Saturday, April 12, 2025

4 mountaineers die on Pico de Orizaba

Four people were killed in an accident on the weekend while climbing the 5,636-meter-high Pico de Orizaba volcano, Mexico’s highest peak.

Civil Protection authorities in Puebla state said Sunday that the four mountaineers fell to their death. Three of the victims were from Veracruz and one was from Puebla. Their names, ages and genders weren’t disclosed by authorities.

Pico de Orizaba in Mexico
Also known as Citlaltépetl, or Star Mountain in Náhuatl, the Pico de Orizaba is the highest peak in the country at 5,636 meters (18,491 ft) above sea level. (Wikimedia Commons)

However, the tour company Volcanes de México said on its Facebook page that the victims were Carlos Altamirano Lima, 53; José Inés Zepahua, 63; Hugo Cruz Vázquez, 19; and Humberto Kenji Muray, 58.

Altamirano, an experienced mountaineer, was the group’s guide, Volcanes de México said.

The tour company said that one of the mountaineers slipped and fell and brought his companions down with him.

The bodies of all four victims were located and taken to municipal offices in Atzitzintla, Puebla, on Monday morning, Civil Protection authorities said on social media. Photos showed rescue workers on a steep, rocky slope of the volcano.

Pico de Orizaba, also known as Citlaltépetl, straddles Puebla and Veracruz. It is the third highest mountain peak in North America after Denali (Mount McKinley) in Alaska and Mount Logan in Canada.

Fatal accidents have occurred on Pico de Orizaba previously, including one in 2018 in which three mountain climbers lost their lives.

With reports from AFP and El Financiero 

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
A snow and glacier-capped volcano with an old church in the foreground

UNAM: Mexico’s last remaining glaciers likely to disappear within 5 years

0
For years, Mexico’s glaciers have clung to existence against the odds. Now a leading researcher says their time is almost up.
Detained cartel leader Ernesto Fonseca Carillo "El Neto" in sunglasses

94-year-old Guadalajara Cartel founder ‘Don Neto’ released in Mexico

5
The "Narcos: Mexico" capo is still wanted in the U.S. for a DEA agent’s murder.
A dry river in Nuevo León, Mexico, a state at risk of having its water resources confiscated by the federal government for delivery to the U.S.

Mexico scrambles to boost US water deliveries ahead of next year’s USMCA treaty review

3
Northern states could see their water resources seized by the federal government as it strives to find water to send to the U.S.