Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Acapulco fishermen rescued off coast of Oaxaca after three weeks at sea

Three fishermen from Acapulco who were lost at sea are now safe and sound in Puerto Ángel, Oaxaca, thanks to the help of fellow fishermen who found them three weeks after they left their home and about 190 miles off course.

“Thanks go to God for putting us in the path of these people so that they would find us,” the fishermen said in a video message on social media. “By the grace of God we are alive. We appreciate the solidarity from the fishermen of Oaxaca.”

The trio was found just a few days after the navy had called off the search, which had prompted family and friends to blockade streets for hours in Acapulco’s tourist district on Monday to pressure authorities to continue searching.

When the crew set out from Las Hamacas Beach on January 12, they had planned a five-day fishing trip. But by January 15, their motor had died. Out at sea, their phones did not work, and they had no way to alert anyone.

The navy began looking for the missing vessel on January 20 after family members raised concerns that it was several days late returning.

The boat on which Acapulco fishermen drifted for three weeks.
The boat on which Acapulco fishermen drifted for three weeks.

According to Oaxaca Civil Protection officials, all three were weak from hunger and dehydration but were in good health. Their boat was towed to shore and will be taken back to Guererro by land, said Antonio Rodríguez, son of one of the rescued fishermen.

All three were expected to be transported home Tuesday, he said.

“The truth is that it’s a miracle,” said Rodríguez of the rescue. “A fisherman does not travel that far. At most they go out 80 miles.”

Sources: Milenio (sp), Excélsior (sp), La Jornada (sp), El Sol de Acapulco (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.

Members of the army kill 6 civilians in Tamaulipas in apparent error

1
According to the Ministry of National Defense, military personnel were traveling in three vehicles on the Ciudad Mante-Tampico highway when a white truck "attempted to ram" one of the army vehicles.
Carlos Olson San Vicente,

Chihuahua is first Mexican state to ban inclusive language in schools

5
The motives of the reform's author are both linguistic (eliminating "foreign formations") and political ("no more ideologized language or woke confusions”).
Justice statue

I used to practice ‘amparo’ law. Here’s why the proposed reform is worrying

0
In Mexican law, an amparo trial defends citizens who have had their rights infringed upon by the government. President Sheinbaum recently introduced a reform that would reduce its scope.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity