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Mexico police break up underground parties to enforce Covid rules

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Police in one suburb of Mexico City are playing cat and mouse with revelers at underground parties that flout coronavirus restrictions.

On Friday, for instance, authorities in the town of Ecatepec raided the same house for the third time to break up a party with mask-less people drinking beer and dancing to a DJ. The festivities, like others held on the sly, had been advertised on social media.

"Do you know how bad the coronavirus is?" an officer asked the host of the party, as guests filed out to the street under the gaze of some 30 police, soldiers, firefighters and members of the National Guard.

As the pandemic rages around the world, Mexico is one of the hardest hit nations, with more than 117,000 dead and 1.3 million known infections. Cases are rising sharply.

It is so bad in Mexico City and the neighboring state of Mexico that on Friday the mayor suspended all non-essential activities.

And Ecatepec is one of the worst affected areas in the sprawling metropolis that is Mexico City.

Raids like Friday's have become frequent as Christmas approaches but they have been staged since the beginning of the pandemic, said Jose Isauro Bautista, the mayor of Ecatepec, who accompanied police on the raid.

He says he has broken up parties with as many as 250 people.

A Mexican police officer stands guard inside a billiard hall during a local government operation aga...
A Mexican police officer stands guard inside a billiard hall during a local government operation against illegal gatherings
ALFREDO ESTRELLA, AFP

Minutes before police arrived at the house Friday, the music suddenly stopped. But the murmur of voices made clear something was going on inside. So did the half-full beer cans being tossed out of the windows.

"Good evening, everyone must leave," the officer said as she knocked on the door.

After getting no answer, she shouted, "We are here with the Civil Guard!"

The host finally opened the door but asked the police not take pictures, and 20 guests filed out in silence.

The officer asked the host if he was aware that parties like this raise the risk of revelers going home and spreading the virus to vulnerable people like the elderly.

The host said nothing.

Before this raid, the same team busted a combination pool hall and taco restaurant that was violating a ban on alcohol sales.

"You should arrest the snitches," a woman without a mask told police. She was standing under a sign reading: "God bless this business and all of its customers."

A man swore at the local government and put down his taco to line up a billiard shot.

"We get everything," Bautista said, referring to people who say the virus does not pose that much of a risk, or that they can do whatever they want, even if it breaks coronavirus safety rules.

"We try to encourage dialogue," he said.

Police in one suburb of Mexico City are playing cat and mouse with revelers at underground parties that flout coronavirus restrictions.

On Friday, for instance, authorities in the town of Ecatepec raided the same house for the third time to break up a party with mask-less people drinking beer and dancing to a DJ. The festivities, like others held on the sly, had been advertised on social media.

“Do you know how bad the coronavirus is?” an officer asked the host of the party, as guests filed out to the street under the gaze of some 30 police, soldiers, firefighters and members of the National Guard.

As the pandemic rages around the world, Mexico is one of the hardest hit nations, with more than 117,000 dead and 1.3 million known infections. Cases are rising sharply.

It is so bad in Mexico City and the neighboring state of Mexico that on Friday the mayor suspended all non-essential activities.

And Ecatepec is one of the worst affected areas in the sprawling metropolis that is Mexico City.

Raids like Friday’s have become frequent as Christmas approaches but they have been staged since the beginning of the pandemic, said Jose Isauro Bautista, the mayor of Ecatepec, who accompanied police on the raid.

He says he has broken up parties with as many as 250 people.

A Mexican police officer stands guard inside a billiard hall during a local government operation aga...

A Mexican police officer stands guard inside a billiard hall during a local government operation against illegal gatherings
ALFREDO ESTRELLA, AFP

Minutes before police arrived at the house Friday, the music suddenly stopped. But the murmur of voices made clear something was going on inside. So did the half-full beer cans being tossed out of the windows.

“Good evening, everyone must leave,” the officer said as she knocked on the door.

After getting no answer, she shouted, “We are here with the Civil Guard!”

The host finally opened the door but asked the police not take pictures, and 20 guests filed out in silence.

The officer asked the host if he was aware that parties like this raise the risk of revelers going home and spreading the virus to vulnerable people like the elderly.

The host said nothing.

Before this raid, the same team busted a combination pool hall and taco restaurant that was violating a ban on alcohol sales.

“You should arrest the snitches,” a woman without a mask told police. She was standing under a sign reading: “God bless this business and all of its customers.”

A man swore at the local government and put down his taco to line up a billiard shot.

“We get everything,” Bautista said, referring to people who say the virus does not pose that much of a risk, or that they can do whatever they want, even if it breaks coronavirus safety rules.

“We try to encourage dialogue,” he said.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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