Sunday, October 5, 2025

Cenotes: unique biospheres under threat in the Yucatán

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Templo Mayor cenote, Quintana Roo
The ancient Maya who lived in this region believed that cenotes were the access to points to the underworld. (Nori Velazquez/Amigos de Sian Ka'an)

Say the word “cenote” and images of pristine, sparkling waters usually come to mind. But in Yucatán, around 70% of the state’s cenotes — sinkholes which are sources of drinking water for more than 2 million people — are contaminated with human waste and waste from industrial pig farms, according to the NGO The Grosjean Expedition.

Some nongovernmental agencies also have raised concerns that these unique aquatic biospheres are used as unofficial industrial dumping grounds. The cenotes in Yucatán are connected in an extensive network of natural sinkholes that emerge through the collapse of limestone bedrock, revealing hidden groundwater pools. They are said to be the result of the collision of the same asteroid that killed the dinosaurs and were sacred entrances to the underworld for the ancient Maya. 

Biologist and university professor Maria Gabriela González Cruz, 37, believes untreated waste from the large number of pig farms in Yucatán are the biggest threat to cenote conservation. (Mark Viales)

Today, however, they are more widely known internationally as breathtaking swim spots for locals and tourists that give a much-needed economic boost to rural communities.

Sergio Grosjean Abimerhi, Director of the Grosjean Expedition responsible for cenote cleanup operations, raised the issue in February on the dire state of Mexico’s natural wonders. The sub-aquatic archaeologist said that most of the more than 3,000 cenotes registered in Yucatán have ‘problematic’ levels of untreated sewage and traces of feces.

“There is no need to be alarmed, but we must be careful because of the increase of residents in the state who set up new businesses and industries,” he said. “There is more deforestation and there are no longer such diverse species of plants but rather stains of cement. All this accumulates and contaminates the cenotes.”

In July, the Secretariat for Sustainable Development (SDS) stated that 11 cenotes in seven municipalities had been cleared of 891 kilograms of trash this year. Hundreds of volunteers collaborated for the annual cleanup that removed around 4 tons of garbage in 2022 and more than 5 tons the previous year.

Crystal clear cenotes have been devastated by rancid pollution from humans and pig farms. (Mark Viales)

But María Gabriela González Cruz, 37, a biologist and professor at the Universities for Well-Being Benito Juárez in Yaxcabá, Yucatán, believes rural communities should not be chastised. She says blame for the damage done to cenotes falls mostly on the major pig ranches in the jungle that spill unfiltered waste into the water.

“The biggest threat comes from unseen waste dumped by these major industries that destabilize the fragile underwater ecosystem,” she said. “Nobody wants to talk about it, but as soon as you do, you open a can of worms on the potential ecodisaster ahead.”

When it comes to the trash produced by villagers, Cruz believes it comes from a lack of understanding rather than genuine negligence. There’s little difference for some people in the region between throwing an organic banana skin to the ground or a harmful inorganic plastic bottle. 

“We are working on spreading this awareness to the community from the university and other schools,” she said. “Many of my students knew contamination had increased but were unsure how to deal with it. Now that they better understand the harmful effects of plastic pollution, they are keen to spread the word and help restore their natural environment.” 

Tons of garbage were removed from the contaminated cenote “Ts’ono’ot” in the village of Yaxcabá and is now closed until further notice. (Mark Viales)

The main water source for villages like Yaxcabá comes from neighboring cenotes and is treated with excessively high levels of chlorine due to dangerous levels of contamination. 

A few years ago, the village cenote Ts’ono’ot was sanitized by government officials, and some two tonnes were hauled from its depths. They discovered numerous rusty bicycles, TV sets and all sorts of plastic trash, from soda bottles to chip packets and candy wrappers. They even found part of a toilet.

“Nobody knows just how contaminated the water is, but at a certain time of the year, much of the population falls ill with problems linked to drinking dirty water,” she said. “I feel as though the scientists and doctors I have spoken to have their hands tied because of bureaucratic figures who are indifferent to the problem.”

Cruz also laments that once plentiful endemic species of fish, crustaceans and birds evolving in cenote ecosystems have now completely vanished due to excessive pollution. 

“Everyone loses with the loss of our cenotes, whether it be the ecosystem, locals or tourists. Contaminated cenotes are a sad conclusion for a prehistoric wonder,” she said. “I feel that with the correct investment, we could find a happy arrangement that can satisfy all who benefit from cenotes.”

According to Jaqueline Torres Zepeda, 37, another biologist working in the region, there is still a long way to go regarding research into the resilience of cenotes and in spreading awareness.

Jaqueline Torres Zepeda, 37, is a passionate activist for cenote conservation and often searches the jungle for unexplored sites. (Mark Viales)

“It is distressing to see such an indifferent attitude from the authorities when it comes to conservation of these natural world wonders,” she said. “Cenotes are unique ecosystems of exceptional beauty with profound ancient history attached to them. We do not know how fragile or resilient they are in terms of pollution and what effect climate change has on them.”

After three years in Yaxcabá, Zepeda understood that practically every remote place she visited in Yucatán had a village cenote at its center. It reinforced her concept that these communities still rely heavily on these bodies of water because of the lack of drinking water treatment facilities.

“It is possible to find cenotes under many of the old churches, which demonstrates the dependence on them during colonial times to sustain expansion,” she said. “Water levels in cenotes have dropped drastically over the last decades due to climate change, which — combined with industrial and human pollution — has caused many of them to become putrid.”

Many cenotes remain hidden in the Yucatán jungle but are still vulnerable to contamination from neighboring industry and garbage dumps because of their interconnected water systems. (Mark Viales)

Zepeda said the evidence of this ecodisaster comes from people who have lived here their entire lives and are witnessing this unfortunate development.

“I have the impression that villagers speak about cenotes as a fond memory. They realize that they were sacred to their ancestors and maintain a profound respect for them. Some people still ask for permission to guardian spirits before entering a cenote. Although the true ancestral meaning may no longer exist, the Maya today continue to recognize their spiritual significance.”

Zepeda is adamant that the focus for authorities regarding cenotes must revolve around conservation, including monitoring and management of the interconnected water system. This information should be provided as feedback on the care of cenote heritage to surrounding communities.

“Yucatán is a paradise for biologists, with its lush jungles filled with countless endemic species,” she said. “But all of this beauty is sustained by the freshwater provided by cenotes. 

“If their purity continues to be tainted, I’m afraid of the unfathomable consequences this could have on the local population and surrounding wildlife.”

Mark Viales writes for Mexico News Daily

Mexico’s fiery love affair with hot peppers

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Why did the Mexica first incorporate hot peppers into their diet? The answer is the same reason we seek out spicy salsas today. (Wikimedia Commons)

Step into a sizzling world where passion and pain entwine. As ancient as the Mexica pyramids and as thrilling as a roller coaster, the history of hot peppers unveils a secret: there’s a reason we love to turn up the heat! 

In Mexica cosmology, hot peppers had their own goddess, Tlatlauhqui cihuatl ichilzintli, or “Respectable Lady of the Little Red Chili”, the sister of the more famous Tláloc, god of rain. In 1566, Spanish conquistador Bartolomé de las Casas famously wrote that “Without chili, Mexicans do not believe they are eating.”

The Mexicas are said to have used chile smoke as a disciplinary punishment. (Artes de México/Códice Mendoza)

Over millennia, our Mesoamerican ancestors learned to cultivate and eat chiles, native to South and Central America. Recognizing their different flavors and degrees of spiciness, they learned how to combine them with other ingredients. It is this accumulated wisdom that now makes chiles an icon of our beloved national cuisine.

Archaeological studies in southern Mexico have shown that the use of chiles in Mesoamerica may date all the way back to about 400 BCE. Peppers were an important part of the pre-Columbian diet, along with corn, beans, tomato and squash.

The Mexica of central Mexico used them not only as an essential part of their daily diet, but also for medicinal and even military ends, creating a proto-pepper spray by burning chiles downwind of enemies to gain an upper hand in battle.

Mexicans seem addicted to our beloved chiles, and there’s definitely something captivating about these little devils that grow in a wide range of colors, sizes and pungency. The five hottest chiles in Mexico are the habanero, manzano, chiltepín, chile de árbol, and serrano

There’s something captivating about these little devils that grow in a wide range of colors, sizes and pungency. (Wikimedia Commons)

In modern times, hot peppers have become a daily delight for many, savored in countries far and wide. Given their modern popularity, it’s intriguing to think that these spicy delights were unknown to the majority of the planet until Christopher Columbus set foot in the New World in 1492 and took peppers to Europe, where they spread to Asia and Africa.

Contrary to popular belief, the chile’s seeds are not the real culprits behind its heat: the magic lies in the fluffy white inner layer known as the placenta or veins. This is the part that produces capsaicin, the chemical compound responsible for the burning sensation.

Wild pepper plants produce capsaicin to protect themselves from being eaten by mammals. From an evolutionary perspective, the plant prefers birds to disperse its seeds throughout the world. And unlike mammals, birds don’t have TRPV1 receptors, so they don’t experience any irritation. Humans, with our peculiar tastes, threw a wrench into nature’s plan. Capsaicin doesn’t deter us; it enthralls us!

Eating hot chile peppers is a form of thrill-seeking that feeds our brain’s desire for stimulation and turns the experience into a twisted delight.

Contrary to popular belief, it’s not actually the pepper seeds that burn, but the white inside flesh. (Wikimedia Commons)

When you bite into a hot pepper, your mouth is engulfed in a sensation reminiscent of a raging inferno. Behind this torment lies a curious twist. When capsaicin hooks up with the TRPV1 receptors in your mouth, it plays a clever trick on your nervous system. It convinces your brain that you’ve come into contact with scorching heat, raising the alarm of a blazing fire in your mouth!

Your brain, ever the cunning survivor, jumps into action. It releases a cascade of feel-good neurochemicals, especially the endorphins that soothe pain. Some scientists believe the endorphin rush is so intense that it surpasses the amount needed to tame the chile’s fury. The scales tip in favor of pleasure over pain, and you find yourself swimming in a pool of tears, sweat and euphoria. A natural high created by increased levels of neurochemicals that boost your sense of wellbeing and make you happier. 

If you have spicy dishes regularly, your tongue’s nerves become resilient little crusaders. They build up a resilience to the fiery onslaught, and your heat receptors learn to take it easy. It’s like they’ve enrolled in a capsaicin desensitization course, graduating as seasoned spice warriors.

Hot sauces
If you overdose on hot sauce, don’t reach for water but for milk…or ice cream! (Wikimedia Commons)

If you prefer immediate relief, your first impulse might be to gulp down water. Experts say that this worsens the suffering because capsaicin is not water soluble, which means drinking water only spreads the fire. Capsaicin is fat-soluble, so you’ll find relief in a fatty liquid such as milk or ice cream.

So embrace the burn, savor the endorphins and revel in the beauty of chiles, for in every fiery bite, we find a tantalizing reminder that life’s most exhilarating moments often lie just beyond our comfort zones. 

Sandra is a Mexican writer and translator based in San Miguel de Allende who specializes in mental health and humanitarian aid. She believes in the power of language to foster compassion and understanding across cultures. She can be reached at: [email protected] 

Tropical storm Hilary strengthens off Pacific coast

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Man sheltering from rain on a beach
The storm is expected to bring rough sea conditions to Guerrero, Oaxaca, Colima and Michoacán. (Carlos Alberto Carbajal/Cuartoscuro)

Tropical storm Hilary is approaching the Mexican coastline with the potential to hit Baja California later this week, according to the United States National Hurricane Center (NHC). 

The storm, currently located off the coast of Zihuatanejo, Guerrero, is producing cloud bands and winds of between 65 to 85 kilometers per hour (40 to 52 miles per hour) – a figure which is expected to rise. A press release from the Mexican National Weather Service (SMN) states that Hilary will bring wind gusts of 70 to 90 kilometers per hour and waves of up to four meters (13 ft) high on the coasts of Colima, Guerrero, Michoacán and Oaxaca. In the press release, the SMN also advised residents in Guerrero, Michoacán and Oaxaca to prepare for heavy rains.

NHC Hilary forecast
The National Hurricane Center predicts that Hilary is likely to make landfall in the north of Mexico sometime later this week. (U.S. National Hurricane Center)

“Tourists visiting these states and [anyone involved in] maritime navigation in general are recommended to take extreme precautions against the high waves,” warned the SMN.

The forecast also warned of the potential for lightning strikes, landslides and localized flooding in the affected states. The storm is currently following the path of the 1993 Category 3 hurricane of the same name. 

This year’s Hilary is also expected to strengthen into a hurricane on Thursday, the NHC warned. 

The storm is expected to weaken before making landfall on the Baja California and U.S. coasts on Sunday, and will continue north on Monday should conditions persist. It is likely to bring category 4 or 5 rainfall – the highest level on the atmospheric river scale – and up to two inches of precipitation, the U.S. forecaster reported.

Big waves
Residents of several coastal states have also been warned of rough ocean conditions and waves of up to 4 meters. (Axel Antas-Bergkvist/Cuartoscuro)

“Although it is too soon to determine the location and magnitude of rainfall and wind impacts, interests in these areas should monitor the progress of Hilary and updates to the forecast,” the Hurricane Center said. “Large swells from Hilary will spread northward along the coast of southwestern Mexico and the Baja California Peninsula during the next days.” 

Mexico’s SMN also advised residents to remain aware and follow meteorological updates on the National Water Commission’s (Conagua) website and social media channels, should forecasts change. 

With reporting by El Universal and The Washington Post

5 young men abducted in Jalisco presumed dead

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Jalisco law enforcement have been conducting a search for the missing men. (FGR Jalisco/Twitter)

A horrifying video appears to confirm the murders of at least three of five young men who disappeared in Jalisco last Friday. The two other men are also presumably dead.

Five friends aged between 19 and 22 were apparently abducted Friday in Lagos de Moreno, a municipality in northeastern Jalisco that borders both Guanajuato and Aguascalientes. The abduction is believed to have occurred after they attended a local fair.

Lagos de Moreno victims
The five young men went missing after going to the local fair on Friday night. (Social media)

On Monday, a photograph appeared on social media showing five men kneeling on the ground with tape over their mouths and their hands tied. Two of them had obvious facial injuries, indicating they had been beaten.

A video shows one of the young men – presumably under coercion – beating another of the apparent abductees. Two bloody and lifeless bodies are seen in the foreground of the macabre footage, over which the message “PURO MZ” is superimposed.

The “pure MZ” message is apparently a reference to Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada, a leader of the Sinaloa Cartel, which is engaged in a turf war with the Jalisco New Generation Cartel in the region where the murders occurred.

Blanca Trujillo Cuevas, a state government prosecutor who focuses on missing persons cases, said Tuesday that the families of the five men have seen the photograph and video and told authorities that there is a “high probability” that those who appear are their loved ones.

Jalisco governor Enrique Alfaro (left) met with the mayor of Lagos de Moreno and security officials on Wednesday, saying in a message posted to his social media: “The State Attorney General’s Office continues to make progress in the investigation to understand what is behind this brutal event and find the culprits.” (Enrique Alfaro/Twitter)

Given that they are clearly identifiable in the photo, there would appear to be no doubt that the young men are those who disappeared on Friday: Dante Cedillo Hernández, Roberto Carlos Olmeda, Diego Alberto Lara Santoyo, Jaime Adolfo Martínez Miranda and Uriel Galván. There is no evidence that they had any involvement in organized crime.

Early Tuesday, Jalisco authorities located a burnt-out vehicle that belonged to one of the five men. The remains of at least one person were found in the vehicle, which was abandoned on a road between Lagos de Moreno and the neighboring municipality of Encarnación de Díaz. Authorities said that the remains will undergo testing to determine the number of victims and who they correspond to. Another vehicle used by the men last Friday was located on Sunday.

Jalisco Attorney General Luis Joaquín Méndez told a press conference Tuesday that a blood stain was found at a lookout in Lagos de Moreno to which the men traveled after attending the fair. He also said that authorities had secured a property near where the second vehicle was found. Méndez said that weapons, drugs and license plates of vehicles reported as stolen were found at the property, which may have been used by people involved in the crimes committed against the young men.

Jalisco authorities said they would ask the Federal Attorney General’s Office (FGR) to investigate the case given the likely involvement of organized crime. Méndez said that the search for the missing men will continue as forensic testing of the remains takes place.

One of the vehicles belonging to the victims was recovered by authorities in the search operations on Tuesday. (FGR Jalisco/Twitter)

Jalisco Governor Enrique Alfaro said on Wednesday that he had met with the mayor of Lagos de Moreno and his security cabinet to review the progress in the search for the men.

“At this time that’s the priority and hundreds of officers … are deployed in the region to find them,” he wrote on the social media site X, formerly Twitter.

“The State Attorney General’s Office continues to make progress in the investigation to understand what is behind this brutal event and find the culprits,” Alfaro said.

While the crime is “clearly linked to organized crime, which is a matter of federal purview, we’re going to continue doing our part,” he wrote.

“I hope the FGR and the federal government will do the same,” Alfaro said, adding that the crime has “profoundly hurt Jalisco.”

The case – which triggered a protest in Lagos de Moreno on Sunday – comes after a spate of other heinous crimes in the state, including the murder of eight call center workers in June and a bomb attack in July that killed four police officers and two other people.

Jalisco was the fourth most violent state in the first six months of 2023 with 1,095 homicides, the federal government reported last month.

With reports from Zeta Tijuana, CNN Español, El Financiero, Reforma, El País and AP

AMLO to meet with Biden at Asia-Pacific summit in November

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Joe Biden and AMLO stand in front of a car at Felipe Ángeles airport in January 2023.
President López Obrador says he will confer with Biden while attending the summit in San Francisco in November. (Presidencia México / Cuartoscuro.com)

President López Obrador said Tuesday that he will discuss pan-American economic integration and development with United States President Joe Biden during a bilateral meeting to be held during the 2023 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in San Francisco.

Speaking at his morning press conference, López Obrador said that the bilateral talks will take place during the Nov. 15-17 APEC leaders’ meeting, at which officials of the 21 member economies will be present.

APEC San Francisco graphic
The Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Leaders’ Meeting will be hosted from Nov. 12 to 18 in San Francisco, California this year. (apec2023sf.org)

“What I’m proposing [to Biden] is that we don’t limit ourselves to consolidating the market and economic activity in North America, but rather seek the integration of all the American continent,” he said.

During bilateral talks in January, López Obrador urged Biden to lead a “new policy of economic and social integration on our continent.”

He said Tuesday that economic integration in the Americas is “fundamental” and asserted that the countries of the region “complement each other.”

Economic integration of Western Hemisphere nations would make the Americas a “stronger” and “more important” region of the world, López Obrador said.

The presidents confer.
President López Obrador confers with his U.S. counterpart on a visit last summer to the White House. (Gob MX)

“This is what allowed … the rise of Europe, … first [as the] European Community and then [as] the European Union. That [is what we want] for America, all of the Americas,” he said.

López Obrador also said he would insist on a medium and long-term focus on the “comprehensive development” of the countries of the Americas

“… I’m also suggesting that a development plan can be implemented in all of the Americas, something like the Alliance for Progress,” he said, referring to the regional plan initiated by former U.S. president John F. Kennedy in 1961.

“… In that time due to political issues, ideological issues, two or three countries weren’t included,” López Obrador said, adding that his proposal is for all of the nations of the region to be included.

“[I’m proposing] a plan that we can carry out to attend to the people, to address … the migration phenomenon, so that there is justice … and also to combat violence,” he said.

“All this concerns us a lot. It’s also proven that the best thing is development, the best thing is [economic] growth with wellbeing,” López Obrador said, adding that he believed that an agreement between all the nations of the Americas “can be achieved.”

The president has long advocated integration of and dialogue between all Western Hemisphere countries. He didn’t attend the 2022 Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles because the United States government didn’t invite Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua.

With reports from Expansión and Reforma 

Mexico’s agricultural trade surplus up 8% in first half of year

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Avocados
Avocado export volumes have increased 48% annually, though prices have fallen, according to analysis by an agricultural consulting group. (Hitoshi Nakamura/Unsplash)

Mexico registered an agri-food trade surplus of US $5.3 billion in the first six months of 2023, led by exports of beer, tequila, avocados, tomatoes and berries.

The country exported US $27.5 billion of agri-food produce from January to June, a 5.38% increase from the same period in 2022 – the highest figure registered in 31 years.

Modelo beer
Beer topped the list in export revenue, bringing in US $2.97 billion. (James Kern/Unsplash)

Meanwhile, agri-food imports totaled US $22.2 billion, according to figures from the Agriculture and Rural Development Ministry (Sader). The resulting trade surplus showed a year-on-year increase of US $402 million, or 8.19%. It is the ninth consecutive year that Mexico has registered a trade surplus in the agri-food sector.

The total surplus was made up of US $1.3 billion in the agricultural and fishing sector and  US $4 billion in the agro-industrial sector, which produces processed foodstuffs and other agricultural products.

Nearly half of all agri-food export revenue in 2023 came from just six products: beer, tequila, berries, tomatoes, avocados and beef.

Beer and tequila maintained their place as Mexico’s leading agri-food exports, generating US $2.97 billion and US $2.35 billion, respectively.

Strawberries
Mexico’s berry industry, which topped the list of exports in January and February, slipped to fifth in the mid-year rankings. (silviacozzi/Depositphotos)

Avocados – sometimes dubbed “green gold” due to their high retail prices and relatively low production costs – generated US $1.6 billion, following a 12-month period in which Mexico exported a record 1.13 million tonnes of the fruit to the United States.

Avocado export volumes showed an annual increase of 48.8%, according to an analysis by the Agricultural Markets Consulting Group (GCMA). However, there was a 52% drop in the price of the fruit, threatening its place as Mexico’s top unprocessed agricultural export by revenue.

Tomatoes came a close fourth in the agri-food ranking with US $1.5 billion of exports, according to Sader, while strawberries and raspberries came fifth with US $1.28 billion, despite originally topping the ranking in the first two months of this year.

Exports which registered the highest growth were soybean oil (163%), live cattle (52.8%), butter, fat and cocoa oil (47.6%), coffee, tea and yerba maté (39.3%) and pasta (35%).

With reports from T21 and El Universal

Wendy Guevara, a transgender woman, wins popular reality series

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Wendy Guevara doing make-up
Guevara is a native of Guanajuato state and had already amassed a huge following on Instagram prior to appearing on the 10-week reality show. (VICKY LÓPEZ/CUARTOSCURO.COM)

A 30-year-old native of Guanajuato state is the first transgender woman to win a reality television series in Mexico.

Wendy Guevara, an influencer with over 6 million followers on Instagram, was one of 14 contestants on “La casa de los famosos México,” a Mexican version of the “Celebrity Big Brother” reality program.

Wendy Guevara
With a total of 18.2 million votes, Guevara was declared the winner of “La Casa de las Famosos” earlier this week. (Wendy Guevara)

The finale was broadcast Sunday, with Guevara receiving 18.2 million viewers’ votes to win the 10-week contest.

“I’m shaking, … I can’t believe it, my God!” she exclaimed after she was declared the winner.

Guevara, who was born in León, Guanajuato, will take home 2.6 million pesos (US $151,700) once tax is deducted from her 4-million-peso prize, according to a report by the newspaper El Financiero.

In a video posted to Instagram before the inaugural season of the reality program began, she said she would pay off her home and “help my parents and sisters obviously” if she won the top prize.

Wendy Guevara mural
Guevara has become a public icon during her run on the show. (Rogelio Morales/Cuartoscuro)

During the 2 1/2 months that the program went to air, Guevera “won over fans and supporters with her captivating personality,” NBC News reported.

She and her celebrity housemates participated in weekly challenges after which viewers voted to evict one of the tenants of “La casa de los famosos.”

The runner-up was Peruvian TV host, actor and former soccer player Nicola Porcella, who also stayed in the celebrity abode until the 71st and final day of filming. Entrepreneur and influencer Alfonso “Poncho” de Nigris came third and Sergio Mayer, an actor, singer and former lawmaker with the ruling Morena party, finished fourth.

The show was a ratings hit, making Guevara’s victory as a transgender woman even more impactful.

“In a country plagued by prejudice and discrimination, a trans woman today won the most popular reality show with the votes and love of the audience,” said a user of the social media site X, formerly known as Twitter.

The X user @albertxrex, who identifies as non-binary, added that Guevara’s victory should be “an invitation to embrace trans people, listen to their stories and respect their lives.”

With reports from NBC News, El Universal and El Financiero 

La Luz del Mundo church gathering in Guadalajara draws 500,000

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Luz del mundo Guadalajara gathering
An estimated 500,000 faithful turned out for the first gathering of the La Luz del Mundo megachurch since the COVID-19 pandemic, and the arrest and imprisonment of leader Naasón Joaquín García for child sex offenses. (Fernando Carranza Garcia/Cuartoscuro)

In its first large-scale event in Guadalajara since the Covid-19 pandemic began in 2020 — and since its leader was convicted last June after pleading guilty in Los Angeles to three charges of sexual abuse of minors — the La Luz del Mundo (Light of the World) megachurch drew an estimated 500,000 people to a religious ceremony on Monday, according to media reports.

During the so-called Santa Cena, a ceremony that recalls the death of Jesus, parishioners of the Guadalajara-based evangelical church listened to a recorded audio message from their spiritual leader Naasón Joaquín García, who faced 23 charges of sex crimes against children — including multiple counts of rape and conspiracy to engage in human trafficking and child pornography. Joaquín was arrested at Los Angeles International Airport in 2019.

Luz del mundo international chapters
Church dignitaries from 60 countries were in attendance at the gathering. (Fernando Carranza Garcia/Cuartoscuro)

In exchange for prosecutors dropping many of the charges, including the most serious, Joaquín, 54, pleaded guilty last year to two acts of forcible oral sex with minors and performing a lewd act on a child. He was sentenced in June to 16 years and 8 months, a term he currently is serving at a state prison south of Fresno, California.

In his taped remarks Monday, delivered with the same vigor in which he gave his sermons in person, the so-called “Apostle of Christ” said he prays to God “for those who were deceived and confused” and for “those dominated by the flesh.” 

“There is no sadder and pitiful state,” he said, “than that of the sinner plunged into the field of guilt, the abyss of malice, all due to a whim of his flesh, due to an unhealthy whim and a soft deception that brought him the worst evils, a momentary pleasure that damaged him all his life.” He added that he turns to God seeking “mercy and forgiveness.”

The ceremony marked the first in-person gathering in more than 2 1/2 years at La Luz del Mundo’s main headquarters in Guadalajara’s Hermosa Provincia neighborhood. The streets around the 80-meter (262-foot) tall white temple were crowded with people, though few images of Joaquín – especially those alluding to his innocence, something which many believers still maintain – remain on nearby facades and walls.

Luz del Mundo HQ
The imposing main church of Luz del Mundo, where the majority of the 500,000 attendees gathered. (Policía Guadalajara/Twitter)

According to one report, some 300,000 people from 60 countries were expected for what used to be an annual gathering called Holy Convocation. Another advance report estimated 400,000, but on Monday, several news sources reported that approximately 500,000 people had attended, primarily at the church’s main location, but also at two other sites in Guadalajara. That figure was confirmed by church spokesperson Eliezer Gutiérrez Avelar, who added that most attendees were Mexican nationals.

La Luz del Mundo was founded in 1926 by the late Aarón Joaquín González, the grandfather of the convicted Joaquín. The faithful practice a form of Restorationist theology, which hearkens back to early Christianity. Female members follow a dress code that includes the wearing of long skirts and head coverings during religious services, and are seated apart from men.

The Holy Convocation continued Tuesday with the farewell to national and international delegates.

With reports from Informador, Milenio and López Dóriga Digital

The legend of Pancho Villa’s hidden treasure lives on

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Pancho Villa portrait
Pancho Villa, the famed Mexico Revolutionary leader, allegedly hid an enormous stash of gold in the desert between El Paso and Mexico - though to this day it has never been found.(Library of Congress/Wikimedia)

Francisco “Pancho” Villa, — born José Doroteo Arango Arámbula and known as the Northern Centaur — was the leader of the División del Norte (Northern Division) during the Mexican Revolution. Villa is said to have been a ruthless soldier and a thief.  

The history of the 19th and early 20th centuries in Mexico is packed with revolutions and counter-revolutions. One of the most popular stories from this period is the legend of Pancho Villa and his missing treasure, thought to be buried somewhere in the Sierra Madre mountains.

Pancho Villa
Pancho Villa is one of the best-known of the many fascinating protagonists of the Mexican Revolution. (D.W. Hoffman/Wikimedia)

It was common at the time for revolutionary leaders to protect their plunder by burying it in different locations. Even wealthy landowners buried their money underground to safeguard it from bandits.

Ever since the Mexican Revolution, people have searched for Villa’s buried treasure, which was plundered from local towns and villages throughout northern Mexico.

During the 30-year presidency of Porfirio Díaz, money was concentrated in the hands of wealthy landowners. After Francisco I. Madero’s appeal to begin a revolution in 1910, Villa decided to join the fight.  

Money for armies was difficult to acquire, and as a result, many revolutionaries depended on looting to fund their operations. Villa may have been the most brazen and successful in funding his efforts this way.

Pancho Villa and his generals, photographed in 1913
Villa with his generals. From left to right: Rodolfo Fierro, Pancho Villa, Torribio Ortega and Juan Medina, photographed in 1913. (W.H. Horne/Wikimedia)

There are two documented accounts of significant amounts of money being stolen by Villa and his men. 

In 1999, the University of California, Berkeley, released a letter that was among the papers of Silvestre Terrazas — Villa’s secretary of finance and former governor of Chihuahua.  The letter — written by Wells Fargo Bank in El Paso, Texas — details the looting of one of their trains by Villa and 200 of his men.  They absconded with 122 ingots of silver — estimated to be worth at least US $3.4 million today.

Three weeks after the heist, Villa made a secret deal with Wells Fargo to return the silver for the sum of US $50,000 (the equivalent of US $1 million today). Villa returned only 96 bars of silver, leaving 26 bars unaccounted for.

Another account says that in December of 1913, Villa and his men captured Chihuahua and robbed the Bank of Mexico located in the city. The director of the bank, Luis Terrazas, hid the bank’s gold in one of the columns of the building for protection and then fled to the British consulate for safety.  

Luis Terraza
Luis Terrazas was one of the most prominent Chihuahuans of his day, and had several run-ins with Villa throughout his life. (Library of Congress/Wikimedia)

Villa captured Terrazas and took him from the consulate. His men then tore apart the bank until they located the gold – worth US $6.3 million – which was hidden in a column. The gold was never recovered.

Historians continue to scour the papers of Villa’s accomplices to try and discover more clues to the hidden treasure’s location. Several are housed at the University of California. The University of Texas holds the papers that once belonged to Lázaro de la Garza, who controlled the acquisition of arms and munitions from the United States for Villa and his army.

The United States National Archives also contains the FBI files on the smuggling, money transfers, and financial activities of Felix Sommerfeld — a German spy in Mexico — who also acquired arms for Villa.

Rumors abound over where Villa might have buried his hoard. Some think it was hidden in remote places in Durango, Chihuahua or Coahuila. Historian Carlos Castañón cites Torreón, Coahuila, as a possibility — it was a center of commerce and transportation during the Porfiriato, making it attractive to mercenaries.

The gold of Pancho Villa movie poster
“The Treasure of Pancho Villa,” a 1955 film mythologizing the hidden hoard – and starring Villa’s youngest son – which has become one of the most popular Mexican revolutionary legends. (Benito Movie Poster)

The La Laguna area was taken over at least four times and looted for large sums of cash, gold, and silver. It is said that people in the region have dug hundreds of holes searching for the treasure. Searches of entire towns in northern Mexico have turned up nothing.

Another account says the gold was hidden in Tepuxta, north of Mazatlán, in a cavern used by Villa as a hideaway for him and his men.

The last documented sighting of Villa’s plunder or at least part of it – was in 1915. In November that year, the El Paso Times newspaper detailed the raid of The Villa Stash House — as the FBI termed it — in El Paso, Texas.  

The house used by Villa, his brother Hipólito and their wives was raided by Treasury Department agents based on the belief that it contained items smuggled into the United States.

The Villa Stash House
The Villa Stash House – where some of Pancho’s legendary gains are rumored to be hidden. (kisselpaso)

The agents said they were tipped off by the purchase of a large safe by Mrs. Hipólito Villa.  Inside the safe they found US $30,000 (almost US $1 million today) in diamond jewelry and more than $500,000 in US currency and gold coins (more than US $15 million today) – along with a solid gold medal inscribed: “To General Francisco Villa from the Constitutional Government for personal valor.”

The agents confiscated the jewelry and a French touring car parked outside but later returned them by court order, as there was no way to establish where they were purchased.

Since Villa’s death in 1923, treasure hunters have searched the Sierra Madre seeking the loot. Emil Holmdahl — the soldier-of-fortune who is suspected of stealing Villa’s skull from his grave and selling it to the “Skulls and Bones” secret society at Yale — spent decades searching for the hidden treasure but never found it.

The Villa Stash House has also been searched thoroughly. The abandoned house was purchased by entrepreneur Enrique Guajardo who began renovating it to turn it into a tourist attraction.  During the renovation, he discovered a place hidden beneath the floorboards that he believes was used to hide Villa’s stash. But yet again, there was no sign of the treasure.

Emil Holmdahl
Emil Holmdahl in the regalia of an insurgent fighter. He spent years searching for Villa’s treasure. (Wikimedia Commons)

In 2020, the public gained access to the Villa Stash House, with a grand opening attended by curious historians from both sides of the border and a number of treasure seekers. Last year, a Las Cruces company, Construction Survey Technologies, was brought in to search the area where the house is located, using ground-penetrating radar (GPR) and other cutting-edge technology used for subsurface mapping and excavation.  

But after over 100 years of searching in many different locations, Villa’s treasure remains elusive.

Sheryl Losser is a former public relations executive and professional researcher.  She spent 45 years in national politics in the United States. She moved to Mazatlán in 2021 and works part-time doing freelance research and writing.

Ticketmaster Mexico to switch to digital ticketing

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Ticketmaster Tickets
Ticketmaster Mexico has announced that it will retire paper tickets in favor of a more secure digital option. (Fernando Carranza Garcia/Cuartoscuro)

Ticketmaster Mexico will replace paper tickets with a new form of digital ticket, which it hopes will combat issues with reselling, duplicates and fakes.

Event-goers will be able to buy tickets using the SafeTix app, via a user account verified with an email address and phone number. The app then creates a digital ticket that can be displayed on a mobile phone, with a dynamic barcode that changes every 15 seconds to prevent counterfeiting.

Government officials initially accused ticket sales and distribution company Ticketmaster of overselling the Dec. 10 and 11 Bad Bunny concerts in Mexico City.
Ticketmaster is implementing the new app to cut down on reselling and fraudulent tickets, as well as make the customer experience smoother. (Depositphotos)

Ticketmaster launches the new system in Mexico after it was forced to pay more than 18 million pesos (US $1 million) to 2,155 ticket holders who were denied entry to a Bad Bunny concert at Mexico City’s Azteca Stadium in December.

The venue saw dangerous crushes and repeated failures of the ticketing system, due to what Ticketmaster claimed was an unprecedented number of fake tickets. The company avoided a fine from the Federal Consumer Protection Agency (Profeco) by agreeing to pay disappointed ticket holders 100% of the ticket price, plus 20% compensation.

“The Ticketmaster SafeTix ticket is part of the technological and service evolution that the company is making for the benefit of consumers,” Ana María Arroyo, CEO of Ticketmaster Mexico, said at a press conference on Monday. “We seek to close spaces to illegal tickets and protect the user experience.”  

Arroyo took over direction of the company in January, tasked with promoting technological change. At Monday’s press conference, Arroyo explained that users will initially be able to choose between paper or digital tickets, but that paper tickets will be phased out over the coming months as people become familiarized with the new system.

The company faced significant backlash after thousands were denied entry to a concert by singer Bad Bunny due to what Ticketmaster called “an unprecedented number of fake tickets.” (Mario Jasso/Cuartoscuro)

“Migration [to digital tickets] is progressive and we expect it to be quite rapid,” she said. “It’s not a transition that we’re going to force, it’s a decision that users are going to make.”

As well as greater security, the SafeTix app offers other benefits, including a help button, advance registration for events, and improved systems for buying tickets.

“The virtual queue gives clarity and certainty to fans of the place they occupy for the acquisition of their tickets,” explained Alejandro Ordaz, Ticketmaster’s deputy director of marketing.

In-person ticketing for Ticketmaster Mexico currently requires customers to physically visit a Ticketmaster location after making an online purchase, often having to wait a significant length of time in order to obtain their printed tickets.

The SafeTix system is already in use in the United States and Canada, where about 20 million digital tickets were scanned last year. It will be implemented in Mexico alongside a new event entry system, called TM1 Entry, which speeds up the reading of legitimate tickets and facilitates the identification of fakes. 

With reports from El Universal, Reforma and Expansión