Mexico's president returns after catching coronavirus

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Mexican President Andrs Manuel Lpez Obrador gives his daily morning press conference following a two-week absence after he tested positive for coronavirus, at the presidential palace, Palacio Nacional, in Mexico City, Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

MEXICO CITY – Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador returned to his daily morning news conferences Monday following a two-week absence after catching coronavirus, but vowed not to wear a mask or require Mexicans to use them.

“There is no authoritarianism in Mexico ... everything is voluntary, liberty is the most important thing,” López Obrador said. “It is each person's own decision.”

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López Obrador revealed he received experimental treatments, which he described only as an “antiviral” medication and an anti-inflammatory drug.

The president also revealed that he twice tested negative in late January in rapid tests that are widely used in Mexico, before a more thorough test — apparently PCR — came back positive the same day.

“I came through well, healthy,” López Obrador said, noting he had been doing breathing exercises as well. “We are back on our feet again, in fighting style.”

Many residents of Mexico City have been unable to find beds at Mexico City's overcrowded hospitals, and have been forced to treat sick relatives at home. López Obrador was treated at the apartment where he lives in the city's National Palace.

Despite Mexico's dearth of vaccines — the country hasn't received new shipments in weeks, and is down to its last 55,000 doses — López Obrador repeated his faith that the country will get enough vaccines from Pfizer, Russia, China and India to vaccinate all Mexicans over 60 by the end of March.

That would imply the daunting task of giving about 15 million people at least one dose in just a month and a half.

López Obrador has held his daily news conferences almost every working day for more than two years, and this was the longest he has been absent from them.

Interior Secretary Olga Sánchez Cordero took over during his absence, and the conferences were quite different for a while. Sánchez Cordero sought out daily newspaper reporters for questions; the president prefers taking questions from sympathetic web sites. Nor did Sánchez Cordero criticize the newspaper reporters, as López Obrador frequently does.

True to style, López Obrador came back swinging, saying his opponents “have not stopped politicizing the issue of COVID,” and claiming that “the plague of corruption” has done much more damage to Mexico than the novel coronavirus.