Los Angeles Times

Mexico’s ongoing human rights crisis

The U.S. has been noticeably silent on the subject

- By José Miguel Vivanco and Tyler Mattiace José Miguel Vivanco is Americas director at Human Rights Watch. Tyler Mattiace is a researcher at Human Rights Watch.

On Dec. 1, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador reached the halfway point of his six-year term. Since his election in 2018, López Obrador has not only failed to improve the country’s disastrous human rights record, he has worked to undo many of the hardfought gains in transparen­cy and the rule of law that rights groups, activists and campaigner­s have achieved since the end of one-party rule in Mexico in 2000.

The United States has been noticeably silent regarding the Mexican president’s accelerati­ng attacks on democracy. President Biden has instead chosen to focus on enlisting López Obrador to prevent migrants from reaching the U.S. border.

López Obrador, a prominent anti-establishm­ent figure in Mexican politics for decades, is the kind of populist leader that has become increasing­ly common in Latin America. He was democratic­ally elected in a landslide on a promise to “transform” Mexico by taking back control of the country from the elites whose policies he blamed for economic inequality, social breakdown and growing violence.

López Obrador inherited a human rights catastroph­e. When he came to office in 2018, 12 years of a military-led drug war had led to horrific abuses. Homicides hit staggering numbers. Thousands of people disappeare­d every year. But he has not addressed these problems. Soldiers continue to kill civilians. Homicides remain at historical­ly high rates. And according to the government’s figures, more than 25,000 people have gone missing on his watch.

Even so, López Obrador has remained immensely popular with his base. He appears to believe that his continued popular support gives him the moral authority to concentrat­e as much power as possible in his own hands and to attempt to control every part of the state to bring about his promised transforma­tion.

He labels anyone who criticizes him or stands in his way as a “neoliberal” or “conservati­ve,” nebulous groups of supposed adversarie­s whom he describes as corrupt and morally bankrupt. Leveling this charge allows him to avoid responding to genuine concerns raised by journalist­s who question him, women’s rights campaigner­s upset at his lack of action on genderbase­d violence, Indigenous communitie­s who oppose his megaprojec­ts, environmen­talists who disagree with his coal and oil-focused energy policy, and press freedom campaigner­s concerned about his government’s harassment of journalist­s, among others.

He has eliminated or proposed eliminatin­g many government agencies not under his direct control, including the independen­t energy and telecommun­ications regulators, funds for protecting journalist­s and responding to climate change and natural disasters, the independen­t transparen­cy agency and the independen­t electoral authority. He recently decreed that his government’s constructi­on and infrastruc­ture projects would be automatica­lly granted permits without any review and that as matters of “national security,” would be exempted from transparen­cy rules.

He has also gone after the judicial system, which has delayed or blocked a number of his projects and proposals as abusive or unconstitu­tional. His efforts to intimidate the judiciary have grown brazen. López Obrador has publicly singled out those whose rulings he dislikes and called for a judge who ruled against him to be investigat­ed.

In April, his coalition in Congress passed a law — since overturned — to extend the term of the Supreme Court chief justice who has ruled in favor of the president. And in August, López Obrador held a referendum on whether the government should put five previous presidents on trial for alleged crimes such as “neoliberal­ism” and the “privatizat­ion of public goods.”

The U.S. policy of ignoring López Obrador’s attacks on the rule of law came into stark relief in June, when Vice President Kamala Harris visited Mexico and met with him. At the end of the trip, a journalist asked the vice president if the United States was concerned about López Obrador’s hostile attitude toward the media and civil society.

Harris initially responded that she had urged the Mexican president to respect the independen­ce of the judicial system, the press and civil society. However, hours later, her spokespers­on issued a correction to the Spanish wire service EFE, saying the vice president had been confused; she and the Mexican president had only discussed immigratio­n and the economy, nothing else.

López Obrador will be in office for another three years. His coalition still controls both houses of Congress and he has made it clear that he is willing to

amend the constituti­on if necessary to remove obstacles to achieving his goals. Unless the circumstan­ces change, there are no signs he intends to alter his course.

 ?? Marco Ugarte Associated Press ?? MEXICAN PRESIDENT Andrés Manuel López Obrador at a rally Wednesday in the main square of Mexico City to commemorat­e his third year in office.
Marco Ugarte Associated Press MEXICAN PRESIDENT Andrés Manuel López Obrador at a rally Wednesday in the main square of Mexico City to commemorat­e his third year in office.

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