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Last updateFri, 03 May 2024 10am

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Tough new penalties for illegal guns

The Mexican government has issued a stark warning to foreign nationals thinking of bringing a weapon into the country by passing a reform that will see unlicensed gun owners receiving hefty fines and sentences of between 3 to 10 years in prison. 

The crackdown on the private ownership of weapons is designed to reduce the black market in guns, which has fueled the drug-war violence that has risen in Mexico since 2007. 

A recent high-profile case brought Mexico’s strict gun laws into light, when U.S. reserve marine Andrew Tahmooressi was held for seven months in Tijuana on weapons charges. Several guns and hundreds of rounds of ammunition were found in Tahmooressi’s vehicle, although the marine insisted he had crossed the border by mistake, not to sell the weapons. His mother, Jill, campaigned on his behalf and several Republican politicians publicly called for his release. Mexican authorities dropped the charges against him on October 31 last year. 


Mexico pays for positive image in new Bond film

According to some news sources, Mexican officials asked the makers of new James Bond film “Spectre” to make some major script changes in exchange for giving US$14 million in tax cuts to Sony Pictures and MGM Studios. Leaked Sony e-mails suggest the original script included an attempt to murder the Mexico City mayor, but the Mexican government asked for this to be changed. In addition, they wanted a “known Mexican actress” to play one of the Bond girls, while forbidding the writers from including a Mexican villain.

Briefly: Mexico back in top 10

Mexico has jumped five places in the “World Tourism Rankings” to reclaim its place in the top ten.  The World Tourism Organization, which compiles the annual list of the most popular destinations, has confirmed that Mexico closed the year with almost 30 million visitors. This places Mexico above its closest competitors Thailand, Hong Kong and Austria.

 

Briefly: Electricity costs fall

According to the Comision Federal de Electricidad (CFE) website, over the last year electricity costs for industrial users have fallen by 25.7 percent, while the decrease for domestic customers on the higher consumption DAC rate was down 7.5 percent.