America Suspends Avocado Importation From Mexico

February 14, 2022
America Suspends Avocado Importation From Mexico
America Suspends Avocado Importation From Mexico

The US government has suspended all imports of Mexican avocados indefinitely after a U.S. plant safety inspector in Mexico received a threat from the locals.

Mexico did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the ban, which hits an industry with almost $3 billion in annual exports. However, avocados for this year’s Super Bowl had already been exported in the weeks prior to the event.

Join our WhatsApp Channel

It was much later that Mexico City acknowledged their fate, saying, the surprise suspension was confirmed late Saturday on the eve of the Super Bowl, which was the biggest sales opportunity of the year for Mexican avocado growers.

According to the Mexico’s Agriculture Department in a statement:  “U.S. health authorities made the decision after one of their officials, who was carrying out inspections in Uruapan, Michoacan, Mexico, received a threatening message on his official cellphone.”

“The import ban came on the day that the Mexican avocado growers and packers association unveiled its Super Bowl ad for this year. Mexican exporters have taken out the pricey ads for almost a decade in a bid to associate guacamole as a Super Bowl tradition,” the department wrote.

A behind-the-scene report has it that the ban must have come because the United States also grows avocados and would do anything to ensure   exported avocados especially from Mexico do not carry diseases that could hurt U.S. crops.

Avocado exports are the latest victim of the drug cartel turf battles and extortion of avocado growers in the western state of Michoacan, the only state in Mexico fully authorized to export to the U.S. market.

Recall, it was only in 1997 that the U.S. lifted a ban on Mexican avocados that had been in place since 1914 to prevent a range of weevils, scabs and pests from entering U.S. orchards.

Importantly, after a previous incident in 2019, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s had warned about the possible consequences of attacking or threatening their inspectors.

But, in August 2019, a U.S. Department of Agriculture team of inspectors was “directly threatened” in Mexico. While the agency did not specify what happened exactly, local authorities said a gang robbed the truck which the inspectors were traveling in at gunpoint.

The USDA wrote in a letter at the time that, “For future situations that result in a security breach, or demonstrate an imminent physical threat to the well-being of APHIS personnel, we will immediately suspend program activities.”

The avocado ban would be the latest threat to Mexico’s export trade, stemming from the government’s inability to rein in illegal activities.

+ posts
Previous Story

Ibom Air Ramp Coordinator Nathan Weds Ecobank Staff Chisom

WAEC Honours Outstanding Ghanaian, Nigerian Candidates
Next Story

WAEC Releases 2021 WASSCE Results For Private Candidates

Featured Stories

Latest from News

President Tinubu

Tinubu Nominates New Oil Regulators as Ahmed, Komolafe Resigns

President Tinubu has nominated new chief executives for Nigeria’s petroleum regulatory agencies following the resignation of the heads of the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) and the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), developments that come amid intense controversy

Musa Calls Time on Illustrious Super Eagles Career

Nigeria’s most-capped footballer, Ahmed Musa, has formally announced his retirement from international football, bringing the curtain down on a distinguished career that spanned more than a decade in the national colours. Musa confirmed the decision in a statement shared via his official

Rep Raises Alarm Over Mismatched Gazetted Tax Reform Laws

A member of the House of Representatives, Hon. Abdulsammad Dasuki (PDP, Sokoto), has raised serious concerns that the tax reform laws gazetted for public use differ from the versions passed by the National Assembly, calling for urgent legislative scrutiny. Speaking during Wednesday’s

Trump Escalates Tensions, Orders Naval Blockade on Venezuela

Following Venezuela’s condemnation of President Donald Trump’s earlier remarks on the country’s oil, land, and mineral wealth, the U.S. President has intensified the standoff, announcing a “total and complete blockade” against the South American nation, Prime Business Africa reports. In a statement
Previous Story

Ibom Air Ramp Coordinator Nathan Weds Ecobank Staff Chisom

WAEC Honours Outstanding Ghanaian, Nigerian Candidates
Next Story

WAEC Releases 2021 WASSCE Results For Private Candidates

Don't Miss

Buhari Suspends National Census, Incoming Govt To Determine New Date

2023 Census: Ad hoc Staff Protest Non-payment Of Allowances

No fewer than 467 ad-hoc staff of the National Population
seeds

Yemi At The Seeds Conference

Tertiary institutions have been urged to prioritize research as a