Home Blog Page 16

Mexico blocks bank accounts of former Sinaloa Governor Rocha Moya and other officials

3
Former Governor of Sinaloa Rubén Rocha Moya
Rocha and nine other defendants are facing charges by the United States of conspiracy with the Sinaloa Cartel. (Galo Cañas/Cuartoscuro)

The federal government’s Financial Intelligence Unit (UIF) has blocked the bank accounts of Sinaloa Governor Rubén Rocha Moya and nine other current and former officials accused of drug trafficking by U.S. prosecutors in an indictment that was unsealed on April 29.

President Claudia Sheinbaum said on Monday that the UIF acted after Mexican banks took “a series of measures” related to the accounts of Rocha and the nine other officials accused of colluding with the Sinaloa Cartel. Mexican media first reported last week that the defendants’ accounts had been frozen.

On Monday, Sheinbaum said that “since there is an arrest warrant in the United States for 10 individuals, banks here, because they have relationships with banks there, take a series of measures, and the UIF automatically takes preventive action.”

Asked whether the UIF was investigating Rocha, who is currently on leave as governor, Sheinbaum said it was not.

She said that the UIF would issue a statement explaining that its freezing of the accounts of the people accused of drug trafficking in the United States was the result of “automatic mechanisms” that are triggered in such cases.

In its statement, the UIF said that additions to the “List of Blocked Persons” were of a “strictly preventive nature” and due to “reports issued by institutions of the Mexican financial system.”

“These reports … stemmed from allegations made by U.S. authorities and disseminated publicly,” said the UIF, which is part of the federal Finance Ministry.

“Consequently, Mexican banks, which maintain correspondent banking relationships with U.S. financial institutions, issued alerts regarding customers considered to be Politically Exposed Persons (PEPs) in accordance with their compliance and monitoring procedures,” the statement said.

“Based on these bank reports, … the UIF carried out a preventive freeze in order to protect the integrity of the national financial system.”

The UIF said that “these measures don’t constitute a definitive determination nor do they imply a finding of liability.”

Rather, they are “preventive actions of an administrative nature,” the agency said.

The UIF also said that “the people included on the List of Blocked Persons have access to defense mechanisms and guarantees provided under applicable legislation, including the exercise of the right to a hearing.”

In addition, it said that it was analyzing a range of “information and documentation” related to the politically exposed persons included on the List of Blocked Persons.

Two of the 10 defendants, both of whom were ministers in the state government led by Rocha, turned themselves in to U.S. authorities last week. All of the other suspects are presumed to be in Mexico.

2 former Sinaloa officials in US custody following drug trafficking indictment

According to the U.S. indictment, Rocha and the nine other defendants participated in a conspiracy with the Sinaloa Cartel to “import massive amounts of fentanyl, heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine from Mexico into the United States.”

“Among other things, the defendants have shielded Cartel leaders from investigation, arrest, and prosecution; caused sensitive law enforcement and military information to be provided to members of the Cartel and allied drug traffickers to assist the Cartel’s criminal activities; directed members of state and local law enforcement agencies … to protect drug loads stored in and transiting through Mexico to the United States; and allowed brutal drug-related violence to be committed by members of the Cartel without consequence,” the indictment states.

“In exchange, the defendants have collectively received millions of dollars in drug money from the Cartel,” it says.

Rocha and other accused officials, including a Morena party federal senator and the mayor of Culiacán, have rejected the accusations against them. Mexican authorities have said there is currently insufficient evidence against the defendants to warrant their arrest for the purpose of extradition.

Rocha and various other suspects are affiliated with Morena, the party founded by former president Andrés Manuel López Obrador, and which backed Sheinbaum at the 2024 presidential election.

Milenio: UIF investigating companies linked to Rocha’s sons 

The newspaper Milenio reported on Tuesday that the UIF has begun an investigation into the financial transactions of companies linked to Rocha’s three sons.

“The noose is tightening around Rubén Rocha Moya, the governor of Sinaloa who is currently on leave,” the newspaper wrote.

“In addition to having his accounts frozen, the Financial Intelligence Unit (UIF) yesterday began reviewing all financial transactions involving his son’s companies, according to requests within the national banking system to which Milenio had access.”

Milenio said that companies linked to Rocha’s sons are suspected of carrying out “operations of financial triangulation and money laundering.”

Those companies include construction firms, a market research firm and an agricultural business.

The newspaper Reforma published a similar report on Sunday, writing that the UIF was looking at “possible money laundering operations, financial triangulation and the use of companies” linked to Rocha’s family.

Reforma reported that the bank accounts of the governor’s sons have also been blocked.

“The freezing of accounts ordered by the Financial Intelligence Unit (UIF) is no longer limited to former officials and security commanders accused in U.S. investigations, but has extended to the ex-governor’s children,” the newspaper wrote, specifically mentioning Rubén, Ricardo and Jose Jesús, three of Rocha Moya’s four children.

(Rocha’s also has a daughter, Eneyda Rocha Ruiz, who is president of the DIF family services agency in Sinaloa.)

Citing letters sent by the National Banking and Securities Commission on May 6, Reforma said that the UIF wasn’t just required to add the 10 people accused of drug trafficking by U.S. prosecutors to the List of Blocked Persons, but family members of the governor as well.

With reports from CNN Español, La Jornada, Reuters, Reforma and Milenio 

Made in Mexico: Tin Tan, Mexico’s first binational icon

3
Tin Tan, the pachuco persona of Germán Valdés
The creation of Germán Valdés, Tin Tan became a movie star and Mexico's first binational icon. (IMDb)

In Mexico, the first binational icon may be the mestizo: 500 years of cultural collision condensed into what Octavio Paz once called a contradictory soul. But there are many Mexicos, and one that rarely makes it into English-language coverage is that of the pachucos — young Mexicans in Los Angeles who appropriated U.S. slang and style on their own terms. The pachuco was everything official Mexico preferred not to see: despised by the upper classes, nothing like the charro masculinity of Jorge Negrete or Pedro Infante, and a world away from the cosmopolitan chilangos of mid-century Mexico City.

One actor changed how that figure was seen and, alongside Cantinflas, became a pillar of Mexican comedy: Germán Valdés, better known as Tin Tan. Dressed in an oversized zoot suit and singing in a jazz-inflected cadence, he exploded onto the screen shouting, “¡Ya llegó su pachucote!” What he announced, without quite knowing it, was a future that looks a lot like our present: the binational, border-born self.

Tin Tan in Havana, Cuba
Like Mario Moreno with Cantinflas, Germán Valdés became famous by portraying the character of Tin Tan. (Héctor García/Wikimedia Commons)

A binational legacy

Germán Genaro Cipriano Gómez Valdés y Castillo was born in Mexico City on September 19, 1915: his mother was from Aguascalientes; his father, Rafael, was a customs agent whose work would carry the family north.

Rafael was first posted to Veracruz and then, in 1931, to Ciudad Juárez. Germán was sixteen. He arrived at the border just as a generation of young people on both sides was inventing something new: a hybrid culture stitched together from Mexican migration, African American jazz, Hollywood swagger and Depression-era poverty. Historians would later call them the “Mexican American generation.” On the street, they called themselves pachucos.

Germán took to it immediately. A poor student pushed to work, he was hired as a janitor at XEJ, the local radio station. One afternoon, alone in the studio, as the legend goes, he began imitating the announcers for his own amusement, unaware that the microphone was live. Station owner Pedro Mesenes heard him and turned the janitor into an on-air personality.

In 1943, impresario Paco Miller arrived in Juárez with a traveling company. When one of his comedians suddenly quit, Miller heard Tin Tan on the radio and hired him almost immediately.

Pachucos under suspicion

Pachucos were young, mostly working-class Mexican Americans who emerged in border cities in the 1930s and 1940s. Influenced by Black jazz culture, they wore zoot suits — oversized jackets with padded shoulders, baggy trousers pegged at the ankle, wide-brimmed hats, two-tone shoes — popularized by performers like Cab Calloway and adopted by Mexican American youth as a visible statement of identity and refusal. They spoke a slang that blended Spanish, English and their own inventions: a kind of early Spanglish that dominant cultures on both sides of the border found incomprehensible and vaguely menacing. In the eyes of two nations, they were simultaneously the wrong kind of Mexican and the wrong kind of American.

In June 1943 — just as Germán was preparing to leave Juárez with Miller’s troupe — the Zoot Suit Riots exploded in Los Angeles. White U.S. servicemen, with the tacit cooperation of the LAPD, attacked Mexican American youths, stripping them of their suits and beating them. The Mexican government, allied with the United States during the Second World War, struggled to respond. 

From punchline to protagonist

Tin Tan was not a parody of a pachuco, but the pachuco as a hero of his own story. (Asociación Nacional de Actores/Wikimedia Commons)

Other comedians had already dressed up as pachucos, but only to mock them, using the slur pocho to mark their distance from “real” Mexicans. In their hands, the pachuco was a walking punchline.

Tin Tan inverted the formula. He didn’t perform the pachuco as a caricature; he played him as a protagonist — sly, charming, musically gifted, romantically successful and linguistically inventive. He was the hero of his own story. That, more than the zoot suit or the slang, is what scandalized cultural nationalists. José Vasconcelos — one of the architects of post-revolutionary national identity — denounced such foreign influences. To mix Spanish with English, to dress in foreign clothes and dance to foreign music, was, for him, a betrayal of the patria.

Octavio Paz, writing in “The Labyrinth of Solitude,” was more sophisticated but no kinder. For Paz, the pachuco was a figure of negation, defined by his refusal to belong to either culture that had produced him. His defiance was a kind of self-humiliation: Su voluntad era la de no ser” — their will was not to be.

It’s one of Paz’s most quoted observations and also one of his most incomplete. Paz was looking at pachucos from the outside, as pathology. Tin Tan had grown up among them in Ciudad Juárez; he knew them as friends and neighbors, and carried that sensibility into Mexican mass culture with a generosity Paz, writing from California, could not see.

A radically modern way of being funny

On set, he improvised constantly, pushing directors to give him space “to do and undo” as he pleased. As critic Carlos Monsiváis noted, he didn’t leave a single word in peace: he twisted, stretched and jazzed the language until it broke into something new. He did the same with the camera — in an era when most actors behaved as if the audience were sealed off in the dark, Tin Tan looked straight into the lens, treating it as another character and the audience as an accomplice. The effect feels surprisingly modern: a proto-YouTube directness in the middle of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema.

Five films as an entry point

Tin Tan made more than 100 films. A handful are enough to open the door:

The Valdés brothers in 1958, with Germán at the far left. (Secretaría de Cultura de la Ciudad de México)
  • “El hijo desobediente”: His first leading role, and the debut of actress Marga López. Watch it to see him still working out the character.
  • “Calabacitas tiernas”: Directed by Gilberto Martínez Solares — his most important collaborator — this 1949 film is the one that made him a star. 
  • “El rey del barrio”: If you only watch one Tin Tan film, make it this one. He plays a railway worker by day and the leader of a hopeless band of thieves by night, a Robin Hood of the vecindad whose schemes collapse with the elegance of a Buster Keaton routine. This is widely regarded as one of the great achievements of Mexican cinema.
  • “El ceniciento”: A 1951 parody of Cinderella featuring one of the most joyful dance sequences of his career, set to Beny Moré’s “Dónde estabas tú.”
  • “El revoltoso”: A meddlesome shoeshine boy gets entangled in a plot that lands his girlfriend in jail — a reminder that Tin Tan’s characters lived in the barrio, fought for the barrio and never aspired to leave it.

The other voice you already know

Almost every Mexican parent eventually learns a small, delightful fact: Tin Tan is the Spanish-language voice of Baloo in Disney’s “The Jungle Book (1967) and of Thomas O’Malley in “The Aristocats” (1970). Listen to Baloo singing “Busca lo más vital” and you’ll hear it immediately — the rasp, the swing, the way he hangs slightly behind the beat, turning “vital” into a word that carries an entire philosophy of life. This is why Mexicans of a certain age sometimes become unexpectedly emotional during an old Disney cartoon. They’re not crying about a bear. They’re remembering Tin Tan.

A legacy that took its time

Tin Tan died on June 29, 1973, at age 57, from complications related to cirrhosis and pancreatic cancer. He left no fortune. One of the few formal honors he received in his lifetime was the Virginia Fábregas Medal, awarded for 25 years of professional service.

The rest came later. Today, the verb tintanear circulates in Mexican Spanish alongside Mario Moreno’s cantinflear. Where cantinflear means to talk in circles and say nothing, tintanear is its opposite: to express everything by mobilizing every available resource. Tin Tan was not corrupting Spanish; he was expanding it. Words he popularized — chidochalecarnalnelya sábanas — are now so embedded in Mexican Spanish that removing them would feel like amputating the language itself.

And that hybrid border identity Paz once treated as a symptom? It has quietly become the dominant cultural reality of a continent. Around 37 million people of Mexican descent live in the United States. Spanglish is the everyday language of an enormous demographic. Zoot suits hang in museums; pachucos are studied in Chicano Studies departments; the grandchildren of those young men beaten in Los Angeles in 1943 now run cities, write novels and win Oscars.

On a Saturday night in a dance hall in Tepito, you can still find men in their seventies and eighties wearing zoot suits and two-tone shoes. Ask them where the look came from and they won’t say Los Angeles or Cab Calloway. They’ll say: Tin Tan.

That, in its way, is the deepest kind of immortality — when a person’s name stops referring only to him and starts referring to a way of being in the world. And for the record: in 2026, Tin Tan has more monthly Spotify listeners than Sammy Davis Jr. — 710,700 to 636,500. The pachucos, it seems, are still very much alive in the algorithm.

Maria Meléndez writes for Mexico News Daily in Mexico City.

Health Ministry announces goal of 9,000 new hospital beds by 2030: Tuesday’s mañanera recapped

1
Sheinbaum stands before a podium and views a presentation by her government's Health Ministry
According to the government's plan, 6,364 of the new beds — around 70% of the total — will be in 50 new hospitals that have been built or will be built during Sheinbaum's presidency. (Saúl López Escorcia/Presidencia)

Sheinbaum’s mañanera in 60 seconds

  • 🏥 9,000+ hospital beds planned: Deputy Health Minister Eduardo Clark announced the government intends to add 9,139 public hospital beds by 2030, spread across new and expanded facilities, at an estimated cost of 181 billion pesos.
  •  ⚖️ Zero extraditions from U.S. to Mexico: Foreign Affairs Minister Velasco said that since 2018, Mexico has made 269 extradition requests to the U.S., but none have been fulfilled. He said that 33 requests were denied and 233 still pending — context the government is using to push back on U.S. pressure to extradite Sinaloa Governor Rocha Moya and other officials accused of collusion with the Sinaloa Cartel.  
  •  🔄 Reciprocity demanded on serious cases: Sheinbaum pressed the U.S. to explain why none of the 269 requests have been honored, saying that those sought include ex-governors, organized crime figures, fake invoice brokers and suspects linked to the 2014 Ayotzinapa case.

Why today’s mañanera matters

At President Claudia Sheinbaum’s Tuesday morning press conference, the federal government once again sought to demonstrate that asking for proof (or additional proof) against a person that the United States wants Mexico to extradite, or vice versa, is not an unusual practice.

Federal officials, including Sheinbaum, have emphasized this point since U.S. authorities requested the provisional arrest for extradition purposes of Sinaloa Governor Rubén Rocha Moya and nine other current and former officials accused of drug trafficking in league with the Sinaloa Cartel. Two of the suspects, both former ministers in the Sinaloa government led by Rocha, turned themselves in to U.S. authorities last week.

Mexican authorities have requested proof against the suspects from their U.S. counterparts, asserting that, as things stand, there is insufficient evidence to warrant the arrest of Rocha and the other defendants who remain in Mexico.

Also of note at today’s mañanera was the announcement of a plan to add more than 9,000 beds to public hospitals in Mexico before Sheinbaum leaves office in 2030.

Government aiming to add over 9,000 hospital beds by 2030

Deputy Health Minister Eduardo Clark announced that the federal government intends to increase the number of public hospital beds in Mexico by 9,139 during its six-year term (October 2024 to September 2030).

According to the government’s plan, 6,364 of the new beds — around 70% of the total — will be in 50 new hospitals that have been built or will be built during Sheinbaum’s presidency.

Clark said that 47 public hospitals will be expanded to allow the installation of 1,001 new beds, while 1,774 extra beds will be installed in 55 other hospitals.

If the government succeeds in adding 9,139 new beds during its six-year term, the total number of beds in public hospitals across Mexico will increase to 106,105 in 2030 from 96,966 in 2024.

Clark said that the plan to add more than 9,000 new hospital beds in new and expanded hospitals will cost an estimated 181 billion pesos (US $10.4 billion) between 2024 and 2030.

He presented data that showed that 5,308 public hospital beds were added during the six-year term of former President Felipe Calderón (2006-12), while 3,906 beds were added during the presidency of Enrique Peña Nieto (2012-18). During Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s presidency (2018-24), the number of public hospital beds increased by 7,404.

If 9,139 beds are added during Sheinbaum’s term, the number of public hospital beds added in the 12 years between 2018 and 2030 will be 80% higher than the number added in the 12 years when Calderón and Peña Nieto were in office.

Velasco: Since 2018, Mexico has asked US to extradite 269 people; None have been sent to Mexico 

Foreign Affairs Minister Roberto Velasco told reporters that between Jan. 1, 2018, and May 13, 2026, Mexico asked the United States to extradite 269 people. However, none of those people has been sent to Mexico, Velasco said.

Foreign Affairs Minister Roberto Velasco
Foreign Affairs Minister Roberto Velasco made a case for greater reciprocity in extraditions from the United States to Mexico, saying it is a “common practice” between the countries. (Saúl López Escorcia/Presidencia)

He said that 36 extradition requests were denied, while 233 are “still pending completion.”

Velasco said that in 47 of 50 outstanding cases in which Mexico requested the provisional arrest of people in the United States for the purpose of extradition, U.S. authorities asked for “additional information.”

“In other words, it’s a common practice between the two countries,” he said.

Velasco presented information about some of the people that Mexico has asked the U.S. to arrest for the purpose of extradition. Among them are suspects wanted in connection with the 2014 abduction and presumed murder of 43 students in Guerrero (the Ayotzinapa case). Velasco highlighted that the United States rejected a request for the extradition of a man wanted in connection with an embezzlement case because the crime he allegedly committed was not a violent one.

Sheinbaum: ‘Why haven’t they handed anyone over?’ 

Sheinbaum emphasized that the United States hasn’t fulfilled any of the 269 extradition requests Mexico has made since 2018. 

“They haven’t sent anyone,” she said. 

Sheinbaum said that Mexico has requested the extradition of people in connection with “extremely serious cases.” 

She said those people include factureros (fake invoice brokers), ex-governors, people accused of organized crime and people linked to the Ayotzinapa case. 

“There has been no handover of any of these alleged criminals to Mexico,” Sheinbaum said. 

“What does Mexico always ask for? … Reciprocity. Why haven’t they handed anyone over?” asked the president, whose government has sent over 90 organized crime figures to the U.S. in three large transfers that took place in January 2026, August 2025 and February 2025.  

Neither Sheinbaum nor Velasco mentioned that former Chihuahua Governor Cesar Duarte was extradited to Mexico from the U.S. in 2022

By Mexico News Daily chief staff writer Peter Davies (peter.davies@mexiconewsdaily.com)

MND Local: Guadalajara welcomes the return of the Echoes Music Festival and World Naked Bike Ride 

0
Party like a local or ride a bike naked, Guadalajara is offering some unique local experiences over the next month. (Roman López/Unsplash)

Early next month, the global spotlight will shine on Guadalajara as the FIFA World Cup kicks off on the city’s west side. As we look ahead to an action-packed month here in La Perla Tapatia, there are plenty of upcoming events and ways to keep busy, even if you don’t have plans to enjoy the matches.

World Naked Bike Ride back in Guadalajara on June 13 

A man riding a bicycle in his underwear
(World Naked Bike Ride Guadalajara/Facebook)

Hundreds of people will once again take to the streets of the city during the World Naked Bike Ride (WNBR) Guadalajara, scheduled for June 13.

More than just a bike ride, the WNBR is an international movement that seeks to raise awareness about the need to respect cyclists and the vulnerability of those who travel by bike in urban settings.

According to Miguel Asa, one of the Guadalajara event’s organizers, the ride is held as a challenge to car culture and the damage it does to both the human body and our environment. 

“What we are looking for is for people on the street to question and criticize the excessive use of automobiles, to promote the use of means such as bicycles, to reflect on the way we move, because a large part of the city is built for cars, and there is little space for cyclists,” he said.

Riding naked also serves as a metaphor for the exposure and fragility that many cyclists face daily in Guadalajara’s perennially traffic-choked streets.

As in previous years, attendees can participate partially or completely naked. As the locals say, “Tápate lo que quieras, destápate lo que puedas.” (Cover up what you want, uncover what you can).

If this is your first ride, here are some recommendations:

  • Stay well-hydrated and use sunscreen
  • Carry only what you need
  • Report any disrespectful behavior or photographic abuse

When: The ride takes place on June 13
Where: Departs from Plaza José Clemente Orozco. Gathering begins at 9 a.m. The ride kicks off at 11 a.m. 
Cost: Free

Echoes Festival gets its fourth turn — in a new location

Echoes Festival stage in Guadalajara
(Concerty)

Guadalajara’s only homegrown indie music festival is returning for the fourth time next month, in what’s being branded as its World Cup edition. 

Headlining this one-day event will be Australia’s five-piece electropop band Parcels, known for their infectious, danceable beats. For a sample, check out their hit, Tieduprightnow.

Also scheduled to perform at Echoes Festival is French musician Darius (a DJ set), Guadalajara’s own Babas Tutsipop, and another special guest to be announced shortly.

This year’s event takes place at the University of Guadalajara Cultural Center in north Zapopan. For additional details check the event’s social media.

Where: Plaza Bicentenario within the Centro Cultural Universitario in north Zapopan.
When: June 19, 2026, from 5 p.m. to 2 a.m.
Tickets: Available from Boletomovil for 1,680 pesos, excluding fees.

100 cats descend on Zapopan in new MAZ exhibit

It isn’t just the internet that’s obsessed with cats: Local artist Cecilia Rébora recently launched her “Cien Gatos” (100 Cats) exhibition at the Zapopan Museum of Art (MAZ) in Zapopan’s Centro. 

The show, created especially for children, features illustrations, prints, and pieces inspired by cats of all kinds. The exhibit is interactive, with visitors encouraged to draw their own cat on a collaborative mural inside the gallery.

The six-week exhibit runs throughout the month of May. There will also be special activities tied to the exhibition inside the museum.

Cecilia Rébora is an illustrator from Guadalajara who specializes in children’s and young adult literature. Her work draws on references from classic stories such as ”Alice in Wonderland,” ”Puss in Boots,” and “The Black Cat.”

For more information, check the museum’s social media.

When: April 25 – July 5, 2026
Where: Zapopan Art Museum (MAZ), open Tues–Sun from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., with the museum staying open on Thursdays until 10 p.m. Closed Mondays.
Cost: Free admission

OCESA shares plan for revamp of Guadalajara’s 3 de Marzo stadium

(Tecos FC)

One thing that has differentiated Guadalajara from Mexico City (CDMX)  in recent years has been Guadalajara’s lack of large-scale, world-class outdoor entertainment venues. This has prevented the area’s local entertainment promoter OCESA, from consistently staging high-profile shows on par with the Corona Capital festival in CDMX

Fortunately, this infrastructure gap is narrowing with the recent announcement that the Estadio 3 de Marzo, on the campus of the Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara (UAG) in Zapopan, will be converted into a modern entertainment venue, to be known going forward as the Coliseo GNP Seguros.   

The 55-year-old stadium has previously welcomed top acts such as Shakira, Lady Gaga, and Justin Bieber, but it currently serves primarily as a sports venue for UAG’s collegiate soccer team.

New plans call for the space to be converted into a top-tier venue capable of hosting massive tours and concerts, establishing it as a “strategic hub within the global entertainment circuit,” according to OCESA.

The renovation will see a nearly 60% bump in capacity, holding up to 30,000 people. In the new layout, the stage is being incorporated into the building’s structure, freeing up space for general admission and hospitality areas, luxury boxes, and additional seating.

Backstage dressing rooms, production offices, and service spaces are also being added.

The entrance plaza is also being redesigned to improve access and crowd flow, with accessibility for the disabled (which doesn’t exist today). A new roof will also help to weatherproof the space.

Among the first artists scheduled to perform at the revamped facility are Spanish-language musical acts Alejandro Sanz, Yuridia, Auténticos Decadentes, Caligaris, and Panteón Rococó.

When the work is completed, the GNP Seguros Coliseum — coming on the heels of the recently opened 20,000-capacity Arena Guadalajara on the north side of Zapopan — should help expand the city’s live entertainment schedule.

MND Writer Dawn Stoner is reporting from Guadalajara.

‘El Cruce’ swim to Isla Mujeres attracts over 1,600 swimmers from 21 countries

0
El Cruce
The El Cruce open water swimming compeition, considered one of the most important such events in the world, brought more than 1,600 swimmers to the Quintana Roo coast from more than 20 countries. (Mara Lezama)

Mexico’s world-renowned open water swimming competition known as El Cruce attracted 1,638 participants from 21 countries over the weekend, but at the end of the day, two local Quintana Roo athletes took home the honors.  

Fernando Betanzos Rodríguez and María Elena Carreto Castro were crowned men’s and women’s winners of the 10-km competition on Sunday, the main event that took swimmers through the Caribbean Sea from Playa Caracol in Cancún to Isla Mujeres.

el cruce
Patty Kohlmann, a swimmer who competed in two Olympic Games for Mexico, said El Cruce is an “emblematic swim,” a true test of endurance, strategy, and adaptation to ocean currents. (Mara Lezama)

Patty Kohlmann, a Mexican former female freestyle and medley swimmer who participated in two consecutive Summer Olympics for Mexico starting in 1984, described El Cruce (the Crossing) as a true test of endurance, strategy and adaptation to ocean currents.

“The Cruce competition is a must,” Kohlmann said about the competition on her personal Instagram account. “I believe that all open water swimmers must do it at some point because it’s an emblematic swim. It’s a swim that’s been prestigious for many years.”

She’s not alone in her opinion. El Cruce is considered by the World Open Water Swimming Association to be among the 10 most important open water swims in the world due to the physical demands of the course and the natural beauty of the turquoise waters.

Swimmers competed in 13 different categories across the competition. In addition to the 10-km swim, a Half Iron Swim (1.9 km) and an Iron Swim (3.8 km) were held on Saturday.

Quintana Roo Governor Mara Lezama Espinosa opened the 21st edition of the competition after a Maya ceremony was held as part of the traditional event.

In addition to establishing Quintana Roo as a major sporting destination, El Cruce is a significant economic and tourism driver for the state, attracting athletes, coaches, families and visitors from around the world. 

Kohlmann said that the competition is particularly difficult because conditions can change dramatically from one day to the next, meaning that you must always be prepared for what might come. She emphasized the importance of the swimmers’ strategy and the ability to adapt their style depending on the conditions. 

She joined the 10-km competition on Sunday. “It was a spectacular swim… some difficult conditions but always fun,” Kohlmann said when asked about her latest experience. 

With reports from Reporte Indigo, El Sol de México and Quintana Roo Hoy

Spanish king to attend the Spain-Uruguay World Cup match in Guadalajara

3
Akron Stadium
King Felipe VI of Spain's main destination during his upcoming royal visit to Mexico won't be a high-level government meeting room but the Guadalajara area's Akron Stadium (under the FIFA-imposed temporary pseudonym Guadalajara Stadium), where he will watch his country's men's national team take on Uruguay. (Fernando Carranza García/Cuartoscuro)

Among the spectators at the June 26 World Cup match between Spain and Uruguay in Guadalajara will be King Felipe VI of Spain, who has accepted a formal invitation to attend.

The Spanish Royal Household has confirmed that the king will attend the match as part of the agenda for his royal visit at the invitation of President Claudia Sheinbaum and FIFA President Gianni Infantino. 

King Felipe VI of Spain
King Felipe VI of Spain, who will be visiting Mexico next month, is seen here delivering the Cervantes Award for Spanish-Language Literature to Mexican writer Gonzalo Celorio in April. (UNAM/Cuartoscuro)

In March, Sheinbaum announced that she had sent an invitation to Felipe VI to attend the World Cup. The March invitation letter reportedly emphasized that the World Cup represented an opportunity to strengthen ties between the two nations through sport, culture, and bilateral cooperation. 

The invitation was sent days before the king publicly acknowledged that “there were significant abuses” and “moral and ethical controversies” during the Spanish conquest of the Americas. 

Sheinbaum described those words as “a gesture; an approach that we acknowledge,” noting that further progress is needed in historical recognition. 

Indeed, the king’s statements were the first in which Felipe VI has directly and publicly addressed the context of the Spanish Conquest and colonization after years of diplomatic tension between Mexico and Spain over that very subject. The recent tension began when former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador sent a letter to Spain demanding an apology for the wrongs committed against Indigenous people during and after the Conquest.

The letter went unanswered, leading Sheinbaum to refrain from extending an invitation to King Felipe VI to her presidential inauguration ceremony in 2024.

However, formal diplomatic relations were never severed between the two countries, a fact recognized by Sheinbaum during her Monday morning press conference

What happened was a moment of differing perspectives, and we reaffirmed our view, and they acknowledged it,” Sheinbaum said when asked about the king’s visit. “They are now seeing and speaking differently about the period known as the Conquest.” 

Another recent boost to the trans-Atlantic relationship was Sheinbaum’s trip to Barcelona last month to participate in the Summit in Defense of Democracy, organized by Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.

With reports from Eje Central and EFE

10 killed in armed attack on Puebla-area ranch

1
Aerial view of Tehuitzingo, Puebla
The massacre occurred on a ranch in Tehuitzingo, a municipality about 120 kilometers south of Puebla City. (@SSPGobPue/X)

Ten people including a baby girl were killed during an armed attack in the state of Puebla early Sunday, authorities said.

The massacre occurred on a ranch in Tehuitzingo, a municipality about 120 kilometers south of Puebla City.

Six of the victims were members of the same family, while four were ranch workers, Puebla Attorney General Idamis Pastor Betancourt said Monday. Two of the ranch workers were teenagers. Among the victims was a baby girl aged one month and 20 days. She wasn’t shot but rather suffocated when her mother fell on top of her after she was shot in the back, Pastor said.

The attorney general said that preliminary investigations pointed to “a family issue” related to land ownership as being the motive of the attack. Pastor said that three men related to six of the victims had been identified as the alleged perpetrators. She noted that none of them had yet been arrested, but pledged that the crime wouldn’t go unpunished.

According to media reports, one of the alleged perpetrators is a man called José Alfredo, son of the ranch owner. Along with two other armed men, he allegedly killed his father, his mother and his three siblings, one of whom was just 15.

José Alfredo reportedly escaped from a drug treatment center sometime before he allegedly killed members of his own family on a ranch called “La Marihuana.” The news magazine Proceso reported that he had been sent to the treatment center by his family “due to his addictions” and he perpetrated the attack in “revenge.”

The newspaper 24 Horas reported that José Alfredo “allegedly harbored family grudges related to addiction issues and personal disputes.”

Mass murders are common in Mexico, but are usually related to organized crime rather than family disputes.

However, multiple members of the same family have been killed in previous massacres in Mexico, including one perpetrated in México state in 2022. In 2019, three women and six children belonging to an extended Mormon family with roots in the United States were murdered in the northern state of Sonora.

With reports from El Financiero, Proceso, La Jornada and 24 Horas 

Mexico’s CNTE teachers’ union threatens national strike ahead of the World Cup

0
CNTE
The CNTE marched through the capital on Friday, its usual Teachers' Day activity. This year's march may be a mere prelude to a June strike timed to disrupt the World Cup. (Rogelio Morales/Cuatoscuro)

An activist teachers’ union with a history of disruptive protests has threatened a national strike that could block access to Mexico City’s main public square just 10 days before the World Cup opening ceremony, some 15 kilometers away.

In calling for the strike over what they considered an inadequate 9% salary raise offer from the Education Ministry, the National Coordinating Committee of Education Workers (CNTE) left no doubt that the threatened action’s proximity to the World Cup opener is no coincidence.

Teachers paro in Zocalo
Teachers took over the Zócalo, Mexico City’s main public square, as recently as March 19. They are threatening to do it again with the World Cup just three weeks away. (Victoria Valtierra/Cuartoscuro)

“As has been announced, the national strike coincides with the World Cup,” one CNTE member told the press. “The eyes of the world will be on Mexico City, and we will be there, showing our discontent and fighting for justice.”

The strike announcement appears to be as much a negotiating ploy as a definite plan. 

CNTE representative Elvira Meleces Morales said what action the strike includes — and apparently whether there will be one at all — will depend on President Claudia Sheinbaum’s response to their list of demands. 

“Our actions don’t depend on this movement; they depend on the will of the federal government, because what we are seeking is to make the struggle visible,” Meleces said.

If left unsatisfied, the CNTE says it will mobilize its sections where it has a presence — mainly Oaxaca, Michoacán, Mexico City, Chiapas and Guerrero — and bring them to the capital. There, on June 1, after a mass protest march in the morning, an encampment will be set up in the Zócalo.

“If the authorities are unwilling, access to the Zócalo will be blocked,” Mereces said.

Beyond disrupting World Cup logistics, the CNTE’s aggressive posture could jeopardize the school calendar, as public schools with CNTE representation may have to suspend classes. That would create an ironic situation in which teachers themselves would accomplish what Education Minister Mario Delgado tried but failed to do: truncate the school year by more than a month.

What are teachers asking for?

According to CNTE representatives, the offered 9% (salary plus benefits) increase is too low to offset inflation.

Beyond a salary raise, the teachers demand a review of education reforms and changes to the pension system.

“These crumbs thrown to education workers are unacceptable,” representative Pedro Hernández Morales said.

Other demands include the repeal of the 2007 ISSSTE Law, which changed the federal pension scheme from pooled to individual and which President Sheinbaum previously pledged to reverse. CNTE teachers protested against this law in June last year

The CNTE does not represent the majority of teachers. The rival SNTE is older, with a larger membership and broader distribution.

With reports from El País and El Financiero

2 former Sinaloa officials in US custody following drug trafficking indictment

17
Diptych of Gerardo Mérida and Enrique Díaz Vega
Gerardo Mérida Sánchez (R) turned himself in in Arizona; Enrique Díaz Vega (L) did so in New York. (Facebook/Cuartoscuro)

Two of the 10 current and former Sinaloa-based officials charged in a U.S. drug trafficking indictment that was unsealed last month are now in U.S. custody.

Gerardo Mérida Sánchez, a former Sinaloa security minister, and Enrique Díaz Vega, a former Sinaloa administration and finance minister, turned themselves in to U.S. authorities last week, according to the Mexican government and media reports.

Both men served in the government of Sinaloa Governor Rubén Rocha Moya, who U.S. prosecutors also accuse of drug trafficking in league with the Sinaloa Cartel. Rocha has taken leave as governor, but has not been arrested.

Federal authorities say there is insufficient proof to arrest Rocha and the other defendants for the purpose of extradition to the United States. The mayor of Culiacán and a federal senator who represents the ruling Morena party are among the 10 people accused of colluding with the Sinaloa Cartel — especially the “Chapitos” faction of the criminal organization — in exchange for political support and bribes.

Rocha also represents Morena, the party founded by former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador. The governor, an ally of Sheinbaum, has denied the accusations against him and declared that his innocence will be proven beyond doubt in due course.

Rocha Moya at a press event
The Justice Department of the United States claims Rocha Moya, along with former members of his administration, has allowed the Chapitos to operate with impunity in Sinaloa. (José Betanzos Zárate/Cuartoscuro)

Sheinbaum has said on repeated occasions that her government won’t provide cover for anyone who has committed a crime. However, she asserted on April 30 — the day after the indictment was unsealed — that if there is no “clear proof” against Rocha and the other defendants, the objective of the U.S. charges is “political.”

Mérida detained in Arizona 

Mérida, security minister in Sinaloa between September 2023 and December 2024, was arrested in Arizona last Monday.

Mexico’s Security Cabinet said on social media that Mérida entered Arizona from Nogales, Sonora, and was taken into custody by the U.S. Marshals Service.

The former security minister appeared in U.S. federal court in New York on Friday, according to court records. The indictment charging him and the nine other officials was filed in the United States District Court in the Southern District of New York.

Mérida, 66, is accused of narcotics importation conspiracy; possession of machineguns and destructive devices; and conspiracy to possess machineguns and destructive devices.

According to the indictment, he “received bribes from the Chapitos” — led by sons of convicted drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán — “and, in exchange, provided the Chapitos with, among other things, advance notice of law enforcement raids on drug labs, so that the Chapitos could move their drugs and lab equipment before the raids.”

Mérida, a former commander in the Mexican Army, is being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, where Sinaloa Cartel leader Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada is also detained.

Díaz surrenders in New York 

Díaz, the administration and finance minister in Sinaloa from November 2021 to September 2024, turned himself in to authorities in New York on Friday, according to reports.

He is accused of the same crimes as Mérida. If convicted, both Díaz and Mérida face sentences of up to life in prison.

According to the indictment, Díaz, 50, “helped the Chapitos leaders install corrupt officials to protect the Chapitos’ drug trafficking operations and served as” a liaison “between the Chapitos leaders and Rocha Moya.”

At her Monday morning press conference, President Claudia Sheinbaum said she saw “no risk” in declarations that Mérida and Díaz could make to U.S. authorities.

“It was their decision to turn themselves in and there is no risk, none,” Sheinbaum said, apparently dismissing the possibility that the two former state ministers could implicate other officials and politicians affiliated with Morena and/or say things that could damage her government.

Morena senator says he is in Sinaloa after reports claimed he was arrested in San Diego 

There were reports over the weekend that federal Senator Enrique Inzunza had been arrested in San Diego by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

Enrique Inzunza
Inzunza told La Jornada that he would not turn himself in to U.S. authorities. (Wikimedia Commons)

However, in a social media post on Sunday, Inzunza — who is also accused of colluding with the Chapitos — said he was in Sinaloa.

“What right-wing media outlets are publishing about contact with foreign authorities is false,” he wrote.

“… I’m in Sinaloa, my land, of which I am proud, with me and mine, good and honest people,” said Inzunza, who told the newspaper La Jornada that there was no chance he would turn himself in to U.S. authorities.

In his social media post, the senator rejected the charges against him, describing them as “mendacious” and without foundation. Inzunza asserted that his innocence will be proven in due course and expressed his willingness to attend to any requirements of Mexican authorities.

Of the 10 officials accused of drug trafficking by U.S. prosecutors, Inzunza is the only one who remains in office. He has been a senator since September 2024 and previously served as general secretary of the Sinaloa government led by Rocha.

Even though he is accused of aiding and abetting the Chapitos, Inzunza is considered a possible candidate for Morena in the 2027 gubernatorial election in Sinaloa, the El Universal newspaper reported. Edgar Barraza Castillo, president of Morena’s executive committee in Sinaloa, said last week that both Inzunza and Culiacán Mayor Juan de Dios Gámez Mendívil could participate in the process to select Morena’s candidate for the election as long as they meet the contest “requirements.”

With reports from Reuters, El País, El Universal and Reforma 

MND Local Puerto Vallarta: Sample the city’s best restaurants and get a taste of history at events in May

0
Image of the Puerto Vallarta skyline during daytime.
Looking for fun events in Puerto Vallarta? There's fun to be had for all interests and ages in May! Get the lowdown. (Josue Liera/Pexels)

From adrenaline-filled competition to community creativity, culinary celebration and commemorative cataloging, the Bay of Banderas is alive with a string of must-see events in the month of May. Before the month runs out, get out there and see photos documenting PV’s history, sample the region’s most popular high-end restaurants at reduced prices, build sandcastles for a good cause and more!

Restaurant Week Puerto Vallarta 2026 in full swing

A haute cuisine presentation of ceviche toppped with red onions and tortilla chips on a gray ceramic rectangular plate, on a wooden table. A glass of white white is next to the plate.
(Azafrán Restaurant Puerto Vallarta/Facebook)

Restaurant Week Puerto Vallarta 2026 has officially begun and will continue through June 10, transforming the Bay of Banderas region for more than three weeks into a showcase of culinary talent.

The annual festival features participating restaurants across Puerto Vallarta and Riviera Nayarit that offer three-course menus at fixed prices, giving area diners the opportunity to experience some of the region’s top cuisine at affordable prices.

Although traditionally called “Restaurant Week,” the event has evolved into an extended gastronomic celebration. More than 50 restaurants will participate in the 2026 edition, with dishes ranging from contemporary Mexican cuisine and fresh seafood to international fine dining experiences.

Additional information, participating restaurants, and special menus can be found at  Restaurant Week Puerto Vallarta.

When: May 15–June 10
Where: At more than 50 restaurants across Puerto Vallarta and the Riveria Nayarit
Cost: Variable, depending on the restaurant

International kitesurfing festival begins May 22 

Festival de Viento 2026 poster showing a kitesurfer in mid-air during a jump. The background is in ocean blue and the text with event details is in Spanish.
(Festival del Viento)

From May 22–24, Bucerías will become the center of international kitesurfing as the 2026 Festival del Viento (Wind Festival) takes to the shores of Banderas Bay. 

Athletes from across Mexico and around the world are expected to gather for three days of competition, entertainment and beachside celebration in one of the country’s most recognized wind sports destinations.

Freestyle events will highlight aerial tricks and technical creativity, while Big Air contests focus on height and precision. Visitors can also watch downwind races, slalom competitions, and foil regattas, where participants demonstrate speed, balance and endurance across open water.

In addition to the sporting events, the festival grounds will offer food vendors, live music, exhibitions and activities designed for families and visitors of all ages.

When: May 22–24
Where: On Bucerías’ beaches, with events centered at the Suites Costa Dorada in Nuevo Nayarit.
Cost: Free admission to competitions for spectators. Entry to all related musical events on Saturday and Sunday: 500 pesos 

Raise funds for teachers while building sandcastles at Mango’s Beach Club

Colorful poster with an image of a sandcastle on the shore of a beach with details of the Volcanes Community School of Puerto Vallarta's first annual sandcastle building competition for families.
(Volcanes Community School/Facebook)

The Volcanes Community School will host its first annual Sandcastle Competition on May 29 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Mango’s Beach Club, bringing together families, students and community members for a day of creativity and fundraising in support of the school’s teachers’ fund. 

Organizers say every contribution will directly support the educators who work to provide students with a safe, encouraging and enriching learning environment.

Throughout the event, participants will design and build imaginative sandcastles along the beach while enjoying a festive community atmosphere. In preparation, architect Chava Camberos recently spoke with the schoolchildren about structures and the importance of creating strong foundations and supports to secure their sand creations.

The event is open to the public and will include activities for all ages, encouraging residents and visitors alike to take part in a meaningful community initiative.

When: May 29, 9 a.m.–1 p.m.
Where: Mango’s Beach Club
Cost: Free

Puerto Vallarta celebrates its history with exhibition at City Hall

A photo of several candid amateur photos in black and white of people and events in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, history, laid out collage-style.
(Government of Puerto Vallarta/Facebook)

As part of its anniversary celebrations, Puerto Vallarta will be putting on “Puerto: Archive and Memory,” an exhibit of historical photos and ephemera dedicated to preserving and sharing the city’s historic legacy.

Scheduled for May 29 at City Hall, the gathering will showcase a valuable collection of previously unpublished photographs, antique maps, official documents and historical records that reveal how the coastal destination evolved from a small fishing community into one of Mexico’s most recognized tourist cities.

The event forms part of the commemorations marking the municipality’s 108th anniversary and the city’s 58th anniversary as an officially recognized urban center. It is part of a series of events going on that weekend on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Historians, archivists and cultural researchers will offer lectures and presentations designed to connect residents and visitors with the stories, traditions and milestones that shaped Puerto Vallarta’s identity through the decades.

For more information, visit the Puerto Vallarta Government Facebook page, or check this list of all the official anniversary events going on over the weekend.

When: May 29
Where: Puerto Vallarta City Hall
Cost: Free

Charlotte Smith is a writer and journalist based in Mexico. Her work focuses on travel, politics, and community. You can follow along with her travel stories at www.salsaandserendipity.com.