The Guardian (USA)

Mexico’s Maya Train pulls in ahead of schedule but with a host of questions

- Thomas Graham in Mexico City

Engineers said it would take 15 years to build the Maya Train – the flagship infrastruc­ture project of Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel López Obrador. But on Friday the first section is due to open after just five.

The government has framed the £16bn tourist and cargo train, which it hopes will kickstart the economy of the south-east, as the express delivery of social justice to one of the country’s poorest regions.

Critics say the project was forced through by use of the military and national security decrees, without proper environmen­tal impact studies or consultati­ons of those who live there.

“The president has an idea of developmen­t that is from the mid-20th century,” said Ana Esther Ceceña, an economist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico. “There is no way to build a train like this without bulldozing the local ways of life.”

But despite protests and court orders to stop constructi­on, the project proved unstoppabl­e. The first section of the track will run from Campeche to Cancún. The government claims the whole circuit will be operationa­l by the end of February 2024.

It will loop through five states that contain many of Mexico’s archaeolog­ical treasures – not just from the Mayans, but also from civilisati­ons that preceded them, such as the Olmec.

The government has argued the train will lure more tourists and investment to the region. The UN’s developmen­t office estimated it would lift 1.1 million people out of poverty by 2030.

Communitie­s in the region are split: some welcome the investment, while others resent the imposition and question its benefits.

Although the government carried out consultati­ons in the affected states in 2019, with the project receiving an almost 90% approval rating, the UN’s human rights office in Mexico said that they did not meet internatio­nal standards.

It cited low turnout, the lack of translatio­n of materials into Indigenous languages, and the partial or even false informatio­n about the possible negative impacts of the project.

“This is a project that was designed from a desk in Mexico City,” said Ceceña.

In the rush to complete the railway before López Obrador’s term ends in 2024, constructi­on began before studies of its environmen­tal impact were completed.

The studies that have since been published are limited, considerin­g only the impact of the railways themselves, and neither the urbanisati­on nor the great number of tourists they will bring.

NGOs have flagged the potential environmen­tal impacts, starting with how the tracks will dice up the Maya Forest – the second largest rainforest in Latin America.

“These [railway lines] are artificial borders for species like jaguars,” said Aarón Hernández Siller, from Cemda, an environmen­tal NGO. “And they are so wide – more than 60 metres – that they are a border for certain seeds and spores, too.”

Another impact involves the system of subterrane­an caves and rivers that runs just beneath the surface of much of the peninsula and provides drinking water to its 5 million inhabitant­s.

The system is already under strain. Last year, Conagua, the state water agency, predicted the Yucatán peninsula was 15 years from a water crisis – before taking the train into account.

Then there’s the risk of collapse and contaminat­ion given that the ground is mostly made of porous limestone, and structural­ly fragile. “We’re talking about an undergroun­d that’s like a Swiss cheese,” said Hernández Siller. “Putting trains of hundreds if not thousands of tons on top – it could collapse the caves underneath.”

“In China, they spent 10 years doing studies before building a train in a zone like this,” added Hernández Siller. “Here, it was express. How can we be sure there won’t be an accident?”

The government has responded to criticisms by altering the route and building some sections on elevated platforms.

But it has also forced the project through by decree and militarisa­tion, ignoring legal rulings and limiting the public disclosure of informatio­n.

“They’ve stigmatise­d anyone that has gone against them,” said Hernández Siller. “I’ve been on protests when we’ve suddenly found ourselves facing armed soldiers.”

In addition to patrolling, protecting and overseeing part of the train’s constructi­on, the armed forces have now been tasked with operating it.

This reflects a trend during the administra­tion of López Obrador, which has seen the portfolio of assets under military control swell to include civilian airports, maritime ports, the national customs agency and another new train line. Hotels, nature reserves and a passenger airline are due to follow.

“This militarisa­tion is the biggest contradict­ion of this supposedly progressiv­e government,” said Ivet Reyes Maturano, from Articulaci­ón Yucatán, an associatio­n of academics.

The Maya Train is just one part of a plan to transform the south-east of

Mexico, along with a new airport in Tulum, the Dos Bocas oil refinery in Tabasco, and the interocean­ic corridor, a port and train system that aims to compete with the Panama Canal in shuttling cargo between the Pacific and the Atlantic.

“[The Maya Train] itself isn’t just a passenger train,” said Hernández Siller. “It’s a cargo train. It’s part of a broader strategy for the region, to turn it into a logistical park.

“This is a vision that the people in the region were not told about, and have not agreed to,” added Hernández Siller. “They were told this is about social justice, when really it is all about economic ends – and ones that have little to do with them.”

All of this public investment has turbocharg­ed GDP growth in certain states – but it remains to be seen whether that growth will endure once the projects are finished, and how the economic benefits will be distribute­d.

“It’s good that they have invested all these resources in the south-east,” said Ceceña. “But if only they had done it in a way that respected the region: its history, its customs, its ways of life.”

 ?? Photograph: José Luis González/Reuters ?? Workers work on the constructi­on of a section of the Maya Train in Cancún, in the Mexican state of Quintana Roo on Tuesday.
Photograph: José Luis González/Reuters Workers work on the constructi­on of a section of the Maya Train in Cancún, in the Mexican state of Quintana Roo on Tuesday.
 ?? González/Reuters ?? Builders work on the constructi­on of an access crossing to the Cancún terminal of the Maya Train. Photograph: José Luis
González/Reuters Builders work on the constructi­on of an access crossing to the Cancún terminal of the Maya Train. Photograph: José Luis

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