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Mexico
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Mexico

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Monte Alban (white mountain), the ancient Zapotec capital, 9 km/6 mi west of Oaxaca, Mexico. Building began in c.500 BC, and it became the centre of the Zapotec people and culture of Oaxaca until c.750 AD when it suffered a sudden decline and the people moved down into the surrounding valleys.
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The 1704 km/1,060 mi long Highway 1 in Baja California, Mexico, leads from Tijuana on the USA border down the west coast to Cabo San Lucas. It passes through the Baja Desert, an arid region of mountains and dry salt lakes.
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Land's End, a rocky peninsula at Cabo San Lucas, Baja California South in Mexico. The area is popular for tourism and sport fishing.
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A train in northern Mexico. Mexico has a wide variety of transportation systems. While some farmers still carry their goods to market on their heads or backs, all the major cities are connected by highways and railways, such as this one in northern Mexico.
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A rodeo in Mexico. Rodeos are popular in both the USA and Mexico. Bull riding is one of the rough stock events, the others being bareback bronco riding and saddle bronco riding. A bull riding contestant tries to remain mounted for at least eight seconds.
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The Zócalo is Mexico City's main plaza. It is built over the site of the old Aztec capital's main square. Many important buildings surround the square, including the National Palace, the Supreme Court of Justice, and, seen here, the huge, ornate National Cathedral.
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This scene in the American Indian village of San Juan de Chamulo, Mexico, shows a blend of new and old cultures. Clothing, textiles, and even advertising signs all show the combination of modern influences and Mexico's native Indian past.
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Miner's bridge near the city of Durango, capital of Durango state, north-central Mexico. Situated in the volcanic Sierra Madre Occidental, the state of Durango is abundant in silver, gold, sulphur, tin, mercury, antimony, and copper. One of the world's largest deposits of iron ore lies just north of the city.
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The town of Taxco, in the northern part of the state of Guerrero, south-central Mexico. A centre for silver mining since before the Spanish settled in 1528, Taxco is still the heart of silverworking in the western hemisphere. With its abundant churches and steep cobbled streets, the city is now a national monument.
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The Mayan palace at Palenque, Chiapas state, southern Mexico. Built during the late classic period around 600 under the rule of Lady K'an Ik', the palace is approximately 90 m/295 ft long and 75 m/246 ft wide. Its walls are made of plaster, with limestone carvings, stucco, and terracotta images inside. The central tower is thought to be an observatory or watchtower.
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Farmer moving cattle in Mexico. Because of northern Mexico's dry climate, livestock are generally ranched on the open range, on areas larger than 250,000 acres. Until the 1960s, most cattle were criollo cattle, descended from Spanish stock of the 16th century. They now include Herefords, as well as Brahman cattle raised in the more tropical regions of the country.
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Harvesting corn in Mexico. Agriculture employs a quarter of the workforce in Mexico. Many are subsistence farmers, working small plots of maize, beans, and squash by traditional methods. Much of the farmland in Mexico is managed under the ejido system of land tenure, in which cropland is owned communally, but worked by individuals.
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Nayarit state, on the central Pacific coast of Mexico. Nayarit's chief Pacific port, San Blas, lies south of the Grande de Santiago River and its fertile valley. Among other agricultural products, the state grows maize, sugarcane, cotton, coffee, and tobacco, and its coastal lagoons have a number of wild bird refuges.
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Fields in southern Mexico. Agriculture accounts for about one tenth of Mexico's gross domestic product (GDP). The country produces crops for both subsistence and local consumption, and for export. Crops include maize, squash, coffee, and cotton, as well as speciality crops such as henequen, used for its fibre, and maguey, from which tequila is derived.
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Church interior, Puebla, central Mexico. Although the Republic of Mexico has no official national religion, 95% of Mexicans are Roman Catholic. Located in the foothills of the Sierra Madre Oriental, the city of Puebla, capital of Puebla state, was founded by the Spanish in 1532. Most of the city's architecture, including the Cathedral of Puebla and the church of Santo Domingo, is characteristically Spanish.
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Mayan ruins in the ancient city of Palenque, Chiapas state, southern Mexico. Palenque was one of the major cities of Mayan civilisation during the late classic period, from about 600-900. Structures such as the Temple of the Inscriptions are known not only for their distinctive architectural style, but also for their carvings, bas reliefs, and hieroglyphics.
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Mountain top, Mexico. Mexico's complicated topography is a result of its position at the junction of two converging tectonic plates. Tectonic activity has caused the volcanism of the Sierra Madre Occidental and Neo-Volcanica Cordillera, as well as the folding and lifting of the plateaux and Sierra Madre Oriental. The northern part of the country is relatively dry, with sparse, desert vegetation.
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Market in front of the church of St John the Baptist in San Juan Chamula, Chiapas state, southern Mexico. San Juan Chamula, a small town outside San Cristobal, is the largest Mayan township in Chiapas. The Mayan traditions are still strong here (Tzotzil is the local language) and the worshippers at the church practise a mixture of Mayan and Catholic customs.
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Pátzcuaro, Michoacán state, west-central Mexico. This small, Spanish colonial town is located in an extremely active volcanic region near the central Pacific coast of Mexico, just south of Lake Pátzcuaro. The region was originally inhabited by the Purepecha Indians, many of whom still live in and around Pátzcuaro. The remains of Tzintzuntzan, the capital of the Purepecha empire, are located a few miles away.
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Pyramid of the Sun, Teotihuacán, Mexico. This 66 m/216 ft high pyramid made of coarse red volcanic rock was built by the Teotihuacán civilization at the beginning of the first millennium. Located 50 km/31 mi north of Mexico City, Teotihuacán (‘City of the Gods’) was the largest city in the New World prior to Spanish colonization.
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The Pacific port of Mazatlán, Sinaloa state, north-central Mexico. Known as the ‘Pearl of the Pacific,’ Mexico's largest Pacific port is also a popular resort. The city lies on a peninsula overlooking Atlas Bay on the Gulf of California. In addition to tourism, the area supports abundant fishing, and serves as the major link between Baja California and mainland Mexico.
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Prickly pear plant, southern Mexico. The name refers to the edible fruit of some species of cactus, which are an important food source in many tropical and subtropical areas. The prickly pear is grown as a forage crop, as well as for its fruit, and its seeds are used to produce oil. The water-storing flat stems (particularly of spineless varieties) are also used to feed stock during times of severe drought.
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Cacti in southern Mexico. Cacti belong to the New World Cactaceae family and are specially adapted to living in arid conditions.
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Colossal stone head, near Altamirano in the state of Guerrero, Mexico.
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Tule tree, Oaxaca, Mexico. These massive trees can live up to 2,000 years. Of the eight tule trees in this locality, the one known as El Arbol del Tule (pictured) is the oldest and largest, with a circumference of about 54 m/177 ft. The tule trees are a unique natural monument; however, the lack of subterranean water and the increasing urbanization of the area seriously threatens their future.

Country in the North American continent, bounded north by the USA, east by the Gulf of Mexico, southeast by Belize and Guatemala, and southwest and west by the Pacific Ocean; population (2000 est) 13,083,400 It is the northernmost country in Latin America.

Government

Mexico is a federal republic of 31 states and a federal district, based in Mexico City. The constitution dates from 1917 and is broadly based on the US model. Legislative power rests with a two-chamber national congress of senate, chamber of deputies, and directly-elected president. The senate has a six-year term and the deputies serve for three years. The president, who is head of state and government, is directly elected for a non-renewable six-year term and chooses and presides over a cabinet. The senate has 128 members, each state and the federal district being represented by four senators. Three of these are elected by majority election and the fourth by proportional representation based on each party's national share of the vote. The chamber has 500 members: 300 representing single-member constituencies and 200 elected by proportional representation so as to give due weight to minority parties. Members of congress are elected by universal suffrage. Each state has an elected governor and chamber of deputies, elected for a six-year term.

History

The first humans probably reached Mexico from the north some time after 14,000 years ago. Some of the earliest evidence of human occupation in Mexico has been found at Tlapacoya, and comprises a series of hunting camps with clipped tools and animal bones. At the end of the last ice age (around 8000 BC) hunting became more intensive with an advanced stone-tool inventory based on the Clovis and leaf spear points also found elsewhere in North America. Large game, such as mammoth, mastodon and horse, were hunted to extinction by about 7000 BC.

After around 7000 BC economies became more generalized and there is evidence of intensive plant collecting and incipient cultivation of avocados, squash, chilli peppers, and amaranth. The greatest agricultural achievements were the domestication of corn (maize) and three kinds of bean between 5000 and 3000 BC, forming a diet so complete in proteins that scarcely any meat was consumed. The only domestic animal was the turkey.

The Preclassic period

The Formative or Preclassic period of Mexican civilization (c. 2000 BC-c. AD 250) developed on this sound agricultural basis, and irrigation was widely used. Pottery had appeared in around 2450 BC on the Pacific coast, and small ritualistic figurines featured in certain houses in the villages. By 1500 BC ceremonial architecture was constructed in Oaxaca and on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico.

The Gulf coast was the centre of the first great culture, the Olmec (c. 1200-400 BC). This was based on the temple cities of San Lorenzo and La Venta, which comprised platforms, plazas, and huge sculptured heads of basalt. La Venta was planned along the axis of a ceremonial routeway with a pyramid as its focus. Olmec art was based on the mythology of the jungle, and it is suggested that the later gods of Mesoamerica, including such Aztec gods as Quetzalcoatl (the feathered serpent) and Tlaloc (the rain god), had their origins with the Olmec. The Olmec developed hieroglyphic writing and a calendar based on detailed astronomical observation. Trade with the highlands and Central America provided the Olmec with minerals, stones, and other resources.

The Classic period

By the early centuries AD the cultural pivot of Mexico shifted to the highlands, and particularly to the ceremonial cities of Monte Albán - one of the most important centres of the Zapotecs - and Teotihuacán. However, in the Yucatán Peninsula, the great Maya civilization also flourished throughout the Classic period (c. AD 250-900). In this period art, architecture, metalwork, and science reached high levels of sophistication.

Teotihuacán was the supreme religious centre, a vast city laid out on a planned grid in the Valley of Mexico. It had a large complex of pyramids and palaces at its centre, decorated with friezes and frescoes, and suburbs of merchants, craftsmen, and foreigners. The city was a great political and economic force, establishing an empire over much of south Mexico and having trade links and embassies in the great Mayan cities of the Yucatán (see Maya). Trade was in luxury goods - obsidian, jade, feathers, gold - as well as foodstuffs. At its peak in around AD 450-650, Teotihuacán had a population of some 200,000, making it the largest city in the world at that time. Teotihuacán collapsed in AD 750 for reasons that are not entirely understood, although hundreds of years later was revived as a religious centre by the Aztecs. The Classic period ended around AD 900 with the collapse of other great Mesoamerican cities.

The Postclassic period

In the Postclassic period (AD 900-1250) the Mixtec kingdom (capital Cholula) spread across south Mexico, and overran the wealthy Zapotec state in Oaxaca, seizing their capital, Monte Albán. Evidence of conquest there has been excavated to reveal the tomb of a Mixtec lord with rich grave goods, including amber, jade, coral and jet beads, and the bones of many servants. Mixtec art and influence was spread beyond their territory by trade.

In the north was the great Toltec kingdom, based in the city of Tula, northeast of Mexico City. Tula was an impressive urban centre covering 5 sq km/2 sq mi, with carved monoliths depicting gods and soldiers erected on top of the main decorated pyramid. Mythology tells of a struggle between two gods: Quetzalcoatl (the feathered serpent), representing the traditional peaceful priesthood, and Tezcatlipoca (smoking mirror), whose followers were warlike. The followers of Quetzalcoatl were expelled and fled ultimately to the Yucatán, where they built the city of Chichén Itzá. Following the collapse of the Toltecs in the 12th century, their territories were taken over by the Aztecs and the Maya.

The Aztecs and the Spanish conquest

The Aztecs moved south into the Valley of Mexico in the 12th century, and in around 1325 started to build their great capital of Tenochtitlán. They came to dominate the surrounding tribes, creating a large empire in central Mexico.

Aztec civilization collapsed within two years of the coming of the Spanish conquistadores under Hernán Cortés in 1519. The last Aztec king, Montezuma II, was killed in 1520, and, with the assistance of the peoples who had been subjugated by the Aztecs, Cortés captured Tenochtitlán in 1521. The indigenous population was reduced from 21 million in 1519 to 1 million by 1607, with many deaths from Old World diseases to which they had no resistance.

Spanish colonial rule and independence

In 1535 Mexico became the viceroyalty of New Spain, and was governed by a viceroy and council for nearly 300 years. Colonial rule became increasingly oppressive, and the struggle for independence began in 1810 when Miguel Hidalgo launched a war for independence. A confused and prolonged war of independence culminated in 1821, when a conservative faction in Mexico declared the country's independence from an innovating liberal government in Spain. One of the conservative military leaders, Agustín de Iturbide, made himself emperor in 1822, establishing the short-lived Mexican Empire of 1822-23.

Civil wars and war with the USA

Iturbide's enforced abdication precipitated 50 years of conflict and civil war between liberals demanding the abolition of military, clerical, and guild privileges and conservatives defending them. Dominating this period was the dictator Antonio López de Santa Anna. Political instability and economic backwardness exposed Mexico to the intervention of the USA, which annexed Texas in 1835. This brought about the Mexican War 1846-48, in the course of which Mexico suffered further losses to the USA, including New Mexico and California, in return for a negligible indemnity. Santa Anna was overthrown in 1855 by Benito Juárez, whose liberal reforms included many anticlerical measures.

Habsburg rule

In 1861, enticed by the offer of 30% of the proceeds, France planned to intervene in the recovery of 79 million francs owed to a Swiss banker by former Mexican president Miguel Miramón, who had been overthrown and exiled by Juárez in 1860. Seeking to regain power, in 1862 Miramón appealed to Empress Eugénie, consort of Napoleon III, saying that steps must be taken against Juárez and his ‘anti-Christian’ policies.

Eugénie proposed Maximilian, the brother of Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria, as monarch of Mexico. Napoleon III agreed, since the plan suited his colonial ambitions, and in 1864 Maximilian accepted the crown offered him by conservative opponents of Juárez. Juárez and his supporters continued to fight against this new branch of the Habsburg empire, and in 1867 the monarchy collapsed and Maximilian was executed.

Díaz's capitalist dictatorship

Juarez returned to the presidency (1867-72), and attempted unsuccessfully to turn the impoverished indigenous peoples into prosperous small farmers, but he was unable to bring stability to Mexico. Only the ruthless opportunism of Porfirio Díaz - who was dictator of Mexico 1877-80 and 1884-1911 - made political stability and economic expansion possible. However, his handling of the economy made him deeply unpopular, and only a small landowning and industrialist class benefited from his programme.

The Mexican Revolution

The gap between rich and poor widened, and the result of festering resentments was the explosion known as the Mexican Revolution. The Revolution, which started in 1910, was precipitated by the liberal movement led by Francisco Madero, which triggered off unrest among the peasants (led by Emiliano Zapata), artisans, and the expanding urban working class. By 1911 Madero had ousted Díaz and reestablished a liberal regime, but was himself assassinated in 1913. The Revolution brought changes in land ownership, labour legislation, and reduction in the powers of the Roman Catholic Church.

Following Madero's death Victoriano Huerta seized power, but was forced to resign in 1914 by the USA, where it was widely believed that he had pro-German sympathies. The same was also suspected of Francisco ‘Pancho’ Villa (1877-1923), who established a revolutionary government in the north of Mexico. In 1915 Venustiano Carranza established a regime more acceptable to the USA than that of Huerta, and in 1916 Carranza gave the US army permission to pursue Villa into Mexico after a raid across the US border. US forces withdrew early in 1917, having failed to kill Villa. Relations with the USA remained poor following the interception by British Naval Intelligence of a message in early 1917 from the German foreign minister Alfred Zimmermann to the German ambassador to Mexico, which suggested that Mexico ally itself with Germany and reconquer the territory lost to the USA in the 19th century. Although Mexico denied any involvement in this proposal, it helped to precipitate the USA's entry into World War I (see Zimmermann Telegram). Carranza stayed in power until his murder in 1920, which was followed by three years of civil war.

The Revolution institutionalized

After the civil war Mexico experienced gradual agricultural, political, and social reforms. In 1929 military leaders responded to economic dislocation and political instability by forming a single political party, the Mexican Revolutionary Party, which was renamed the Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI; Institutional Revolutionary Party) in 1946. The broadly based PRI has dominated Mexican politics ever since, pursuing moderate, left-of-centre policies, and carefully exploiting the revolutionary myth.

The Revolution had clearly lost its impetus until 1934, when the new president, Lázaro Cárdenas, confronted by a wave of discontent among the peasants and urban workers, announced a drastic reform programme, including measures for oil nationalization, land redistribution, and industrial expansion. In 1938 all foreign-owned oil wells were nationalized, but compensation was not agreed until 1941. During the Spanish Civil War Mexico exported considerable amounts of arms and ammunition to the Spanish Republican government.

Mexico in World War II

The government of Manuel Avila Camacho (president 1940-46) realized the danger to Mexico implicit in the aggressive designs of the Axis powers, and readily responded to the various proposals made by the USA in 1941 for closer cooperation and the settlement of outstanding differences. The murder in Mexico in 1940 of Leon Trotsky, who had been granted asylum some years previously, involved the government in difficulties with the communists, who were assumed to be involved in the assassination. In June 1942 Mexico formally declared war on the Axis powers as a response to Axis sinking of Mexican ships, and a squadron of the Mexican air force fought in the Pacific theatre in 1945.

Mexico in the post-war decades

None of the successors of Cardenas maintained the speed of social change that he instigated in the 1930s, although economic expansion from 1945 to the 1970s was dramatic. However, prosperity was confined to a small upper class and an expanding urban middle class, while conditions amongst the underprivileged groups generally failed to improve. Resentments exploded in a wave of peasant, trade-union, and student unrest in the 1960s, which was ruthlessly repressed, and large sections of the population remained alienated.

President Luis Echeverria, on assuming office in 1970, emphasized the uniqueness of the Mexican Revolution and promised a nationalistic capitalism, a tolerance of limited opposition, and a degree of sympathy towards the reforms instituted by the democratically elected Marxist president of Chile, Salvador Allende. In practice, however, the only opposition party to be permitted to flourish was the extreme right-wing National Action Party (PAN). Mexico nevertheless continued to present a democratic face to the world, and in 1974 broke off diplomatic relations with the Spanish government of Gen Franco because of the undemocratic manner in which Basque rebels were treated.

Economic problems

From the 1970s the popularity of the PRI was damaged by the country's poor economic performance and soaring international debts. However, despite criticisms from vested-interest groups such as the trade unions and the church, the PRI scored a clear win in the 1985 elections. The government's problems increased later that year when an earthquake in Mexico City caused thousands of deaths and made hundreds of thousands homeless, and in 1986 the government was forced to sign an agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

The PRI under challenge

The PRI faced its strongest challenge in the 1988 elections. However, despite claims of fraud, the PRI candidate, Carlos Salinas de Gortari, was declared president by the electoral college. During his term, around 250 political opposition activists were killed.

Salinas led campaigns against corrupt trade unions and drug traffickers, and worked closely with the US administration of President George H W Bush to negotiate debt reductions. In April 1992 public outrage followed a gas sewer-line explosion in Mexico's second-largest city, Guadalajara, in which 194 died and 1,400 were injured. In the July 1992 state-governor elections, the PRI suffered its second defeat in 63 years in Chihuahua state, losing to a PAN candidate. In November 1993 the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with the USA and Canada was ratified by the Mexican senate.

The Zapatista rebellion and political violence

An uprising in the southeastern state of Chiapas by a newly formed rebel group, the Zapatista National Liberation Army (Ejército Zapatista Liberación National; EZLN), in January 1994 was harshly put down by government troops. The EZLN opposed the recent NAFTA agreement, which they claimed would benefit only the better-off members of society, and demanded political reform and redistribution of land. The government offered a unilateral cease-fire and awarded the rebels political recognition as the Zapatista National Liberation Front (Frente Zapatista Liberación National; FZLN), and a peace accord was signed in March 1994.

In March 1994 Donaldo Colosio Murrieta, the PRI presidential candidate, was assassinated. He was replaced by Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León, who went on to win the August 1994 presidential elections. The following month the PRI secretary general, José Francisco Ruiz Massieu, was assassinated. Subsequent investigations into his killing suggested a conspiracy involving senior members of the PRI and a Mexican drug cartel, and in March 1995 the former president, Carlos Salinas, went into exile after his brother Raul was charged in connection with the murder. Meanwhile, allegations of electoral fraud in state-governor elections in Chiapas had led the EZLN to swear in a rival candidate to the official PRI winner.

The currency crisis of 1994-95

Share prices plunged in December 1994, when, contrary to earlier assurances, the government devalued Mexico's currency, the peso, allowing it to float freely on international markets. By January 1995 the peso had lost a third of its value, forcing President Zedillo to announce an austerity programme, to which the USA and the international community responded by authorizing loans worth nearly $50 billion. Zedillo also signed an electoral-reform pact, which included an agreement to rerun elections in Chiapas and one other state. At the end of 1994, Mexico's trade deficit was $28 billion.

Accord with the Zapatistas

In November 1995, government and EZLN representatives reached an agreement providing for greater autonomy for the indigenous Mayan people of Chiapas. EZLN and government representatives signed the first of six peace accords in February 1996 recognizing the right of American Indians to adopt traditional forms of government within their communities and to have adequate representation in the national parliament. However, violent attacks against the government by the new leftist Popular Revolutionary Army (EPR) increased.

The 1997 elections

In July 1997 the PRI suffered dramatic setbacks in city, state, and parliamentary elections at the hands of both the left-wing and conservative opposition. The party lost Mexico City for the first time to the social democrats, and two of the six state governorships at stake to the conservative National Action Party. The PRI retained control of the upper house but won only 36% of the nationwide vote for the 500-seat lower house.

Ethnic unrest

Paramilitary gunmen killed 45 American Indians and wounded 11 others in an attack on a village in the Chiapas state of Mexico in late December 1997. Many of the victims were women and children. Thousands of Tzotzil American Indians fled their villages for the northern Chiapas highlands or were evacuated to Polho, a village populated mainly by Zapatista sympathizers. International outrage over the massacre put pressure on president Zedillo to investigate the paramilitary groups believed to be behind the massacre. As the result, the governor of Chiapas resigned in January 1998. In March 1998 the government announced that the lapsed peace accord with the Zapatista rebels would be reactivated and that a bill would be introduced to ensure indigenous rights. However, talks between the government and the rebels broke down in December 1998.

Trade agreement

In June 2000, Mexico signed a free-trade agreement with El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras, to eliminate duties on 80% of their exports and 65% of Mexico's.

2000 elections

After 71 years, the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) lost power in Mexico despite a recovering economy, which grew by 7% in 1999. In July 2000 Vicente Fox, the candidate of the conservative National Action Party (PAN), won the country's presidential election by an unexpectedly wide margin. He promised national unity, job creation, and to attack government corruption. In concurrent legislative elections, the PRI lost control of both houses of congress and the mayoralty of Mexico City.

Fox's cabinet included business people, left-wing academics, but few politicians. In December 2000, in his first actions as president, Fox sent a bill on indigenous rights to Congress, to allow the 10 million-strong Indian communities to govern themselves by traditional customs and to have some control over their natural resources, as a step towards trying to settle the Zapatist rebellion in the southeastern state of Chiapas and withdrew soldiers from the region. The leader of the Zapatista guerrillas, Subcomandante Marcos, agreed to restart peace talks on condition that the president order the evacuation of seven army bases, free all Zapatista prisoners held in federal jails since the 1994 uprising, and sign an Indian Bill of Rights to safeguard the area's marginalized Mayan tribes from exploitation. In January 2001, the government closed four bases in the Chiapas region. In May 2001, Congress approved the bill, but the Zapatistas pledged to continue their rebellion.

In December 2001, Congress approved tax rises worth about 1.2% of GDP, but rejected long-standing proposals from President Fox to levy value-added tax (VAT) on food and medicine.

Drugs cartel leader arrested

In March 2002, army special forces arrested Benjamin Arellano Félix, the head of the Tijuana cocaine cartel. The most powerful drug gang in Mexico, it accounted for an estimated 40% of all cocaine shipments to the USA.

North American security agreement

In March 2005, in response to the threat of global terrorism, Mexico signed, with the USA and Canda, a Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America. It was intended to complement NAFTA and to promote cooperation and information sharing among the three countries.

Narrow electoral victory for PAN

The PRI polled badly in the 2006 elections to the Chamber of Deputies, finishing in third place behind PAN and the left-wing Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD). The presidential elections resulted in a narrow victory for Felipe Calderón, from PAN, with 36.4% of the vote against 35.3% received by Andrés Manuel López Obrador of the PRD. López Obrador disputed the result and tried, initially, to set up an ‘alternative government’.

Mexico

City and seat of Audrain County, in northeastenn Missouri; population (2000) 11,300. Mexico lies on the South Fork of the Salt River, 45 km/28 mi northeast of Columbia.

Mexico was founded in 1836, and grew with the arrival of the railway in 1858. Since around 1900, when clay deposits were discovered beneath the city and nearby, it has been a centre of the fire-clay industry, with refractories and brick factories. Horsebreeding is a long-established occupation here, and the city is a commercial centre for trade in livestock, wheat, and soybeans. Mexico is the site of the Missouri Military Academy (founded 1889).



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