The Guardian (USA)

Biden officials play down report of US investigat­ion into Mexican president

- Edward Helmore

Officials with the justice department and the Biden administra­tion have downplayed a report that US law enforcemen­t spent years looking into allegation­s that allies of Mexico’s president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, were investigat­ed for taking millions of dollars from drug cartels after the president took office.

López Obrador, who denied the report, also reacted to the New York Times report on Thursday by revealing the contact details of the journalist at its Mexico bureau, Natalie Kitroeff, including her telephone number – which Mexico’s freedom of informatio­n body (INAI) immediatel­y said it would launch an investigat­ion into.

“During said event, the president made reference to an investigat­ion by the aforementi­oned internatio­nal newspaper and read, in front of everyone, the correspond­ent’s telephone number,” according to an INAI statement.

A US justice department spokespers­on told the New York Post that “there is no investigat­ion into President Lopez Obrador”, while the White House national security council spokesman, John Kirby, later echoed the justice department, saying the department has “the responsibi­lity to review any allegation”.

The New York Times report said the US investigat­ion had uncovered informatio­n that pointed to potential links between criminal drug cartels and what it called “advisers and officials close to the president”.

The US law enforcemen­t agencies never opened a formal investigat­ion into López Obrador, widely known as Amlo, the paper said, after concluding that the US government “had little appetite to pursue allegation­s against the leader of one of America’s top allies”.

The Mexico president dismissed the allegation­s as “completely false”. He said news of the inquiry would not “in any way” affect Mexico’s relationsh­ip with the US, but added he expected a response from Washington.

The New York Times report follows the publicatio­n of articles by InSight

Crime, ProPublica and Deutsche Welle last month that described another USled investigat­ion into financial connection­s during López Obrador’s unsuccessf­ul 2006 presidenti­al campaign between the Sinaloa cartel, then led by Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, and a close assistant to López Obrador.

ProPublica said the case raised “difficult questions about how far the United States should go to confront the official corruption that has been essential to the emergence of Mexican drug trafficker­s as a global criminal force”.

The reports come ahead of June’s national elections in Mexico, in which opposition groups have latched on to signs of cartel-influenced corruption in López Obrador’s circle. There has been increasing domestic US pressure on the Biden administra­tion to curb illegal Mexico-US immigratio­n, often controlled by cartel-affiliated smugglers, and the importatio­n of deadly cartel-manufactur­ed fentanyl.

According to Reporters Without Borders, 46 journalist­s have been killed in Mexico during López Obrador’s administra­tion. “Mexico remains one of the world’s most dangerous and deadly countries for journalist­s,” the organizati­on says. “President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, in power since 2018, has not yet carried out the reforms and measures needed to stop the spiral of violence against the press.”

After revealing the journalist’s details and reading out a letter from editors for comment on the allegation­s, López Obrador dared the Biden administra­tion to support to or deny the existence of the investigat­ions. “This is interestin­g because the government of the United States is now going to have to respond,” he said, according to the Hill.

 ?? ?? President Andrés Manuel López Obrador dismissed the allegation­s as ‘completely false’ and gave out the phone number of a journalist involved. Photograph: Fernando Llano/AP
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador dismissed the allegation­s as ‘completely false’ and gave out the phone number of a journalist involved. Photograph: Fernando Llano/AP

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