Mexican military to take control of airports as part of president's efforts to tackle corruption | CBC News

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Mexico's armed forces are taking control of the capital's main airport, and the government plans to give the military control of nearly a dozen more across the country as the president takes aim at corruption and mismanagement.

Posted: Jul 09, 2023 1:15 PM EDT | Last Updated: 2 hours ago

More than 1.8 million Canadians travelled to Mexico in 2022, according to Statistics Canada. CBC News has reached out to the Canadian embassy in Mexico City for more information. Meanwhile, López Obrador has gone to the armed forces for help throughout his term, giving them some immigration duties and control of ports and customs. Its members are also building major infrastructure projects, such as a tourist train through the Yucatan Peninsula and a new airport in the same area. They even run plant nurseries and tourist trips to a former penal colony.

Unlike the capital's other airport, Felipe Angeles, where National Guard troops take passenger tickets at the gate, at Benito Juarez the only uniformed military are the 1,500 marines deployed since February 2022 for security. The rest of the airport personnel will be civilians but "with clearer rules … that govern with more order and discipline," Velázquez Tiscareño said.

The pandemic-era policy Title 42 allows border patrol to expel migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border immediately after they cross, without asylum hearings. As the policy expires, authorities, migrants and communities along the border are braced for what comes next. Matt Galloway talks to The Current’s Liz Hoath, who has been reporting in Guatemala this week; El Paso, Texas, pastor Timothy Perea, whose church has been helping migrants who reach his community; and Michelle Hackman, who covers U.S.

In Mexico, corruption got to the point years ago that coded messages were sent using airport internal communications to hold up baggage inspections so drug shipments could pass untouched, according to testimony during the U.S. trial of former Public Security Secretary Genaro Luna. He was convicted of drug trafficking in February.A private security officer check a passenger's baggage at a checkpoint at the Benito Juarez International Airport in Mexico City on Friday.

 

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