Latest News

Sheinbaum under pressure over megaprojects after Mexico train derailment

Mexico's president Claudia Sheinbaum deferred Tuesday questions about the?record of a passenger?train that derailed at the weekend, killing thirteen people and injuring another 98. This was the latest of several accidents that put pressure on the?government? to improve the safety on flagship projects.

Opposition lawmakers have demanded an investigation after questioning the conductor, who survived.

Sheinbaum told her Tuesday regular press conference that the prosecutor's office had already interviewed several people, including the operator. They will need to report on what happens next.

This is the third train crash this year in Mexico. Two derailments have occurred on the new tourist-oriented Mayan Train on the Yucatan Peninsula. In both accidents, no one was injured.

Mexico's military operates the Mayan Train as well as the Interoceanic Train, both of which derailed on the Sunday. This has led to some questioning its role in delivering safety to flagship infrastructure projects.

Gustavo Flores Macias is the dean of University of Maryland School of Public Policy. He said that the government should pay close attention to the safety record of the railroad and take great measures to find out the cause of this derailment.

According to?local media outlets, the crash occurred as the train was rounding a curve. The crash occurred on the Interoceanic Railway of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec - a narrow strip of land that connects the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico.

The railway is part of the Interoceanic Corridor project, launched by Sheinbaum’s mentor and predecessor, former president Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador in 2023, to create an alternative to Panama Canal.

The project was also accused of a lack of oversight, corruption and possible conflicts of interest.

In a report for 2020, the federal audit office of Mexico reported irregularities, including an overpayment of materials, in four Interoceanic Train contracts.

Local media outlets reported after the crash that Lopez Obrador’s sons’ associates could have benefitted from government contracts related to major infrastructure projects. This includes the Interoceanic Train.

Lopez Obrador denied the allegations, calling them political motivated.

The opposition lawmakers demanded an independent investigation of the accident. Alejandro Moreno of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) urged the government not to allow any projects to be undertaken that are linked to former President's sons or their business partners.

Senator Mario Vazquez, of the National Action Party (PAN), called the derailment a "criminal neglect."

Antonio Ocaranza is a Mexican political consultant who believes that the accident could undermine Sheinbaum’s infrastructure plan.

"The discussion around this accident could lead to a wider and more damaging conversation regarding other projects," Ocaranza stated, pointing out the Mayan Train as well as the Olmeca Refinery, two megaprojects that have ballooning budgets.

He said that if accidents became more frequent, and their causes were deemed to be unreliable then there would be an increased level of public scrutiny as well as a greater cost for the government. (Reporting and editing by Emily Green, Rosalba o'Brien and Raul Cortes)

(source: Reuters)