Bangkok Post

Americas: Mexican water wars heat up

Farmers ambushed soldiers and seized a dam to stop water payments to the United States, in a sign of growing conflict over increasing­ly scarce resources

- NATALIE KITROEFF BOQUILLA, MEXICO

The farmers armed themselves with sticks, rocks and homemade shields, ambushed hundreds of soldiers guarding a dam and seized control of one of the border region’s most important bodies of water. The Mexican government was sending water — their water — to Texas, leaving them next to nothing for their thirsty crops, the farmers said. So they took over the dam and have refused to allow any of the water to flow to the United States for more than a month.

“This is a war,” said Victor Velderrain, a grower who helped lead the takeover, “to survive, to continue working, to feed my family.”

The standoff is the culminatio­n of long-standing tensions over water between the United States and Mexico that have recently exploded into violence, pitting Mexican farmers against their own president and the global superpower next door.

Negotiatin­g the exchange of water between the two countries has long been strained but rising temperatur­es and long droughts have made the shared rivers along the border more valuable than ever, intensifyi­ng the stakes for both nations.

The dam’s takeover is a stark example of how far people are willing to go to defend livelihood­s threatened by climate change — and of the kind of conflict that may become more common with increasing­ly extreme weather.

Along the arid border region, water rights are governed by a decades-old treaty that compels the United States and Mexico to share the flows of the Colorado and Rio Grande rivers, with each side sending water to the other. Mexico has fallen far behind on its obligation­s to the United States and is now facing a deadline to deliver the water this month.

But this has been one of the driest years in the past three decades for Chihuahua, the Mexican border state responsibl­e for sending the bulk of the water Mexico owes. Its farmers have rebelled, worried that losing any more water will rob them of a chance for a healthy harvest next year.

“These tensions, these tendencies, are already there, and they’re just made so much worse by climate change,” said Christophe­r Scott, a professor of water resources policy at the University of Arizona. “They are in a fight for their lives, because no water, no agricultur­e; no agricultur­e, no rural communitie­s.”

Since February, when federal forces first occupied the dam to ensure water deliveries to the United States continued, activists in Chihuahua have burned government buildings, destroyed cars and briefly held a group of politician­s hostage. For weeks, they’ve blocked a major railroad used to ferry industrial goods between Mexico and the United States.

Their revolt has alarmed farmers and politician­s in Texas. Greg Abbott, the state’s Republican governor, appealed to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo last month, demanding that he persuade Mexico to deliver the water by the deadline next week or risk inflicting pain on American farmers.

Mexico’s president, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who has repeatedly bent to President Donald Trump’s demands on immigratio­n, has vowed that his country will make good on its water obligation­s to the United States — whether the state of Chihuahua likes it or not.

He sent hundreds of members of the national guard to protect Chihuahua’s dams and his government temporaril­y froze bank accounts belonging to the city where many of the protesters live.

For the farmers, the government’s stance is a betrayal.

Mr Velderrain, 42, said he never saw himself as the type of person who would lead hundreds over a hill to overwhelm a group of soldiers protecting a cache of automatic weapons. But there he was in a video posted on Facebook, escorting a Mexican general out of the Boquilla Dam on the day he led the takeover.

Surprised and heavily outnumbere­d, the national guard quickly surrendere­d. Later that day, one protester was shot and killed by the national guard.

“We have always dedicated ourselves to work; we’ve never been known as protesters,” Mr Velderrain said back on his farm, shucking an ear of corn that wasn’t quite ready for harvest. “What happened at the Boquilla dam was impressive, because we took off our farmer clothes and put on the uniform of guerrilla fighters.”

The federal government argues that the protesting farmers are also hurting other Mexicans by preventing water from flowing to their compatriot­s downstream and that the growers would still have access to at least 60% of the water they need for next year.

“Agricultur­e, like any other profession, has risks,” said Blanca Jimenez, head of Mexico’s National Water Commission. “One of the risks is that there are years when it rains more and years when it rains less.”

With the intensity of the drought in Chihuahua this year, Mexico has fallen far behind on its water shipments to the United States. It now has to send more than 50% of its average annual water payment in a matter of weeks. The Mexican government insists it will still comply, despite the takeover of the dam, which spans the Conchos River, a major tributary of the Rio Grande. But some Texans have their doubts.

“It’s just not going to happen, unless a storm develops and helps Mexico, which is normally what they count on,” said Sonny Hinojosa, general manager of an irrigation district in Hidalgo County, Texas. “They gamble and hope that a storm or Mother Nature will bail them out.”

Texans also contend that, on balance, Mexico benefits more from the water-sharing agreement between the two countries, signed in 1944, than does the US. Mr Abbott, the state’s governor, has pointed out that the United States sends Mexico about four times as much water as it receives from its neighbour.

The treaty doesn’t punish either side for shirking its duties but, eager to avoid conflict, Mexico is scrambling to find a way to meet its water obligation­s as the deadline nears. One of the likeliest solutions is that Mexico will hand over a significan­t amount of the water it owns in reservoirs, normally used by more than a dozen Mexican cities. In exchange, Mexico has asked the United States to lend it drinking water for those cities if Mexico ends up running out.

Part of the problem, scientists say, is that Mexico’s need for water has grown since the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement in the 1990s, as more people settled in the country’s dry border region and agricultur­al production ramped up to satisfy American consumers.

Francisco Marta, a 23-year-old who manages his father’s corn and alfalfa fields, suspects that his fellow farmers don’t have the Mexican president’s sympathies in the water dispute because they are generally not members of his poor and working-class political base. The farmers live in the north, traditiona­lly a stronghold of the conservati­ve opposition against Mr Lopez Obrador, who ran on a leftist platform.

“He believes that we are rich and that nothing will happen to us if we don’t work next year, but that’s not true,” Mr Marta said. “I myself will migrate if I don’t have anywhere to work here.”

Mr Lopez Obrador has accused politician­s and “big agricultur­e” of fomenting strife in Chihuahua, which, he said at a recent news conference, “has nothing to do with small farmers”.

But Jéssica Silva, 35, the protester who was killed the day the farmers took the Boquilla Dam, didn’t have a farm of her own, her parents said. She and her husband, Jaime Torres, rented about nine hectares of pecan trees and helped her parents cultivate an even smaller plot.

“She had so many plans,” said Silva’s mother, Justina Zamarripa, tears falling into the creases of her cheeks.

The national guard shot Silva several times in the back through the window of her husband’s truck. He was wounded but survived.

“She was defending what belongs to us,” said her father, José Luis Silva.

In a photo her parents have of the two just after the attack, Silva is slumped over in the passenger seat, wearing her seat belt and a mask to protect against the coronaviru­s.

“She was always so cautious,” her mother said.

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 ??  ?? FAR LEFT
Farmers and workers, during a demonstrat­ion against water being sent to the United States, in Delicias, in Chihuahua, Mexico on Sept 20.
LEFT
Members of Mexico’s National Guard at a control point that moves water to the United States near Delicias, in Chihuahua, Mexico on Sept 19.
FAR LEFT Farmers and workers, during a demonstrat­ion against water being sent to the United States, in Delicias, in Chihuahua, Mexico on Sept 20. LEFT Members of Mexico’s National Guard at a control point that moves water to the United States near Delicias, in Chihuahua, Mexico on Sept 19.
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 ??  ?? ABOVE
José é Luis Silva and Justina Zamarripa, with a photo of Jéssica Silva, their daughter, who was killed during the takeover of the dam, at their home in Chihuahua, Mexico on Sept 20.
ABOVE José é Luis Silva and Justina Zamarripa, with a photo of Jéssica Silva, their daughter, who was killed during the takeover of the dam, at their home in Chihuahua, Mexico on Sept 20.
 ??  ?? La Boquilla Dam, near Delicias, in Chihuahua, Mexico.
La Boquilla Dam, near Delicias, in Chihuahua, Mexico.

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