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| A citizen marks his ballot during a referendum on building a "Maya Train", in Felipe Carrillo Puerto, Champoton, Campeche state, Mexico, on December 15, 2019 (AFP Photo/Lexie Harrison-Cripps) |
Mexico City (AFP) - Indigenous communities in southern Mexico voted overwhelmingly to approve President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's pet project to build a regional railroad aimed at boosting tourism and economic development, the government said Monday.
The
$6.2-billion "Maya Train" is meant to link Caribbean resorts such as
Cancun and Playa del Carmen with ancient Mayan archaeological sites such as
Palenque and Chichen Itza, passing through the impoverished interior of
southeastern Mexico along the way.
Lopez
Obrador, an anti-establishment leftist widely known as "AMLO", says
the passenger and freight railroad will kick-start economic development in the
region.
But it has
faced resistance from activists and some indigenous communities over the lack
of clarity on the environmental impact.
However,
the region's communities are overwhelmingly in favor, according to official
results from a referendum on the issue -- which was itself the subject of
criticism.
Hundreds of
indigenous villages held communal councils on the project over the weekend,
while 84 municipalities in the train's path voted in a more classic ballot-box
referendum.
"There
is a generalized consensus, unanimous, in support of building and implementing
the Maya Train program," said Adelfo Regino, head of Mexico's National
Indigenous Peoples' Institute.
"We
have 93,142 Mexicans who voted 'Yes', equivalent to 92.3 percent of the
vote," said the deputy minister for development, Diana Alvarez.
The
government acknowledged many indigenous communities also demanded attention for
more pressing issues, such as schools, health centers, roads and protection of
their environment and archaeological sites.
Lopez
Obrador said the first tender for the project would be launched in early
January.
The
president's opponents have accused him of using such referenda -- or
"people's consultations," as he calls them -- to rubber-stamp his
stance on controversial issues with no oversight by electoral authorities.
Other
decisions he has made by referendum include building a new oil refinery in his
native Tabasco state and canceling a $13-billion airport for Mexico City that
was already one-third complete and replacing it with a rival project.


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