Los hechos se registraron en la colonia Colinas de Chapala. Foto: Twitter.
Redacción.- Elementos de la Fiscalía del Estado de Jalisco (FE) quienes realizaban una investigación en el municipio de Chapala durante la tarde de este martes, lograron la detención de tres personas quienes presuntamente forman parte de un grupo de la delincuencia organizada que opera en la entidad.
De acuerdo con el reporte, al estar realizando actos relacionados con una carpeta de investigación por la desaparición de la adolescente Julissa Esmeralda Oliveros, en la colonia Colinas de Chapala, personal de la Fiscalía Especial en Personas Desaparecidas (FEPD) avistaron la presencia de varios sujetos los cuales portaban armas de fuego.
Al notar la presencia de los elementos, los sujetos intentaron evadirlos; sin embargo fueron detenidos por el personal de la FEPD.
Además de los detenidos, el personal de la Fiscalía de Jalisco aseguró armas de fuego, chalecos balísticos los cuales portaban siglas de un grupo de la delincuencia organizada, una bolsa con estupefacientes, así como un vehículo automotor.
La FE informó que tanto los detenidos como lo asegurado serán puestos a disposición del agente del Ministerio Público de la Fiscalía General de la República quienes definirán su situación jurídica en el término constitucional.
Abandoned wooden modules in the Municipal Market of Jocotepec each costing $7,500 pesos, Photo: Héctor Ruiz.
Héctor Ruiz Mejía (Jocotepec).- They threw in the towel. The street merchants who were relocated to the upper floor of the Municipal Market of Jocotepec decided to abandon their stalls after months of low sales.
Vendors interviewed by Laguna said that after a little more than three months of «going through an odyssey» to receive some solution or support from the City Hall to cushion the difficult economic situation they suffered after being relocated, they have opted to move to other places to sell their merchandise.
«I actually had to look for a job. This is over. We tried and fought, but we were left with no response and no support. So I too, like everyone else, am leaving,» commented one of the last vendors.
Semanario Laguna toured the second floor of the building last Tuesday, April 26th , at noon and found that, despite the more than ten million pesos invested in a rehabilitation project that would «give life» to the commercial space, it was empty.
Products such as cooked nopales, cambray onions, chopped and bagged vegetables, avocados and radishes, to mention a few, which not only energized the streets and sidewalks of the town, but were the livelihood of more than 30 families selling on Morelos Street on the outskirts of the market, are no longer for sale.
In addition to looking for another livelihood, some of the affected vendors opted to move to other parts of the town, and even decided to «try their luck» in the neighboring towns of Ajijic and Chapala to continue doing the only thing they know: selling products on the sidewalk, an activity they were no longer allowed to do in Jocotepec.
«It is a shame that they are leaving, I always used to buy my nopalitos and vegetables here with the lady, but when they moved her, it was difficult for my mother and me to go up there; and now we will have to look for someone else,» commented one of the consumers.
Of the ten wooden vendor stands installed on the upper floor of the market to relocate the street merchants, costing approximately $7,500 pesos each, only two are now being used.
City Hall has remained tight-lipped about the situation. After several meetings, negotiations and even a demonstration, officials are aware of the monetary difficulties faced by the affected merchants from the beginning of the relocation, but has not issued any statement on the matter.
Translated by Patrick O’Heffernan
Irregular entrance to a property located in La Canacinta, on Lirios Street. Photo: Archive.
Editor.- At least four cases of alleged attempts of property dispossession have surfaced in recent months in the municipality of Chapala, thanks to legitimate owners and citizens who pointed out irregularities in the paperwork of the properties and in the actions of the authorities and former officials involved.
The last case occurred last Wednesday, April 27, in the area of La Canacinta, west of Ajijic, on Lirios Street, where José Contreras Ortega has owned a property for approximately 55 years, which is now in court because people claiming to own the property have appeared.
Although there has been no resolution of the litigation, the supposed new owners, with the help of lawyers, workers and municipal police -who witnesses said that they were mocking and arrogant-, forced their way onto the property containing some of Contreras Ortega’s belongings and livestock.
Both José Contreras Ortega and his relatives said that, being an elderly man and unable to read and write, these characters took advantage of him, denying that anyone other than him could read the documents they had, and only giving his family a notice of a hearing to occur.

Machine used for the attempted eviction in La Floresta, in Ajijic. Photo: Facebook.
«They wouldn’t show us anything. If it was real, they would have a judge’s verdict, eviction order or something. They just gave us a notice for a hearing that is scheduled for May. The lawyer is the one who has been handling the case, as my father does not know how to read or write, he just gives him the corresponding payments to do things,» said one of Don José’s daughters. Some other witnesses pointed out that this lawyer has been linked to irregular legal processes.
In the end, the Contreras family opted to take legal action the following day, presenting their evidence and the notification they never received, claiming they thought that the trial was still ongoing. As a result of this situation, Contreras Ortega had to move their cattle to a property that was loaned to them next to the one where they were originally located.
On Saturday, April 23, several people affected by the attempted dispossession met to tell their cases to the media. Both the Ibon family from Ajijic and the López family from Santa Cruz de la Soledad, along with a member of the Indigenous Community of San Antonio Tlayacapan, presented their cases, linking the Covarrubias brothers to the dispossession of Ajijic and Santa Cruz, and mentioning several former presidents involved in the Chapala ejido, which has sought to appropriate the communal land of San Antonio.
In this meeting, the names of both municipal authorities and ex-officials, as well as institutions such as the Pension Institute of the State of Jalisco (IPEJAL), were mentioned, which they described as «bribed» or «sold».
All the affected families agreed that they will publicize all the cases and all those involved, so that precautions and actions are taken against those involved.
Translated by Patrick O’Heffernan
Abandoned wooden modules in the Municipal Market of Jocotepec each costing $7,500 pesos, Photo: Héctor Ruiz.
Héctor Ruiz Mejía – Jocotepec: They threw in the towel. The street merchants who were relocated to the upper floor of the Municipal Market of Jocotepec decided to abandon their stalls after months of low sales.
Vendors interviewed by Laguna said that after a little more than three months of «going through an odyssey» to receive some solution or support from the City Hall to cushion the difficult economic situation they suffered after being relocated, they have opted to move to other places to sell their merchandise.
«I actually had to look for a job. This is over. We tried and fought, but we were left with no response and no support. So I too, like everyone else, am leaving,» commented one of the last vendors.
Semanario Laguna toured the second floor of the building last Tuesday, April 26th , at noon and found that, despite the more than ten million pesos invested in a rehabilitation project that would «give life» to the commercial space, it was empty.
Products such as cooked nopales, cambray onions, chopped and bagged vegetables, avocados and radishes, to mention a few, which not only energized the streets and sidewalks of the town, but were the livelihood of more than 30 families selling on Morelos Street on the outskirts of the market, are no longer for sale.
In addition to looking for another livelihood, some of the affected vendors opted to move to other parts of the town, and even decided to «try their luck» in the neighboring towns of Ajijic and Chapala to continue doing the only thing they know: selling products on the sidewalk, an activity they were no longer allowed to do in Jocotepec.
«It is a shame that they are leaving, I always used to buy my nopalitos and vegetables here with the lady, but when they moved her, it was difficult for my mother and me to go up there; and now we will have to look for someone else,» commented one of the consumers.
Of the ten wooden vendor stands installed on the upper floor of the market to relocate the street merchants, costing approximately $7,500 pesos each, only two are now being used.
City Hall has remained tight-lipped about the situation. After several meetings, negotiations and even a demonstration, officials are aware of the monetary difficulties faced by the affected merchants from the beginning of the relocation, but has not issued any statement on the matter.
Translated by Patrick O’Heffernan
Opening ceremony on Friday, April 22. Photo: Sofia Medeles.
Sofía Medeles-Ajijic. The first Earth Day commemoration in Ajijic which took place on April 22, 23 and 24 t was a success although participation was lower than the organizers hoped for. The three-day event consisted of a series of conferences and other activities designed to raise awareness about the need to care for the environment.
Between 150 to 200 people attended each day for a total of 500 and 600 people, mostly adults although there were also interested children.
The first day began with an opening ceremony asking permission to the elements and deities to allow the participants to respectfully carry out the programmed activities. During the closing ceremony on the last day, a tribute and offering was made to Lake Chapala.
The conference speakers included activists who work to safeguard the integrity of both the lake and the mountains, such as Manuel Villagómez Rodríguez, Luis Valdivia Ornelas, Raquel Gutiérrez Nájera and the local resident Julio Carmona. There were also music and film presentations, and tables for information and sale of ecological products.
«I think the event was effective both in the professional and academic quality of the presenters, said Noris Binet, who added that, “ I think it was very ambitious to do it in three days since it demands consistent participation by the public.”
Binet explained that, “ There were three relevant focuses of the event: that battles of this type can and have been won, that Lake Chapala urgently needs to become a Ramsar site, that a mapping of endangered and reserved areas needs to be done that clearly defines where not to buy or build, something the Expats requested I a petition. ( Lake Chapala is listed on the RAMSAR Information Service as RAMSAR as Ramsar Site no. 1973. For its extensive wetlands).
Sihara Casillas Gaeta, another of the organizers, commented that this type of event helps people to learn about the type of land in which they live, about the local aquifers, and to take stock of how corruption has contributed to the deterioration of natural water reservoirs, which helps convince people to be more vigilant.
Jane Custer, who was in charge of translations at the event, said that she was very pleased to see the Mexican and foreign communities of Ajijic together in one place acquiring knowledge to protect the Lake and the environment.
Noris stated that, in the coming years, she believes the event could improve in terms of local participation, involving neighbors and members of indigenous communities, talking about their problems related to environmental issues. She plans to produce an official document summarizing the most important points of the event to be presented to government authorities, as well as the creation of a citizen and academic observatory to monitor and denounce environmental destruction.
Translated by Patrick O’Heffernan
Sofía Medeles- Ajijic. Purse thefts have been reported in at least 17 places in Lakeside in the towns of Ajijic, San Antonio Tlayacapan, the municipal capital of Chapala and San Juan Cosalá,. The thieves have mostly targeted tourists and Expats.
One of the sites of the incidents was the Lake Chapala Society (LCS) in Ajijic, a popular gathering place for both Expats and local Mexicans. LCS executive director Luis Pacheco assured Laguna that the two mishaps were not violent, but rather accomplished by distracting the victims.
«The two thefts occurred in LCS were not violent,. The thieves – a foreign woman and two Latinos – use a practiced modus operandi. There are at least 17 public spaces and restaurants, or businesses, where robberies of this type have occurred and, in some of them, the thieves identified are the same ones who operated here,» said Luis Pacheco.
According to the LCS executive director, the modus operandi of the pickpockets is that the foreign woman approaches to talk to other tourists or Expat residents to distract them, while the other two people create a barrier and grab their possessions.
Pacheco pointed out that the person in charge of Ajijic’s office, Maximiano Macías Arceo, Chapala Security Commissioner Sergio Conzuelo Ramírez, and the municipal president, Alejandro Aguirre Curiel, are aware of the events, so they are working together to create a crime prevention campaign in the area.
This was confirmed by Macías Arceo who said that this campaign would be focused on training restaurant owners, administrators, block chiefs, etc., in the prevention of crime, and that, although there is still no date to start, it will be announced through the department of Social Communication.
Luis Pacheco said that the most important to reduce crimes is to reestablish the social fabric where neighbors will have co-responsibility and support each other to take care of themselves and educate themselves about this type of crime.
Translated by Patrick O’Heffernan
Jazmín Stengel- Chapala. The Facebook post of an alleged attempted kidnapping of a student of a language academy and the report of the disappearance of a teenage girl in Chapala, has motivated a group of local women to ask the authorities to guarantee their safety.
The women have organized themselves to collect signatures and ask the authorities for the signage of safe spaces in stores, public and private transport, free courses for self-defense and advertising on the lakeshore to make society aware of the violence to which they are exposed in their daily lives. Several measures are already active in Chapala,sbut the women say they need more.
The women also ask for counseling and protection for victims, free psychological care, a hotline for emergencies and the activation of the purple patrol of female offices.
However some of the measures they ask for have been active in Chapala since the beginning of this administration. For example, there is a purple patrol with six trained female officers that respond to public safety emergency numbers 24 hours a day. The Women’s Institute, located at 69 Niños Héroes Street in the municipality, provides free counseling and follow-up to victims.
The cases that have been reported include the April 22 Facebook post of the private language school People Bilingual Training that one of its students was grabbed by men handing out flyers at the Chapala bus station, who tried to pull her into a parked car in front of the station. The student was helped by a woman selling vegetables and managed to escape.
According to the publications and victims consulted by Laguna, many young women have been chased or stalked by men in cars.
Although one of the threats have been reported to Chapala Public Security or formal complaints filed in the Public Prosecutor’s Office about kidnapping attempts or pursuits of women, Chapala Public Security Commissioner Sergio Conzuelo Ramirez has already ordered stepped-up security strategies and increased citizen information to work on the prevention of crime against women.
Jalisco Strategic Coordinator of Public Security Ricardo Sanchez Beruben said he was not aware of any alleged attempt to kidnap women, since none of the alleged victims have formally filed a complaint.
Sanchez Beruben said that the audio messages that circulated a few days ago warning of the kidnapping of women by criminal groups have circulated in different states of Mexico since 2019.
Translated by Patrick O’Heffernan
Irregular entrance to a property located in La Canacinta, on Lirios Street. Photo: Archive.
Editor- At least four cases of alleged attempts of property dispossession have surfaced in recent months in the municipality of Chapala, thanks to legitimate owners and citizens who pointed out irregularities in the paperwork of the properties and in the actions of the authorities and former officials involved.
The last case occurred last Wednesday, April 27, in the area of La Canacinta, west of Ajijic, on Lirios Street, where José Contreras Ortega has owned a property for approximately 55 years, which is now in court because people claiming to own the property have appeared.
Although there has been no resolution of the litigation, the supposed new owners, with the help of lawyers, workers and municipal police -who witnesses said that they were mocking and arrogant-, forced their way onto the property containing some of Contreras Ortega’s belongings and livestock.
Both José Contreras Ortega and his relatives said that, being an elderly man and unable to read and write, these characters took advantage of him, denying that anyone other than him could read the documents they had, and only giving his family a notice of a hearing to occur.

Machine used for the attempted eviction in La Floresta, in Ajijic. Photo: Facebook.
«They wouldn’t show us anything. If it was real, they would have a judge’s verdict, eviction order or something. They just gave us a notice for a hearing that is scheduled for May. The lawyer is the one who has been handling the case, as my father does not know how to read or write, he just gives him the corresponding payments to do things,» said one of Don José’s daughters. Some other witnesses pointed out that this lawyer has been linked to irregular legal processes.
In the end, the Contreras family opted to take legal action the following day, presenting their evidence and the notification they never received, claiming they thought that the trial was still ongoing. As a result of this situation, Contreras Ortega had to move their cattle to a property that was loaned to them next to the one where they were originally located.
On Saturday, April 23, several people affected by the attempted dispossession met to tell their cases to the media. Both the Ibon family from Ajijic and the López family from Santa Cruz de la Soledad, along with a member of the Indigenous Community of San Antonio Tlayacapan, presented their cases, linking the Covarrubias brothers to the dispossession of Ajijic and Santa Cruz, and mentioning several former presidents involved in the Chapala ejido, which has sought to appropriate the communal land of San Antonio.
In this meeting, the names of both municipal authorities and ex-officials, as well as institutions such as the Pension Institute of the State of Jalisco (IPEJAL), were mentioned, which they described as «bribed» or «sold».
All the affected families agreed that they will publicize all the cases and all those involved, so that precautions and actions are taken against those involved.
Translated by Patrick O’Heffernan
El recrudecimiento del estiaje podría afectar en el abasto de agua potable de la ciudadanía. Foto: Archivo.
Redacción.- Se recrudecerá el estiaje. El Monitor de Sequía de la Comisión Nacional del Agua (Conagua), reportó que Chapala y Jocotepec se encuentran entre los 57 municipios de Jalisco que presentan un nivel de sequía “severa”.
De acuerdo con la actualización del órgano, en 113 de los 125 de Jalisco hay condiciones de sequía entre “moderada” y “severa”, por lo que la afectación por el estiaje será prácticamente generalizada en la entidad.
Junto a las dos poblaciones ribereñas mencionadas, todos los municipios que integran la Zona Metropolitana de Guadalajara (ZMG), así como Colotlán, Mezquitic, Ameca, Tala, Lagos de Moreno y Tepatitlán, son los más afectados por la situación.
La Conagua detalló que en el pasado temporal de lluvias se registró falta de precipitación en la zona de la Sierra Madre Occidental, así como temperaturas más cálidas que el promedio en la Región Centro Occidente del país. Estas causas incrementaron la sequía en Jalisco.
En contraste, son 12 las localidades clasificadas como “anormalmente secas” o sin problemas: Puerto Vallarta, Cabo Corrientes, Cihuatlán, Ayotlán, Cuautitlán de García Barragán, Degollado, Jesús María, Tolimán, Tonila, Tuxcacuesco, San Gabriel y Zapotitlán de Vadillo.
Por otro lado, el Servicio Meteorológico Nacional recordó que la temporada de huracanes iniciará el 15 de mayo en el Océano Pacífico, mientras que en el Atlántico es a partir del 1 de junio . Se proyecta que las lluvias comenzarán a regularizarse en la segunda quincena de junio, con las ondas tropicales, ciclones y el ingreso de humedad.
Con información de El Informador.
El Señor del Huaje es el Cristo más importante para el municipio de Jocotepec, pues desde su aparición hace poco más de 306 años, propició el culto de los otros dos Cristos importantes para la comunidad ribereña. Foto: Héctor Ruiz.
Héctor Ruiz Mejía.- Con la participación de más de dos mil fieles, bajo el intenso calor, se reanudó la festividad del Señor del Huaje, luego de dos años de cancelación por la pandemia.
El Cristo, con más de 306 años de historia, dio su tradicional recorrido por las calles de la cabecera de Jocotepec, donde, escoltados por la Guardia de Honor, el Mariachi Nuevo San Juan y los fieles, inundaron las calles tras su salida de la Iglesia.

El Cristo de más de media tonelada de peso, es venerado antes de ser montado y bajado para su procesión. Foto: Héctor Ruiz.

Alrededor de las cinco y media, comenzaron las maniobras para desmontar al Señor del Huaje de su base en la Iglesia y dar la tradicional procesión. Foto: Héctor Ruiz.

La Iglesia del Señor del Huaje, hasta el tope de gente, esperando a que salga el Cristo por las calles del municipio. Foto: Héctor Ruiz.

Bajo el intenso calor y la resolana, comenzó la procesión por las calles. Foto: Héctor Ruiz.

El Señor del Huaje, siendo transportado desde la parroquia hasta el carro alegórico donde se instaló para ser transportado por las calles de Jocotepec. Foto: Héctor Ruiz.

Las calles del municipio, inundadas de fieles, que seguían al Cristo. Foto: Héctor Ruiz.
© 2016. Todos los derechos reservados. Semanario de la Ribera de Chapala