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Monday, January 20, 2020

Five Reasons To Live In Oaxaca, Mexico

Mexico

Five reasons to live in Oaxaca de Juárez, Mexico

Living costs are relatively low in the capital of Oaxaca state, which has lively culinary and art scenes
By Persis Love
Nestled in a valley at the foothills of the dusky Sierra Juárez, the capital of Oaxaca state attracts expats with its lively cultural output, affordable and relaxed pace of life, and direct flights to the US.
Global connections
Oaxaca de Juárez’s historic centre, with its cobbled streets and well-preserved colonial architecture, and nearby archeological site Monte Alban are protected world heritage sites. Buildings of note include the Church of Santo Domingo de Guzmán with its attached monastery now home to a museum about local history and culture.
Today, the city’s global profile is growing and the number of international passengers arriving in Oaxaca airport increased by 51.4 per cent in the year to October 2019. Direct flights from Oaxaca to US cities including Los Angeles, Dallas and Houston are also drawing expats to settle in the city.
The ruins of the Zapotec city of Monte Alban in Oaxaca
Economic pull
The cost of living is favourable for those living off dollars, euros or sterling: the price of daily goods is lower than in the US and Europe, with groceries costing more than 70 per cent less than in New York, according to the comparison site Numbeo.
Local agent John Harvey Williams, of Real Estate Oaxaca, says about 80 per cent of property in the upmarket neighbourhoods of Centro, Barrio de Xochimilco, Reforma, San Felipe del Agua and Barrio de Jalatlaco is bought by foreign buyers, mostly from the US. Around half of purchases are for a primary home.
Williams says a two-bedroom apartment in the city centre costs around US$100,000, while a four or five-bedroom house with a garden is around US$700,000. However, he says the city’s popularity is increasing and he expects prices to rise by at least 10 per cent in 2020. Prices in Oaxaca state grew by 7.1 per cent year on year in the first nine months of 2019, compared with 8.9 per cent in Mexico as a whole.
The Sierra Madre del Sur mountains surround Oaxaca
Creative hub
The city’s thriving contemporary art scene overlaps with its tradition of intricate artisanry in the form of textiles, ceramics and alebrijes (sculptures of imaginary creatures). A network of printmaking studios such as Espacio Zapata and Burro Press attracts artists from across the world, with a constant stream of exhibitions and workshops.
There are numerous public arts spaces and museums including Instituto de Artes Gráficas de Oaxaca (IAGO), a graphic arts institute, which was founded by the late acclaimed artist Francisco Toledo. It has an extensive library of art books, film screenings and exhibits by contemporary Oaxacan artists. The city also hosts an annual international film festival, Oaxaca FilmFest, and is the stage for literary and musical events.
A courtyard in the historic centre of Oaxaca
Culinary capital
The birthplace of mole, the traditional Mexican sauce with variations made from different peppers, nuts and chocolate, Oaxaca de Juárez is a centre for contemporary fine dining. Origen restaurant is run by Rodolfo Castellanos, the winner of TV series Top Chef Mexico in 2016, while Criollo is a modern take on traditional Oaxacan food with dishes such as plantain tamales in black mole.
Criollo restaurant offers contemporary reinterpretations of traditional Oaxacan cuisine
Wildflower walks
Weekend hiking trips are possible in the mountain ranges to the north and south of the city. The Sierra Juárez, 60km to the north of central Oaxaca, is rich in flora and inspired Oliver Sacks’ Oaxaca Journal.
A collection of villages known as the Pueblos Mancomunados, including Benito Juárez and Latuvi, have established an eco-tourism network with cabins, guides and mountain bikes available to hire, which make navigating the area easy.
Early morning in the village of Cuajimoloyas, in the Pueblos Mancomunados
Looking for a home in Mexico? Check out the FT’s Property Listings
Photographs: Dreamstime; Alamy; Araceli Paz

Thursday, January 2, 2020

Was Carlos Ghosn Rescued From Japan By A Private Security Company?


    The other story that caught my eye was the allegation that Carlos Ghosn used an elite private security firm to rescue him from Japan. I have already outlined the security in place around his apartment. What I failed to mention two days ago was that I'm sure that all sorts of listening devices were installed to monitor any sort of conversations that he had with whoever.
     A number of different countries have private security firms. The quality of firms and their personnel ranges from elite and brilliant former intelligence officers and top former special operations soldiers down to rowdy thugs who barely made it through their tour in the military. To make a long story short, these firms are employed to do work that is extremely-dangerous or so dirty that governments do not want to risk civilian and military personnel in such operations. These are operations, that if they fail, governments can claim that they had nothing to do with it.
      The alleged extraction of Ghosn from Japan, is quite simply, like breaking a prisoner out of a maximum-security prison. If the operatives had failed to extract Ghosn, they would be looking at prison sentences between 4-10 years for attempted escape. If some Japanese security personnel had been injured or killed, the prison sentences would go up or they would be facing the gallows in Japan.
       Very few private security firms would take such an illegal assignment. If they did, they would charge a huge premium of up to $30 million US. I doubt that Ghosn had that sort of "spare cash" sitting around. Most of his assets were impaired by various legal actions.
        Any firm undertaking such an assignment would face an additional huge obstacle. A number of countries including the US spend a fortune on signal intelligence intercepts. Agencies like the US National Security Agency and their Australian, British and Israeli counterparts are constantly monitoring the airwaves for suspicious messages and phone calls. Israel even has the capability to "crack" encrypted phone, email, and WhatsApp messages. One mistake in a phone call, email, or messenger text would have blown this plan wide open. The Japanese authorities would have been alerted. If the private security company was based in the US or had contracts with US government agencies, they would be subject to civil and criminal prosecution in US District Court for mounting such an operation.