U.S. newspaper publishes false information about Mexico

 Tiempo Latino  Community News   January 2, 2025 2 Minutes

By Pablo Bello

Grand Rapids, MI (tiempolatin.com).- The president of Mexico denounced in her morning conference on January 2 that the U.S. newspaper The New York Times published a story with false information about the production of fentanyl in Sinaloa.

According to the report by The New York Times, two individuals supposedly show how to make the synthetic drug known as fentanyl, however a Mexican government expert said that the production of fentanyl gives off lethal gases, which would have caused the “cooks” to faint.

To “cook” fentanyl, special suits are needed, the production of fentanyl gives off lethal gases and a special ventilation system is needed, said one of the experts who appeared at the morning conference of the president of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum.

In the report by The New York Times, images are seen of two people covering their faces, while making fentanyl, one of them with a mask and the other with a balaclava, so Mexican authorities consider it ridiculous that covering their nose and mouth with a cloth can prevent poisoning with the gases that the process gives off to “cook the drug.

The background of the report aims to hit the Mexican government in its fight against drugs with crude montages like Televisa, a Mexican television network that is dedicated to making crude montages of alleged arrests of drug traffickers in Mexico.

The set-ups began with Genaro García Luna, former Secretary of Public Security of Mexico during the six-year term of Felipe Calderón, García Luna is serving a sentence of more than 30 years for drug trafficking in a penitentiary in the United States.

What is the background of the alleged report of The New York Times? Is it part of a series of coups against the Mexican government by the U.S. government? Now that Trump wants to invade Mexico because he wants to declare the cartels as terrorist organizations?

Why didn’t the “Times” publish this kind of reporting on Mexico before? When mass homicides of people were the daily bread during Felipe Calderón’s six-year term.

The comments section of the “Times” is closed and the reporter, Natalie Kitroeff, responsible for the report, has not answered questions about it.

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