Friday, February 6, 2026

School hazing ceremony suspected in death of Durango student

A 19-year-old student died early this morning in Durango after a suspected hazing at a rural teacher training college.

Ronaldo Mujica Morales was admitted to hospital on Monday in the state capital and remained in serious condition until his death.

One report said the induction ceremony at the Guadalupe J. Aguilera normal school entailed eating whole eggs including the shell, drinking alcoholic beverages, doing extreme exercises and eating spicy foods over the course of seven days. Students were also deprived of sleep during that time.

The director of the school, located in Canatlán, has been suspended while the incident is under investigation.

The director of a local hospital told a reporter that eight aspiring teachers had been admitted to the hospital over a five-day period with injuries incurred during the week-long hazing.

It is the second hazing incident in three weeks at a teacher training college.

One student died and two others were left with kidney damage after a hazing at the Mactumactzá college in Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas, July 21.

The director of the school is in custody on homicide charges.

Source: La Crónica (sp), La Prensa (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Tequila Mayor Diego Rivera Navarro handcuffed with Mexican federal agents

Mayor of Tequila, Jalisco, arrested for extortion and alleged cartel ties

0
The mayor has been accused of extorting tequila maker José Cuervo and illegally turning the National Tequila Museum into his personal residence.
mexican team ready to board Ukrainian vessel

Mexico teams up with Ukraine for its first Antarctic research campaign

0
Mexico is a strong supporter of Ukraine's right to defend its homeland, and Ukraine has had a strong presence in Antarctic scientific exploration. Now they're working together.
Jeffrey Epstein

The Epstein files’ Mexico connection: Former US ambassador responds to allegations

1
The most recent tranche of Epstein file documents include the name of a former US ambassador to Mexico, as well as several former Mexican presidents.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity