Santa Cruz Sentinel

Mexican president pushes back on US criticism on violence

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Mexico's president on Friday angrily rejected comments by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken that the Mexican government has lost control over parts of the country.

However, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador acknowledg­ed that Mexican cartels had placed people inside Mexico's drug regulatory agency to approve imports of fentanyl precursor chemicals from China.

Earlier this week, Blinken said “I think it's fair to say yes” when asked at a Senate hearing whether drug cartels control parts of Mexico.

The Mexican president responded to those comments at his morning press briefing Friday, saying, “That is false, it's not true. ... There is nowhere in the nation's territory where authoritie­s are not present.”

But López Obrador acknowledg­ed that cartels had stretched their tentacles into the Mexican government's federal drug regulatory agency, known by its initials in Spanish as Cofepris.

“They even had representa­tives in Cofepris, people lobbying inside Cofepris,” the president said, adding that some officials have been charged in that case.

Mexican cartels have imported fentanyl precursors under false names or as mislabeled products, with help from inside the regulatory agency. They then process it into fentanyl, press it into counterfei­t pills made to look like oxycodone, Xanax or Percocet and smuggle it into the United States, where the drug has caused more than 70,000 overdose deaths per year.

López Obrador also pushed back against comments by Blinken suggesting that Mexico's takeover of a port owned by a U.S. firm would hurt investment in Mexico. Last week, Mexican police seized a cargo terminal owned by the Alabama-based constructi­on materials company Vulcan Materials.

Speaking before legislator­s, Blinken said “I am very concerned about that situation” and “the potential for a case like this to have a chilling effect ... on further investment or engagement by our companies as they see what's happening.”

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