Amid pandemic, US drinks beer, produces cars, military tech at expense of Mexican lives

June 25, 2020
Issue 
A Corona beer truck in Oaxaca, Mexico. Photo: 16:9clue

Fridges in Mexico are empty of beer because production has ceased in this industry deemed non-essential amid the COVID-19 pandemic. However, United States-owned company Constellation Brands is local orders and forcing Mexican workers to continue producing its Corona and Modelo beers for export to US consumers.

The company is just one of thousands of US-owned brands operating on the Mexican side of the border so they can plunder Mexican resources and take advantage of extremely low Mexican and migrant wages, while sending all the goods north.

Together, these companies form vast factory-scapes of cities where they hog the water and leave locals without. The operations of these companies take on an even more sinister tone in a country where deaths due to the pandemic are only continuing to increase amid poverty and insufficient healthcare.

Constellation Brands, beyond producing beer, is also using the cover of COVID-19 to continue construction of another brewery in Mexicali, near the border, according to activist Diana Arangur茅. A member of , which has spent years campaigning against the new brewery, Arangur茅 told me the company is ignoring orders from Mexican president Andr茅s Manuel L贸pez Obrador to halt construction, following a local vote against it.

The consultation process took place in March this year after years of protest by locals who argued that the brewery would use % of water reserves in the drought-stricken region. Constellation Brands had spent US$700 million on the project by March.

鈥淭wo friends went (to the site) and saw that they are drilling,鈥 Arangur茅 said. However, she noted that people working there were prohibited from talking to the public, making gathering more detailed information difficult.

鈥淎ll the companies here 鈥 do what they want with us,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like we鈥檙e a market and the politicians are saying, 鈥楥ome here, have what you like.鈥欌

Constellation Brands did not respond to my request for more information about the clandestine brewery construction. However, they have been about continuing production despite Mexico suspending non-essential services, and have made it their commitment is to US consumers. They also pulled a public relations stunt, $500,000 to the Red Cross in Mexico 鈥 peanuts compared with their in sales last year.

By April, there had already been two COVID-19 cases in the company鈥檚 brewery in Nava, but spokespeople the workers had been infected outside the factory. They didn鈥檛 support their claim with proof.

Mexico pressured to put US interests first

Last month, Obrador made the strange move of that construction, mining and the auto industry would be considered essential. The move followed weeks of pressure from the US, with Ellen Lord, US under secretary of defence for acquisition and sustainment, it was important that Mexico reopen its maquiladoras (the foreign-owned export factories) to protect the supply and production of US military contractors.

On April 30, Lord said she had already 鈥渟een positive results鈥. Military giants such as Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Honeywell and Textron on factories based in Mexico.

Car factories in the US also depend on a supply chain of parts produced in Mexico. They had been around the US in early May, so it was no coincidence that Mexico then on May 12 that the auto industry would also reopen.

Mexican workers are getting sick, dying

鈥淎ll the companies here [in Mexicali] are running,鈥 said Arangur茅. 鈥淎t the start, a lot closed and others operated clandestinely, but now they are all running. They give the workers face masks 鈥 but that isn鈥檛 sufficient.

鈥淲e (at Mexicali Resiste) have received many reports from workers about mistreatment. For example, one person had COVID-19 and the area where they worked just kept on going. Those who fight for their rights will get fired.鈥

At Clover Wireless, a phone repair subsidiary of the US corporation Clover Technologies Group, two workers of COVID-19. The company shut down for one shift, then resumed operations.

Workers testified that many factories in Mexicali were saying that they had closed and put padlocks on their front entrances, while taking workers in around the back.

In Tijuana, Margarita 脕valos, a former maquiladora worker who now campaigns for workers鈥 rights through the collective , that exploitation levels have worsened during the pandemic.

She said companies such as Parker 鈥 a US tech corporation with three factories in Tijuana 鈥 were supplying workers with one disposable face mask, telling them to wash the mask every second day and that it had to last three months.

She workers were travelling to the factories in public or company-owned buses, which often had black curtains on the windows to hide how overcrowded they were.

Baja California, home to Mexicali and Tijuana, has just 3.3 million people, but 1600 reported deaths from COVID-19 as of June 23, making it one of the most affected regions.

The real figure is likely at least ten times higher however, as health authorities in the region that many deaths have not been tested for COVID-19 and that hospitals are at their limits. They estimated 12,000 deaths for the state more than a month ago.

Mexico鈥檚 national emergency line has also that many people are dying at home and that, according to the calls they receive, the real death figures for Mexico City are about three times the official numbers.

Mexican and migrant worker lives are worth very little to US corporations. At Lear, a US auto parts company with factories in Mexico, families of workers who die from COVID-19 just US$2800 and one year鈥檚 wage, according to Izquierda Diario.

Talking to the independent journal about her fellow workers who had died at Regal Beloit, a US-owned electric motor company, Monica said, 鈥淵ou feel hysteria, fear, sadness. They were workmates that we spent time with. They started to die and to be infected in various areas (of the factory).鈥

She said workers protested and demanded paid time off, but were forced to resume working under the threat of losing their contract if they didn鈥檛. More and more workers confessed through WhatsApp groups that they had symptoms, but the company forced them to go in on crowded company transport and get permission slips for leave.

Ismael Blanco worked at the company while suffering severe COVID-19 symptoms until he collapsed. He later died, as did his wife.

Scott Brown, a Regal company executive in the US, spoke to workers in English and was translated. He them it was the US government that decided when the factory opened, not the Mexican government.

Sacrificing poor countries

The pressure from the US government and the abuse by US corporations is taking place when Mexico鈥檚 deaths from COVID-19 are still rising, hospitals are unable to function, and millions more are being sunk into poverty.

Arangur茅 got through her own ordeal with COVID-19 with support from fellow activists. But she said it felt like authorities didn鈥檛 care. 鈥淭hey told me when my oxygen level got down to 85%, they would provide me with oxygen,鈥 she said. However, a level of 88% is already quite dangerous.

鈥淧eople are dying, while being transported to hospital. There are no tests, there are no follow ups, and there鈥檚 lots of disinformation,鈥 she said.

Mexico has beds nationally, for all hospital types. That compares with beds in the US, with just over double the population. Mexico has just a ventilators, while the US has an estimated .

Mexicans also often live in smaller spaces with larger family groups and many lack any or regular access to running water.

According to a by the Institute for Research for Development with Equity (EQUIDE), the pandemic could sink 95 million people, or 76% of the population, into poverty.

About 65% of homes are already reporting a reduced income since the lockdown began. Two out of three jobs lost so far are of informal workers, meaning largely women and poorer people are being affected. A quarter of homes are already experiencing moderate to severe food insecurity.

Extreme levels of global inequality are already showing themselves in confirmed COVID-19 case numbers, which are in almost all poor countries, while dropping or stabilising in the wealthier countries. Expecting poorer countries to continue sacrificing lives, health and resources to keep the rich people鈥檚 economy going is unacceptable.

[Tamara Pearson is a long-time journalist based in Latin America and author of . Her writings can be found at her , Resistance Words.]

You need 91自拍论坛, and we need you!

91自拍论坛 is funded by contributions from readers and supporters. Help us reach our funding target.

Make a One-off Donation or choose from one of our Monthly Donation options.

Become a supporter to get the digital edition for $5 per month or the print edition for $10 per month. One-time payment options are available.

You can also call 1800 634 206 to make a donation or to become a supporter. Thank you.