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A BLUE CURSE ON THE CORN: MAQUILADORA INDUSTRY MAKING CORN CRADLE RUN DRY.


[The following article by John Ross is reprinted with the permission of Noticias Aliadas in Lima, Peru. It appeared in the Aug. 26, 2002, edition of Latinamerica Press.]

In Mexico's eastern Tehuacan Valley, an altar stands where the world's first domesticated do·mes·ti·cate  
tr.v. do·mes·ti·cat·ed, do·mes·ti·cat·ing, do·mes·ti·cates
1. To cause to feel comfortable at home; make domestic.

2. To adopt or make fit for domestic use or life.

3.
a.
 corn was believed to have been rediscovered in 1964 by an Indiana Jones-style paleobotanist pa·le·o·bot·a·ny  
n.
The branch of paleontology that deals with plant fossils and ancient vegetation.



pa
. Richard McNeish carbon-dated the cave findings to between 5000 and 3500 BC.

Today, Coxcatlan, the nearby valley town, prides itself for being the "Cradle of Corn in the Americas" and commemorates McNeish's find with a giant bronze ear of corn and the entrance to town.

But McNeish's discovery carried a kind of curse. Having carted off thousands of ancient corn specimens without the government's permission, McNeish was declared persona non grata non gra·ta  
adj.
Not welcome; not approved: The aide, having been declared non grata, was expelled from the country.



[From persona non grata.]
 in Mexico, and authorities demanded that he return the cache.

McNeish shrugged off the charges and headed for Peru to rediscover the first potato and to China to find the first rice, although his findings were often questioned. More precise carbon dating carbon dating
n.
See radiocarbon dating.



carbon-date v.
 has slashed as much as 3,000 years from the age of his Coxcatlan corn.

Maize cultivation has flourished in the Tehuacan Valley for a millennium or more. After the Aztec conquest in the mid-14th century, the valley kept Tenochtitlan, the seat of the Mexican empire The Mexican Empire was the name of Mexico on two non-consecutive occasions in the 19th century when it was ruled by an Emperor. (For the Pre-Columbian empires of Mesoamerica in the territory of modern-day Mexico, see Aztec, Toltec, and Teotihuacan. , well fed. Today, however, the tortilla basket of Mexico's Altiplano altiplano (ăl'tĭplä`nō), high plateau (alt. c.12,000 ft/3,660 m) in the Andes Mts., c.65,000 sq mi (168,350 sq km), W Bolivia, extending into S Peru.  is drying up at a worrisome rate.

Maquiladoras maquiladoras (mäkē'lädō`räs), Mexican assembly plants that manufacture finished goods for export to the United States. The maquiladoras are generally owned by non-Mexican corporations.  invade valley

Mexico's ancient crop is now cursed by a handful of brand names that are household words in many countries, including The Gap, Guess, and Calvin Klein. In the Tehuacan Valley, at least 300 clothing assembly plants or maquiladoras crank out 5 million pairs of jeans a month for the US market. With 35,000 employees, of whom 80% are Nahua, Mazateca, Mixtec, or Popoloca indigenous people, the industry now dominates the valley's economy.

Laboring nine hours a day, six days a week, for take-home pay of about US$36, it takes workers a month to earn what a consumer in Los Angeles will pay for a pair of the designer jeans they sew. Jose Mendez, president of the Tehuacan Valley's Camara Nacional de la Industria del Vestido (CANAIVES), touts the area's low wages, tax-free environment, and government-subsidized infrastructure as perks that lure the jeans giants here.

Still, Mendez concedes that the health of the Tehuacan Valley's maquiladora ma·qui·la·do·ra  
n.
An assembly plant in Mexico, especially one along the border between the United States and Mexico, to which foreign materials and parts are shipped and from which the finished product is returned to the original market.
 boom is challenged by both the US economic recession and sweeter offers in Guatemala, Brazil, and China.

Industry threatens water supply

Tehuacan was once universally renowned for the purity of its water. The city's name is synonymous with commercial mineral waters sold throughout Mexico. But now the region's many springs and its deep aquifer are putting out far more of the precious liquid than gets put back in. Martin Barrios Barrios is a name of Hispanic origin. The name may refer to: Persons
  • Agustín Barrios (1885–1944), Paraguayan guitarist and composer
  • Arturo Barrios (born 1962), Mexican long-distance runner and former world record holder
, director of a nongovernmental human rights commission in the valley, says that some water sources are menaced by contamination because of the jeans boom.

With the maquiladoras guzzling up mammoth amounts of water, little is available for the valley's farmland, and the water that remains is so laced with chemicals that it often comes out blue, Barrios says. He adds that 25 laundries, half of them illegal, wash a million pairs of jeans a week, sucking up hundreds of millions of liters of scarce water, none of which is treated or recycled.

Wastewater discharged onto farmland is a witches' brew of nonbiodegradable dyes, bleaches, acids and other toxic agents used to produce stonewashed stone·wash  
tr.v. stone·washed, stone·wash·ing, stone·wash·es
To wash (garments or material, usually denim) in large industrial machines with pumice pebbles to soften and abrade the material by friction.
 and chemically aged jeans. The outflow, Barrios says, has stained the valley floor blue in places.

Feeding the insatiable US hunger for blue jeans is putting a dent in food production. Maquiladoras and shantytown shan·ty·town  
n.
A town or a section of a town consisting chiefly of shacks.


shantytown
Noun

a town of poor people living in shanties

Noun 1.
 neighborhoods of underpaid workers are gobbling up the remaining corn-producing lands. The sons and daughters of the campesinos who have tilled this land for centuries are abandoning the cornfields for the maquiladoras, and the rhythm of the agricultural year is now dictated by The Gap's inventory demands.

"Our old way of living is being erased by The Gap, Calvin Klein, and the others," says Gaston de la Luz, a farmer's son from Santa Maria Coapan. "Now only the old men work on the land. The young men go to New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 or the maquiladoras. Only the old women make and sell tortillas; their daughters all work with denim now." Even the corn is going downhill, he says.

"I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 if it's the chemicals in the water or if too much chemical fertilizer has burnt out the soil," he says. "The farmers have so little land now that they never let it rest. All I can tell you is that the yields are much smaller, the cobs are smaller, and the kernels are not as big as before."

De la Luz also frets about the threat of genetically modified corns that have contaminated contaminated,
v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material.
2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials.
3. an infective surface or object.
 maize just over the Sierra Negra in Oaxaca (see SourceMex, 2002-05-08).

Barrios, the son of Nahua farmers, sees the maquiladora curse as the opening gambit in President Vicente Fox's Plan Puebla-Panama (PPP (Point-to-Point Protocol) The most popular method for transporting IP packets over a serial link between the user and the ISP. Developed in 1994 by the IETF and superseding the SLIP protocol, PPP establishes the session between the user's computer and the ISP using ), an ambitious development plan designed to lure transnational investment to Mexico's resource-rich but impoverished and mainly indigenous south (see NotiCen, 2002-10-24). The plan will also pave the way for the transfer of the foreign-owned assembly plant industry from the US border to southern Mexico.

"This is 'Maquilatitlan,' and we're the guinea pigs," Barrios says. "Fox wants to see all the campesinos working in the maquiladoras. We won't grow our own corn anymore, but there will be plenty of the transgenic stuff available in the gringo-owned supermarkets."

"It's like some god has put a curse on our maize," Gaston adds. "Sometimes I hear the elders blame it on McNeish. Since he took away the first corn, our maize has lost its power."
COPYRIGHT 2002 Latin American Data Base/Latin American Institute
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

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Publication:SourceMex Economic News & Analysis on Mexico
Geographic Code:1MEX
Date:Nov 6, 2002
Words:954
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