Mexico's Maya train: Work halted over cave concerns

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Image source, EPA

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Activists from Greenpeace and other organisations have protested against the works

A judge in Mexico has ordered the temporary suspension of works on a stretch of the Maya train project, citing a lack of environmental permits.

The project to build a railroad in the Yucatán Peninsula is President Andrés Manuel López Obrador's flagship infrastructure programme.

But cavers warn that it threatens caverns dating back millions of years.

The judge ordered works to be halted until studies could be carried out about the works' environmental impact.

Cavers had joined forces with environmentalists to bring the case to court last month.

They argued that a change in the route of the train line linking the tourist hotspots of Cancún and Tulum, known as Section 5, would harm the jungle it will now run through and the network of caves which lies beneath it.

Image source, Getty Images

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Speleologists have warned of the damage continued work could do to underground caves

Judge Adrián Novelo said building work on this 120km (75 mile)-stretch should be suspended because "a continuation of the works (...) implies the cutting down of trees, the destruction of flora and native species, and the perforation of the ground".

Environmentalists and speleologists had warned that construction work would damage the cave system which has been created over a timespan of millions of years.

The caves are home to bats, blind cavefish and a place where jaguars come to drink.

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

The caverns are home to blind cavefish

Judge Novelo agreed that a continuation of the works would entail "a high probability of a change in the ecosystem".

A decision on whether the suspension will be made permanent is scheduled to be taken on Friday.

The $9.8bn (£7.5bn) Maya train project is aimed at building a 1,500km-long railroad linking the south-eastern Mexican states of Chiapas, Tabasco, Campeche, Yucatán and Quintana Roo.

It has been controversial from the start. President López Obrador has argued that it will provide an environmentally friendly mode of transport for locals and tourists alike, as well as boosting development and employment in the underdeveloped region.

But critics say the megaproject has been rushed and environmental concerns have been overridden.

The president has dismissed warnings by activists labelling them as "pseudo-environmentalists" and questioning their motives for opposing the project.

Despite delays and protests, the president is adamant the project will be inaugurated in December 2023.

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