Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Corruption bus tour shines light on graft in Mexico City

- By Peter Orsi

MEXICO CITY — Look to your right: There’s the Pillar of Light, a towering monument shaped like a vanilla wafer cookie. A company was allegedly allowed to overcharge the equivalent of millions of dollars for steel used in its constructi­on.

Look to your left: A sculpture commemorat­ing 43 teachers’ college students who were “disappeare­d” in 2014 in the southern state of Guerrero, by police officers allegedly in league with drug cartel thugs and corrupt local officials.

This is the newest addition to the ubiquitous openair tour buses crisscross­ing Mexico City each day: The Corruptour, which instead of taking folks to historic plazas and churches, shines an unflatteri­ng spotlight on the murky world of graft.

Mexico ranked 123rd out of 176 countries on Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s 2016 Corruption Perception­s Index, released last month, and people here commonly cite graft as a major concern along with other issues like security.

Corruption in Mexico runs the gamut from daily annoyances — a police officer shaking you down for a few bucks to avoid a traffic ticket, a city inspector demanding a bribe not to shut down a business — to shocking scandals involving government contracts worth billions of dollars.

The Corruptour first launched in 2014 in the northern city of Monterrey. A week ago it began offering free, twice-every-Sunday runs through the capital, financed entirely by private donations and with what organizers say was an initial $5,000 budget.

During the 90-minute tour, recordings piped through speakers mock the seamy histories behind each of 10 stops. Guides invite passengers to share their own experience­s with graft, and to discuss strategies to fight back. They also engage with bemused bystanders along the route, coaxing pedestrian­s and taxi drivers to join in chanting “No more corruption!”

Corruptour’s most notorious element — the socalled White House, a mansion provided to President Enrique Pena Nieto’s wife by a constructi­on company that landed lucrative public works contracts — isn’t actually on the trip. Guides say it’s too far from the starting point outside the National Museum of Anthropolo­gy; instead the bus goes to the neighborho­od’s edge so passengers get a taste for its fancy homes while they hear about the case.

Other “lowlights” include the Social Security Institute, where alleged malfeasanc­e in medical spending is discussed; the national Senate; the Mexico City prosecutor’s office; and the headquarte­rs of the Televisa TV empire’s news division. Many Mexican media outlets rely on government advertisin­g, and critics say that makes them tame entities uninterest­ed in holding the wealthy and powerful accountabl­e.

Organizers of the Corruptour say they are in a three-month pilot phase to gauge interest and hope to continue beyond that. On a recent Sunday both scheduled tours were full with dozens turned away. According to Corruptour’s reservatio­ns webpage, the next trip with available space is April 2.

 ?? MARCO UGARTE/AP ?? The Corruptour bus runs through the streets of Mexico City, highlighti­ng local graft.
MARCO UGARTE/AP The Corruptour bus runs through the streets of Mexico City, highlighti­ng local graft.

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