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Last updated on February 13, 2012 at 12:15 EST

Mexico ramps up airport, oil security amid protests

August 4, 2006

By Anahi Rama

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Security has been increased at
Mexico City’s airport so leftists challenging a tight
presidential election cannot block flights as part of their
crippling protests, the government said on Friday.

Extra safeguards have also been put in place at power
plants, crude refineries and other installations of state-owned
oil monopoly Pemex.

“Security has been stepped up,” government spokesman Ruben
Aguilar said. “Mexico City airport will always be in
operation.”

Claiming vote fraud, supporters of Andres Manuel Lopez
Obrador have seized a long stretch of Mexico City’s main
Reforma boulevard and the huge Zocalo square to demand a
recount of the July 2 election that the leftist narrowly lost.

The peaceful blockade has caused traffic chaos and forced
hundreds of businesses to shut down. Lopez Obrador has vowed to
ramp up the protests and prevent Calderon from taking power if
the country’s electoral court does not order a vote-by-vote
recount.

Mexico City’s airport is considered a possible target, as
is the oil industry. Lopez Obrador is from the oil state of
Tabasco and staged blockades and marches there to protest a
governor’s race he lost in 1994.

Mexico City’s airport is the busiest in the country, with
hundreds of daily international and domestic flights.

The state-owned oil industry generates one-third of
government revenues and is a symbol of national sovereignty.

“Security has been reinforced, as a preventive measure, to
safeguard the operations of installations,” Energy Minister
Fernando Canales told reporters.

Ruling party conservative candidate Felipe Calderon, who
won the presidential race by 244,000 votes, says he won
cleanly, although he will accept a recount if the electoral
court orders one.

Calderon’s team admits the standoff is creating political
instability.

“We cannot ignore there are a lot of Mexicans worried about
what is going on, and others convinced by anything Lopez
Obrador says,” Juan Camilo Mourino, a senior Calderon aide,
told Reuters on Thursday. “It’s definitely a problem.”

He said, however, that Lopez Obrador’s protest campaign
could backfire. While the leftist has been able to draw
hundreds of thousands of people onto the streets to back his
cause, many Mexico City residents are sick of the chaos.

Lawyer Miriam Caballero said blocking the airport would
show how desperate Lopez Obrador is becoming in his demands for
a recount. “I think he is a man who doesn’t care about ruining
the country for his own ambition.”

European Union observers say they found no evidence of
fraud, but Lopez Obrador contends vote returns were tampered
with. The electoral court has until August 31 to rule on the
matter, and they must declare a president-elect by September 6.

(Additional reporting by Adriana Barrera and Catherine
Bremer)


Source: reuters