, a 20-year-old university student, came with her 70-year-old father, Antonio Salazar, to cash three cards.

“They gave us the cards in the name of the PRI and Rep. Hector Pedroza (a PRI congressional candidate), and they said they were counting on our vote,” Maria Salazar said outside one store, as she carried plastic shopping bags packed with toilet paper, cooking oil, rice, saltine crackers and instant noodle soups.

Her father carried two more packed grocery bags and her 8-year-old nephew carried another.

“They told us they were worth 500 pesos ($37.50), but when we got to the check-out, they were only worth 100 rotten pesos ($7.50),” Salazar said.

Both she and her father said they had been told to turn in a photocopy of their voter ID card in order to get the gift cards.

Another woman interviewed outside the same Soriana grocery store also complained that her card had only 100 pesos ($7.50) in credit.

“For helping them with votes and all … they gave us a card for supporting them, and all that for 100 pesos,” said the woman, who gave only her first name, Josefina, for fear of reprisals. She said she got the card for supporting Pena Nieto, but complained that “100 pesos lasts you about five minutes.”

Inside the store, long lines formed at card-reading machines as people tried to find the balances on their cards. Some grew angry and shouted insults against Pena Nieto.

Regular shoppers were vexed at the long lines.

“I was going to buy bread right now, but you can see, the lines are tremendous, you can’t even get in,” said Maria Garcia Lobato.

Pena Nieto’s campaign and the PRI press office said they had no immediate comment. In the final days of the campaign before Sunday’s vote, PRI officials denied allegations that the party had distributed pre-paid cash cards from a local bank.

Humberto Fayad, a spokesman for the Soriana grocery store chain, denied the company sold huge amounts of gift cards to the PRI.

“There is no agreement between the PRI and Soriana, or Soriana and any other political party. Soriana is a non-political company,” Fayad said.

Before the election, the PRI accused the conservative National Action Party, or PAN, whose candidate ran third in the presidential election, of passing out groceries during the campaign, and claimed the leftist Democratic Revolution Party, or PRD, had gotten illegal campaign financing. None of those allegations have been proven.

On the Friday before the vote, the PRD issued a statement accompanied by photos of dozens of the Soriana gift cards, saying they had been distributed by a PRI-affiliated union, and it filed a complaint to electoral authorities. The party’s presidential candidate, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, came in second.

Allegations of vote-buying were not limited to Mexico City, with complaints cropping up in several battleground states. PAN accused Pena Nieto’s campaign of acquiring about 9,500 prepaid gift cards worth nearly $5.2 million (71 million pesos) to give away for votes. Authorities said a business had bought that number of cards, but had found no direct evidence of vote-buying. That investigation continues.

On Tuesday, Alfredo Figueroa, a council member of the oversight agency known as the Federal Electoral Institute, said authorities were investigating complaints about the Soriana gift cards. Members of the institute have said they were aware of attempts to engage in vote buying.

Figueroa also said that irregularities in vote tallies might eventually lead to the opening and re-counting of votes from as many as 50,000 polling stations, about a third of the 143,000 involved in Sunday’s vote.

Lopez Obrador said Tuesday that his team had detected irregularities at 113,855 polling places, and called for a total recount.

“This is a scandal … They bought millions of votes,” Lopez Obrador said at a news conference, referring to the PRI. “Clearly, they far exceeded campaign spending limits … this is a national embarrassment.”

Lopez Obrador has refused to accept the preliminary vote tallies, saying the election campaign was marred by overspending and favorable treatment for Pena Nieto by Mexico’s semi-monopolized television industry.

Many Mexicans also questioned why pre-election polls showed Pena Nieto with a double-digit lead, roughly twice the margin he really won by. With 99 percent of the vote tallied in the preliminary count, Lopez Obrador trailed by six percentage points.

The narrower-than-expected margin has fueled suspicion among Lopez Obrador’s followers about the fairness of the vote, and he refused Monday night to concede defeat, just as he did when he lost a razor-thin race in the 2006 presidential race and set off months of political unrest. This time, he has not called his followers into the streets to protest.

Lopez Obrador argued from the start of the campaign that pollsters were manipulating surveys to promote the idea that the PRI candidate was far out in front.

Pollsters deny that, saying they believe some voters switched to Lopez Obrador in the final week, a period when publication of new polls is banned by law.

Lopez Obrador said he would not accept the preliminary election results reported by the Federal Electoral Institute and would wait until Wednesday, when the official results are to be announced, before deciding what he will do.

“We will not accept a fraudulent result,” Lopez Obrador said.

Calls from conservative and pro-business groups mounted for Lopez Obrador to accept the results.

“We hope that the leftist candidate … will also adhere to legality and recognize the official results once the authorities issue a final result,” the Mexican Employers’ Confederation said in a statement.

___

Associated Press writer Mark Stevenson contributed to this report.

Associated Press

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Accusations grow of vote-buying in Mexico election

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U.N. wives to Mrs. al-Assad: Stop him

A picture taken on December 11, 2010 shows Syrian First Lady Asma al-Assad in Paris.

A picture taken on December 11, 2010 shows Syrian First Lady Asma al-Assad in Paris.

United Nations (CNN) — The wives of the British and German ambassadors to the United Nations have taken on Syria’s first lady in an online video, calling on Asma al-Assad to “stop your husband” and “stop being a bystander.”

The roughly four-minute video, posted to YouTube, juxtaposes pictures of an elegant al-Assad, the wife of Bashar al-Assad, against images of other Syrian women, dead and wounded children.

“We want her (al-Assad) to speak out for the end of violence. That is what we want. Stop the bloodshed. Stop it now. We know this is a risk for you, but take this risk,” Huberta von Voss-Wittig, the wife of Germany’s U.N. ambassador, told CNN late Tuesday.

A U.N. diplomat said the video was produced by Voss-Wittig and Sheila Lyall Grant, the wife of Britain’s U.N. ambassador, “on their own initiative.”

Syria has been engulfed in violence for 13 months as a national uprising spread after the government began cracking down on peaceful protests. The United Nations estimates at least 9,000 people have died since the demonstrations began, while others put the death toll at more than 11,000.

“Stand up for peace, Asma,” a voice in the video demands. “Speak out now. For the sake of your people. Stop your husband and his supporters. Stop being a bystander.”

In one clip, the Syrian first lady can be seen bending down to kiss a young girl stepping off a bus. The next image is of a woman embracing what appears to be a dead child.

“Asma, when you kiss your own children goodnight, another mother will find the place next to her empty,” the narrator says.

The video is the latest in a series of professionally-produced videos aimed at stirring or shocking people into action. It asks viewers to sign a petition.

Other recent examples that went viral include “KONY 2012,” a documentary on a notorious Africa warlord’s use of child soldiers in Uganda, and a video showing Mexican children acting out the roles of victims, drug traffickers and kidnappers.

Once described by Vogue magazine as “a rose in the desert,” the London-born al-Assad graduated from King’s College with a degree in computer science. She worked for JP Morgan as an investment banker before marrying Bashar in 2000, just months after he became president.

According to a cache of e-mails leaked to CNN, the first lady appears to have spent much of the last year shopping online for expensive jewelry, art, and furniture, and e-mailing boutiques in London and Paris.

In one e-mail exchange with an art dealer in London, she — apparently using a false name — inquires about six artworks that all feature butterflies. The dealer responds that the works cost between 5,000 and 10,500 ($7,800 and $16,500).

The art inquiry was sent October 28, the same day Syrian protesters staged a massive demonstration in the city of Hama, in which they called for an end to the Syrian president’s rule.

“No one cares about your image,” the voice in the video says. “We care about your action.”

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U.N. wives to Mrs. al-Assad: Stop him

Video of kid ‘violence’ stirs storm in Mexico

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MEXICO CITY (AP) — A video “mockumentary” that shows children as kidnappers, corrupt cops and drug traffickers sparked a fierce debate in violence-torn Mexico on Thursday, with some people calling it a needed wake-up call while others described it as political manipulation or even child abuse.

Kids playing the role of businessmen, criminals and corrupt officials are seen robbing, paying bribes and shooting it out in a mock Mexico made up entirely of children, all to the deceptively laid-back tune of the 1970s ballad “Una Manana,” or “One Morning.”

Produced by a foundation supported by private companies and universities and distributed over the Internet, the video ends with a direct message to the candidates in the Mexico’s July 1 presidential race. A little girl faces the camera and says: “If this is the future that awaits me, I don’t want it. Enough of working for your political parties instead of for us. Enough of cosmetic changes.”

Dubbed “Ninos Incomodos,” roughly “Discomforting Kids,” the four-minute video opens with a pudgy kid-businessman waking up in the morning dragging on a cigarette, and closes with a kiddie-version of alleged drug lord Edgar Valdez, aka “La Barbie,” being dragged off to an overcrowded jail full of moppets by kiddie cops.

Little girls carrying purses scream and scurry for cover as boys their own age spray machine guns from huge SUVs and assault-rifle toting little cops run to detain them at gunpoint.

Despite the video’s grim images of knife-wielding, migrant-smuggling, gun-toting kids, all the major candidates had praise for it. Leftist candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador called it “well done, it’s tough but it’s the truth.”

Earlier, the candidate of the former governing Institutional Revolutionary Party, Enrique Pena Nieto, wrote in his Twitter account: “I support the message of Discomforting Kids. I hear it all the time on the campaign trail; that ‘time is running out.’ It’s time to renew hope and change Mexico. “

Josefina Vazquez Mota, the candidate of President Felipe Calderon’s conservative National Action Party, tweeted that “the video of Discomforting Kids is a call that can’t be ignored. I accept the challenge, I want to join you.”

Not everyone was happy, however.

The video’s vision of a smog-choked, apocalyptic Mexico where kid cops crack down on tiny anti-corruption protesters while pint-sized lazy or corrupt politicians stand by is manipulative, and no candidate could afford to criticize it, TV critic and newspaper columnist Alvaro Cueva said.

“No sane candidate is going to say, ‘I want a future with crime, a future with criminals,’” Cueva said.

He called the video damaging and “a very clear violation of the (electoral) law.”

It is a sensitive question in Mexico, where many people believe the 2006 elections were unfairly influenced by a series of privately produced and sponsored ads that sought to inspire fear of Lopez Obrador, warning Mexicans they could “lose everything” if he were elected. He narrowly lost to Calderon.

“The only thing this video does is to further muddy the election campaigns,” Cueva said. “This video does nothing but foment a sense of desperation and despair.”

While the 2006 “fear” ads against Lopez Obrador, sponsored by private business groups, benefited Calderon, Cueva thinks this year’s fear-video benefits the presidential front-runner, Pena Nieto, whose PRI party has extensive machines in most states that could help him win in the event of a low voter turnout.

“When one watches this video, one loses any desire to vote, and so it foments a low turnout, and in an environment of low turnout, the winner is the PRI candidate, Enrique Pena Nieto,” Cueva said.

Pena Nieto’s campaign was not immediately available to comment.

Others, like former presidential spokesman and political analyst Ruben Aguilar, accepted the private group’s arguments that the video is an attempt to make citizens think.

“In this country, everyone thinks the worst, and they can never accept that somebody is doing something good,” Aguilar said. “I think it is good, it is intelligent and it can help.”

The group that made the video, headed by Mexican insurance company GNP, took out full-page ads in Mexican newspapers saying it was merely reflecting the concerns of millions of citizens “who want to see themselves living in a Mexico that has left behind crime, corruption poverty, unemployment, drug trafficking.”

But some objected to the video’s use of children.

“It is unacceptable, scandalous, that they have shown children smoking, armed, kidnapping people with pistols and locking them in trunks,” Labor Party congressman Mario di Costanzo said on the floor of Congress on Wednesday.

PRI congressman Miguel Angel Garcia Granados called on the Calderon administration to ban the video.

“We are not going to solve the big problems this country faces with sensationalism and shrillness, and certainly not by using underage children in documentaries,” said Garcia Granados.

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Video on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rcIDQNRBqaI

Associated Press

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Video of kid ‘violence’ stirs storm in Mexico

Earthquakes shake Gulf of California


Earthquakes shake Gulf of California

By the CNN Wire Staff

April 12, 2012 — Updated 0807 GMT (1607 HKT)

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • The earthquakes were 10 minutes apart
  • No tsunami warnings were issued

(CNN) — A pair of strong earthquakes rocked Mexico’s Gulf of California only minutes apart early Thursday, the U.S. Geological Survey reported.

The quakes — magnitude 6.9 and 6.2 — were centered about 85 miles northeast of Guerrero Negro in the Mexican state of Baja California, or 325 miles south-southwest of Phoenix in the United States. Both epicenters were shallow, a little more than six miles underground.

No tsunami warnings were issued and there were no immediate reports of damage, but people as far north as Tucson, Arizona, reported feeling them.

The temblors were recorded at 12:16 a.m. and 12:06 a.m. local time (3:16 a.m. and 3;06 a.m. ET).

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Earthquakes shake Gulf of California

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Mexico announces its Digital Agenda: What you need to know

mexican flag wifi by wonderlane1 520x245 Mexico announces its Digital Agenda: What you need to know

Mexico has recently unveiled its National Digital Agenda (ADN), a government plan for ICT which can be downloaded from agendadigital.mx. Besides interesting data on the current state of the Internet, the document also defines goals and strategies to give Mexico a digital boost over the next few years.

Introduced a few days ago by the country’s secretary of communications and transport, Dionisio Pérez Jácome, the document is also part of a ten-action plan he announced in January “to reduce the digital gap and make a positive impact on the telecommunications markets in Mexico.”

A digital gap between supply and demand

There’s no doubt that Mexico still has a long way to go when it comes to digital inclusion. While the population increasingly demands access to broadband and other ICT technologies, penetration still lags behind (see our previous story).

According to the document, the number of Internet users almost doubled since 2006, reaching 40m. At the end of 2011, there were 13m fixed and 7.8m mobile broadband connections (respectively 11.4 and and 7 for 100 inhabitants).

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As the document notes, this makes Mexico the third most-connected country in Latin America. Still, access to technology is far from universal, and the differences between rural and urban regions are significant. This is true of landlines and mobile phones, but also of connected computers.

In cities with more than 15,000 inhabitants, where 71% of Mexican homes are based, 40% have a computer and 30% are connected to the Internet. In comparison, when looking at Mexico’s 188,593 towns with less than 2,500 inhabitants, only 6% of the local homes own a computer, and only 3% are connected to the Internet.

As the Digital Agenda also points out, these differences are the result of multiple factors; the available infrastructure is much more limited in rural areas, and 59.2% of those who don’t own a computer say they can’t afford one, while 21.3% don’t deem it necessary and 13% wouldn’t know how to use it.

Connecting Mexico

compuapoyo Mexico announces its Digital Agenda: What you need to knowAccording to the federal government, this inspired a series of actions it started to implement over the last five years. While some are targeted at democratizing optical fiber and offering free Internet in public buildings, others are more specifically targeted at low-income households. This is the case of CompuApoyo, a subsidized hardware acquisition program.

Beyond these initiatives, Mexico’s federal government now hopes to follow the steps of other countries around the world to define its own ADN. Based on Mexico’s situation, it decided to focus on priority areas such as education, healthcare, social inclusion, online government and competitiveness.

As you can imagine, public initiative is only one of the elements of the puzzle, and government can’t do it all. As a matter of fact, the ADN explicitly mentions the recent OECD report calling for increased competition in the Mexican telecom sector. Still, there are some signs that the public authorities have started to take action to regulate the market, raising hopes that digital bills could come down (see our recent post ‘Carlos Slim’s Telcel dominates the mobile market‘).

Goals and actions

agendadigital.mx  Mexico announces its Digital Agenda: What you need to knowWhile is too early to tell whether or not the government will manage to tackle this specific issue, the adoption of a Digital Agenda still makes sense. Not only does it define vulnerable communities, such as indigenous groups and women, on which public ICT initiatives will particularly focus, but it also sets goals for the country as a whole. Here are some of the targets it hopes to reach by 2015:

  • 55% of urban and suburban households will have at least 5 Mbps broadband access;
  • Fixed and mobile broadband will reach at least 38 out of 100 inhabitants, and access will be universal by the end of the decade;
  • The country will have over 60m computer users;
  • Basic education schools, public health centers and public offices will be connected to the Internet, while the curriculum will develop digital competence;
  • 70% of SMBs with more than 20 employees will have broadband access;
  • Mexico will promote competition and the entry of new operators in the telecommunications market.

Several of these results can only be achieved with the help of the government, and the ADN defines which public entities will be involved in each chapter of the plan. Some actions are specifically focused on the government itself – for instance on open data and transparency, but also for cultural initiatives (see our story on the iPad app ‘Blanco’).

On a higher level, the federal government hopes that the ICT sector will increasingly contribute to the country’s growth, while creating high-quality jobs and making local companies more competitive. Which means that the public and private sectors will have to collaborate for this Digital Agenda to become a reality.

What do you think of Mexico’s Digital Agenda? Let us know in the comments.

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Mexico announces its Digital Agenda: What you need to know