WORLD NEWS

Mexico forest faces fire, armed men, squatters

Apr 26, 2012, 1:30 AM

Associated Press

MEXICO CITY (AP) – Mexico’s largest big-city forest park has been devastated by a fire that officials say was set by squatters seeking to take over land and worsened by the presence of armed gangs trying to scare off firefighters.

The fire at the Bosque de la Primavera, “Forest of Springtime,” on the edge of the western city of Guadalajara, has consumed 18,500 acres, (7,500 hectares), or about one-quarter of the preserve, officials said Wednesday.

The fire, which began over the weekend, has sent plumes of smoke and ash into Mexico’s second-largest city, forcing dozens of schools to close. It is the latest chapter in a larger battle in Mexico to save public forests from development, logging, pollution and fires fueled by droughts.

“It was started in a clandestine dump near a squatters’ camp where, every year, the inhabitants start fires, clearly deliberately, to take over park land,” said Alvaro Garcia Chavez, the chief firefighting official for Jalisco state.

Hernando Rodolfo Guerrero, the federal attorney general for environmental protection, said Tuesday there was evidence the fire was intentionally set and promised to bring those responsible to justice.

Garcia Chavez said authorities had to extinguish 14 fires in the last year in the same area.

Environment Secretary Juan Elvira Quesada said later the fire had been completely contained and 70 percent extinguished by late Wednesday, but expressed fears that fire has become the new tool of land-hungry developers in Mexico.

Elvira Quesada said the Guadalajara blaze was the third suspicious fire following the same pattern at Mexican parks in less than a year.

This weekend’s blaze got out of control because of the accumulation of leaves and branches on the forest floor, but once controlled on Sunday, it sprang up again on several fronts, something that he said “did not follow the natural pattern of a forest fire.”

Something similar happened at a forest reserve in the neighboring state of Michoacan in 2011 and at a park outside of the Caribbean resort of Cancun earlier this year.

“The similarity is that, once it was controlled, the fires started up again at several points,” Elvira Quesada said. “Somebody has an interest in keeping these fires going, somebody has an interest in doing away with natural areas … to open up land for development.”

He said real estate developers in Guadalajara have been trying to build on the edges of the park and he pledged to file environmental restrictions on land titles to prevent any new construction permits or zoning changes for properties within the park.

Garcia Chavez also said two firefighting teams encountered armed gangs in the woods over the weekend and were forced to temporarily withdraw. They later returned under police guard.

“People with (assault) rifles blocked their path. they didn’t say anything; they just made the brigades turn back,” he said.

Drug traffickers have set up clandestine labs to turn out synthetic drugs such as methamphetamines around the forest in the past, “taking advantage of the reserve’s protected status to carry out criminal activities,” Garcia Chavez said.

In 2010, three inspectors for Mexico’s federal Environment Department headed into the wooded mountains west of Mexico City to investigate a pollution complaint. Their tortured bodies were found the next day, and authorities say they were killed after they apparently stumbled onto a drug lab.

Elvira Quesada said the Mexican army had joined in efforts to aid and protect firefighters and help coordinate aerial water drops. He said “we need to increase protection for the reserves,” but noted, “the army cannot be in woods every day to guard them.”

In many parts of Mexico, illegal loggers have joined or formed violent, well-armed organized crime groups.

Earlier this month, gunmen wielding automatic rifles killed eight residents of the Indian town of Cheran in neighboring Michoacan state when the townspeople went into the hills to check reports of illegal logging.

Residents of Cheran are demanding more protection against illegal loggers, who they say have the backing of La Familia drug cartel.

(Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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Mexico forest faces fire, armed men, squatters