'Don't panic,' Mexico president says as fuel shortages spiral

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AFP Mexico City
Last Updated : Jan 10 2019 | 12:40 AM IST

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador urged Mexicans Wednesday not to panic as gasoline shortages spread across the country, caused by a crackdown on fuel theft that risks costing him support.

The president says the shortages were triggered by his administration's decision to temporarily close some of state oil company Pemex's pipelines -- part of his bid to wipe out rampant fuel theft that cost the country an estimated USD 3 billion in 2017.

But for a politician who campaigned on energy nationalism and a promise of more Mexican refineries to produce more cheap gasoline, the shortages have turned into a public relations debacle.

At his daily press conference, Lopez Obrador -- an anti-establishment leftist who took office last month after a landslide election win -- vowed to keep up his fight against fuel theft and urged Mexicans not to make the shortages worse with panic buying.

"We're going to resist the pressure. I'm asking people to help us. How can you support us? By acting prudently and calmly, without panicking, without listening to alarmist and biased information," he said.

"There is enough gasoline in the country...We are in the process of returning to normal deliveries."
"He's trying to catch the thieves, but we're the ones who get screwed over."
"An inexperienced and understaffed energy team combined with Lopez Obrador's centralized decision-making style, especially in politically sensitive issues such as gasoline, leads to inefficient and unplanned reactions that cause bigger problems."

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First Published: Jan 10 2019 | 12:40 AM IST

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