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How safe really is Mexico for expats? A message from Travis Bembenek, CEO of Mexico News Daily

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A white woman strolls the streets of Condesa in Mexico City
Most people who have spent time in Mexico have heard the question: Is it safe? Mexico News Daily's new index sets out to provide an answer based on hard data and real expat experiences. (Shutterstock)

The first quarter of 2026 is over, and the team at MND is very proud of what we have accomplished so far this year. Before I get to something I genuinely need your help with, let me share one number that stopped me in my tracks this week.

In the first three months of 2026, MND’s website, YouTube channel and social media platforms combined for over 10 MILLION reads and views. To put that in perspective, that’s a 10X increase in our reach since my wife and I acquired MND three years ago. Our goal from Day 1 was to reach 10 million people per month — and we are well on our way to hitting it. Thank you for supporting our independent, advertisement-free, agenda-free news platform.

Now — here’s why I’m writing today.

You’ve been asked the question by family and friends. You know the one. Do you feel safe living in, traveling to, or doing business in Mexico? For me personally, it is the single most common question I get asked. I’d be willing to bet it’s the same for you. Think about your own experience — has it come up at dinner tables, on phone calls, in text threads with worried relatives?

And here’s the question I keep coming back to: Would those same people ask you that if you lived in France? Or Italy? Almost certainly not. In fact, not long ago, a friend from Israel told me that even as conflict consumed the Middle East region, his friends kept asking him if he felt safe living in Mexico. Let that sink in for a moment.

So why does Mexico have this narrative? I think it comes down to two things.

First — Mexico does have elevated crime rates in certain cities and states. That’s real and it deserves honest acknowledgment. We at MND have never shied away from covering it, including our coverage of the fall of El Mencho in February, when foreign headlines ranged from alarmist to outright fabricated — including AI-generated images of burning airports that never happened.

Second — and this is where it gets frustrating — international media consistently and selectively focuses on violence in Mexico while often stripping away the context. The result is that millions of people carry a mental picture of Mexico’s safety that bears almost no resemblance to the lived experience of the people actually here. This is, in fact, the reason my wife and I bought Mexico News Daily in the first place. As I wrote in 2024, many media outlets have abandoned impartial coverage in favor of sensationalist stories and opinion masquerading as news. Mexico has been one of the greatest victims of that trend. And as Charlotte Smith wrote powerfully on MND just weeks ago — after watching lies outpace truth on social media in real time — “you don’t get to lie about my home.”

The Mexican government publishes detailed crime and safety perception statistics — but logically and understandably, the focus is on Mexicans living in Mexico. But what about the 2 million-plus expats who call Mexico home? What about the 30 million-plus foreigners who visit each year? What are their real risks? What do they actually perceive? Where are those risks highest — and what does daily life genuinely feel like for the people living it?

Nobody was systematically answering those questions. Until now. MND is launching the MND Expat Safety Perceptions Index™ — a quarterly survey conducted exclusively with expats, immigrants, and foreign nationals living in Mexico. Every quarter, we’ll ask the same questions to thousands of expats living across the country, then analyze and publish the findings as a formal, citable index. This is the kind of fact-based, context-rich resource that I believe the expat community has needed for years — and that the broader conversation about Mexico desperately lacks.

Here is what this will give you:

  • Real data on what expats across Mexico are actually experiencing and perceiving — not what headlines say, not what government surveys of Mexican citizens show.
  • City-by-city breakdowns so you can see how your community compares to others.
  • Trend tracking over time — so we can all see whether things are genuinely getting better, worse, or staying the same.
  • A fact-based resource you can share with worried family and friends — something credible to point to when the question comes up at the next dinner table.

But this only works if you participate. The more expats we hear from across more cities, the more powerful and representative this index becomes. And it takes you less than 5 minutes, four times a year.

If you are an expat, immigrant or foreign national living in Mexico:

CLICK HERE TO JOIN THE MND Expat Perceptions Index SURVEY PANEL — THE FIRST SURVEY GOES OUT NEXT WEEK

(It’s anonymous, takes under 5 minutes, and you can opt out at any time.)

And one more request: Please share this column with expat friends living in Mexico. The strength of this index is directly proportional to how many voices it includes. Your network will help make this index truly representative of the expat experience nationwide.

I’ve spent nearly 30 years living, working and building things in Mexico. I started a podcast named “Confidently Wrong” precisely because I’ve watched smart, well-intentioned people be confidently, completely wrong about this country — about its cities, its people, its risks and its rewards. This is our most direct attempt yet to replace confident wrongness with something better: real data from real people living real lives here. As I noted when examining the narrative being pushed around cartel violence, mainstream media continues to make Mexico sound more dangerous than it is — and in an era where AI can fabricate images of burning airports and deepfakes can manufacture “eyewitness” video of events that never occurred, the only reliable antidote is hard data collected from real people on the ground.

Imagine a world where the conversation about safety in Mexico is actually grounded in reality. A world where your family and friends asking “But is it safe?” can be pointed to hard data from thousands of expats, instead of an influencer looking for clicks.

Thank you for reading MND — and for helping us build something that will benefit every expat in this country, every future expat considering the move, and Mexico itself.

Travis Bembenek is the CEO of Mexico News Daily and has been living, working or playing in Mexico for nearly 30 years.

Campo Alto at Querencia: How a golf course is built in Los Cabos

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Querencia Los Cabos
Campo Alto golf course at Querencia is scheduled to open by the end of 2026. (Querencia)

Great golf courses are years in the making. That was certainly the case with the first golf course at Querencia in Los Cabos, Campo Bajo, which opened to acclaim in 2001, thanks to the first international design from legendary course architect Tom Fazio. 

“Once I experienced this land, I knew it was an extraordinary setting for world-class golf,” Fazio told Golf.com in 2019. “I’ve designed the course to maximize views of downtown San José del Cabo and the Sea of Cortés and provide a fair balance of risks and rewards.”

Golf Digest agreed when it declared Campo Bajo No. 73 of the World’s 100 Greatest Golf Courses for 2022-2023, noting that the routing “wanders the rugged terrain and low-growth vegetation of a high desert plateau above the Sea of Cortés. Holes jump across or sidle up to the edges of rocky canyons and arroyos, with rippling, humpbacked fairways and a number of greens tucked behind stone outcroppings.”

By then, however, another course was also under construction at Querencia, and it too has now been years in the making.

The differences between Campo Bajo and Campo Alto

When I recently visited Campo Alto, the course, as one might imagine, given its expected opening by the end of this year, was a hive of activity. Some 80 or so workers swarmed across the property, busying themselves in projects large and small with a bewildering variety of machinery. The first 13 holes on the course have already been grassed and look almost ready to play. Not so the five dramatic finishing holes, which are still very much a work in progress.

Given Campo Bajo’s world-class reputation and Tom Fazio’s return, one might think that Campo Alto will be something of a sequel. But that was never the plan. While Campo Bajo is immaculately landscaped, from its colorful bougainvillea to the palm trees that artfully frame many greens, Campo Alto will showcase more of the natural sweep of Baja California Sur terrain, including voluminous elevation changes, as the course winds through ridgeways, valleys and canyons.

What sets Campo Alto apart

According to Fazio, Campo Alto will also be more of a second-shot golf course than Campo Bajo, with smaller and less undulating greens. Even the grass will be different. Campo Baja has, since its 2018 renovation, featured Tifgreen 328 Bermuda for its fairways, TifEagle Bermuda on the greens. These are excellent fine-textured choices, but Campo Alto’s Bermuda TifTuf, a hybrid developed in 2014 at the University of Georgia, has an even better sustainability profile and requires significantly lower water usage. 

The two courses do have commonalities. Where the water comes from, for example. Querencia has an agreement with the city of San José del Cabo to receive its gently used wastewater, which it then filters and recycles as “greywater” for irrigation. So there are no demands on local water resources from Campos Alto or Bajo.

Each course also boasts spectacular ocean views. Campo Bajo, famously, has ocean views from every hole on its front nine. Campo Alto, meanwhile, promises jaw-dropping vistas of its own.

2022

How does one start work on a golf course in Los Cabos? The team at Querencia began the process for Campo Alto in early 2022, when it hosted Tom Fazio and his team for the initial site visits and the development of a routing plan. 

“What I really do is to first analyze whether a piece of land is good or bad,” Fazio said of this initial phase in an interview with Cigar Aficionado. “I don’t immediately see golf holes with bunkers, greens, etc. Instead, I see a piece of paper that has natural contour lines on it, that has restrictions, property lines on it; then I start to think, ‘Where do the holes go? If they have elevation, valleys, how should they be sculptured, and where should the green settings or tees be?’ Determining where holes fit the best is easy, like breathing to me. I just do it, for it’s life, living, surviving.”

2024

The land for Campo Alto, like that at Campo Baja — sourced from the 2,000 available acres at Querencia, just outside San José del Cabo — is extraordinary. However, work could not begin in earnest until the permits were approved, which happened in early 2024. With this crucial stage completed, heavy machinery was purchased and the routing and irrigation plans finalized as clearing began. Then came the heavy earthworks, moving and shaping the landscape to bring Fazio’s vision to life. 

“On every hole, you want people to say, ‘Wow, I can’t wait to play this,’” Fazio enthused to Golf.com in 2024. “And when they’re finished, you want their first thought to be, ‘Can we go play again?’”

2025

In addition to grassing the first nine holes, drainage and irrigation works began in early 2025. They wouldn’t be complete until a year later. Part of this process was the pump station start-up, which can pull from water stores and push water through the network of pipes to any part of the golf course. This crucial step was accomplished at Campo Alto in July 2025. 

2026

More remains to be done before Campo Alto opens later this year. Irrigation and drainage works have to be completed, the final five holes have to be grassed (which they will be in May), and numerous details and finishing touches have to be added — including the comfort stations, a Los Cabos specialty. 

Once all the work is finished and Campo Alto at Querencia is ready, then it can start earning its own acclaim. The first and most important part of this is winning over Querencia residents, who now have two courses on-site to choose from. That should be easy.

“Because there are a lot of elevation changes through valleys and ridges, there is a lot of movement to the land and natural definition to the holes,” Fazio explains. “That creates interesting drama and variety.”  

In fact, the new course is sure to attract new residents to the private master-planned community, including at the 54 new homesites in La Cresta, which feature striking ridgeline views of Campo Alto as well as the picturesque surrounding landscape.

Step two is garnering the good opinion of the golf world at large. Links Magazine has already named Campo Alto one of the top international course openings for 2026. More raves are sure to follow.

“As an architect, you never want to repeat yourself, and we haven’t here. The common denominator is the ocean. That’s what’s really special.”  

Chris Sands is a writer and editor for Mexico News Daily, and the former Cabo San Lucas local expert for the USA Today travel website 10 Best and writer of Fodor’s Los Cabos travel guidebook. He’s a contributor to numerous websites and publications, including The San Diego Union-Tribune, Marriott Bonvoy Traveler, Forbes Travel Guide, Porthole Cruise and Travel, and Cabo Living.

The MND News Quiz of the Week: April 4th

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News quiz
(Mexico News Daily)

What's been going on in the news this week? Our weekly quiz is here to keep you on top of what’s happening in Mexico.

Get informed, stay smart.

Are you ready?  Let’s see where you rank vs. our expert community!

Which member of President Claudia Sheinbaum's cabinet resigned this week?

The Health Ministry announced that Mexico's measles cases are falling thanks to how many vaccines administered since mid-February?

What Mexican resort locale did we report was expecting 90% hotel occupancy this week, thanks to an influx of spring breakers?

AtlasIntel's March survey has found Claudia Sheinbaum's presidential approval rating to be at its lowest ever — at what percentage?

A wildlife sanctuary's surveillance video revealed poachers stealing turtle eggs, prompting a Profepa investigation in which state?

Which of Mexico's economic sectors grew in exports to the US by 145% in 2025, taking new auto exports off the No. 1 spot for the first time?

Which food staple is fraudently mislabeled as something else about 33% of the time that it's sold in Mexico, according to a new study?

According to a Mexican think tank report, Mexico's fertility rate has starkly decreased since the 1960s. Which is NOT a reason for this decrease?

President Sheinbaum confirmed a viral video of a woman tanning on a national monument was real. On which national property did it occur?

Mexico's number of airplane passengers dropped in January and February, but which airport had a surprise 18% jump in passenger numbers?

The Holy Week tradition that keeps Mexican residents united in San Miguel de Allende

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A Viernes de Dolores altar to the Virgin Mary is on display in a San Miguel de Allende resident's garage. The creator, a Mexican woman in jeans, a jacket and cap, is standing by the altar with her young son, also dressed in warm clothes. He is holding a small tray of popsicles to give to visitors.
Making an altar to the Virgin Mary in one's home and then opening that altar up to community viewing on the Friday of Sorrows is a San Miguel de Allende Catholic tradition passed down through generations. (María Ruiz)

Each year, at the beginning of Holy Week, the homes of San Miguel residents get ready to open their doors to visitors on the day known to Catholics as the Friday of Sorrows, or Viernes de Dolores. On this day, two days before Palm Sunday, the scent of chamomile mingles with that of tuberoses and the white and purple flowers that decorate the altars. 

At the center of each display — carefully assembled by the families — stands the image of Our Lady of Sorrows, the undisputed protagonist of this celebration.

Mexican woman looking out from behind a curtain with a lithograph of the Passion of Christ printed on it. In front of the curtain is a Friday of Sorrows altar.
Altars like these are less common than they were for centuries in San Miguel’s downtown, where gentrification has pushed out families with generations of history in the city center. (María Ruiz)

A tradition binding a displaced community 

In the afternoon, neighbors go out to walk the streets, visiting house after house to admire the altars. In exchange for their visit, they receive a refreshing treat: a glass of flavored water, a popsicle, an ice cream cone, a piece of candied chilacayote squash, or a delicious capirotada bread pudding. In this way, Friday of Sorrows becomes not only an act of faith, but also a ritual of togetherness that has kept San Miguel families united for generations.

For as long as I can remember, this has been one of my favorite traditions. At first, I was excited about the idea of collecting popsicles for every altar I visited. Over the years, however, I learned to appreciate its mystical essence: the warmth of the candles, the fragrance of the flowers, the songs playing over the loudspeakers and that unique feeling of being invited into the intimacy of a neighbor opening their home to you.

Today, the tradition faces new challenges: Rising housing costs, tourism and gentrification have displaced many San Miguel de Allende families from the downtown area and, with them, part of Holy Week’s original spirit. 

Although some houses — such as those on Aldama, Terraplén, or Tenerías streets — still preserve the magic, other emblematic ones, like that of the Dobarganes family — which had their altar in the patio of their house on Correo and Recreo, with its famous hand on the door — are now hotels that no longer set up their altar.

This year, the atmosphere changed even more with a salsa show organized in the city’s main plaza, the Jardín Principal, breaking with the calm and mysticism that characterize the Friday of Sorrows. While tourists enjoyed an ordinary Friday in San Miguel, locals tried to find their identity amid the hubbub.

Tourism and popularity with foreigners has brought prosperity but also disorienting changes to San Miguel de Allende’s Mexican residents. (María Ruiz)

And then an inevitable question arises: how can we keep this tradition and its deeper meaning alive? To understand this, I spoke with Francisco Mota, creator of the page Memoria San Miguel, who completed a graduate degree in Territory, Tourism and Heritage at Benemérita Universidad Autonoma de Puebla and is a San Miguel de Allende native. He shared with me the history, the symbols and the value that this celebration holds for the community.

What is the Friday of Sorrows? 

Viernes de Dolores (Friday of Sorrows) is a Catholic tradition that recalls the seven sorrows suffered by the Virgin Mary during the passion and death of Jesus Christ. Celebrated on the Friday before Palm Sunday, it marks the beginning of Holy Week in the liturgical calendar. This practice arrived in Mexico during the Viceregal period and took root especially in the central states — Guanajuato, Querétaro, Aguascalientes, Tlaxcala and Jalisco — while also remaining very strong in regions of Oaxaca and Chihuahua.

In San Miguel de Allende, the tradition has been documented since the 18th century, when the city was one of the main textile centers of New Spain and Our Lady of Sorrows was named patron saint of the weavers’ guild. It is no coincidence that the chapel of Our Lady of Sorrows is located precisely in the old neighborhood of shawlmakers and cambaya weavers, which extended around Barranca Street.

According to Mota, the altars for Viernes de Dolores have preserved their essential elements, although they have also incorporated new ones in recent decades. A distinctive hallmark of San Miguel is its use of “carpets” made of thousands of aromatic herbs in altars and processions. Relatively recently, if we consider that this has been a living tradition in the city for three centuries, carpets of painted sawdust have also been added.

Our Lady of Sorrows’ altars: Each detail a symbol

Every detail on these altars carries religious symbolism — from the flowers and food items chosen to the colors used. (María Ruiz)

Our Lady of Sorrows is the main figure of the altar. This is an image of Mary dressed in mourning, wearing a blue or purple mantle and a sorrowful expression and, often, bearing one or seven daggers that pierce her heart, symbolizing the sorrows that accompanied the passion of Jesus. This imagery was very widespread in the 18th-century Hispanic world.

The altar is set on a table covered with a cloth and enriched with a series of symbolic elements: 

  • Bitter oranges with little flags of golden paper allude to Mary’s heart pierced by bitterness.
  • Wheat sprouted in the dark, which must appear yellow, represents Christ as the hope of life and resurrection.
  • The purple color in cloths, backdrops and papel picado expresses mourning and penitence. In San Miguel, the use of carpets made of chamomile, fennel and mastranto  — aromatic and medicinal herbs that fill the space with fragrance —  is also typical.

Finally, the altar is lit with candles or votive candles, a metaphor for the light of faith that accompanies sorrow. The altars are opened to the public in the afternoon of the Friday before Palm Sunday. Hosts offer a glass of fresh water, ice cream, an ice pop, capirotada or candied chilacayote — small delicacies that transform Mary’s sorrow into shared sweetness.

Tourism, gentrification and displacement 

Viernes de Dolores is, above all, a popular and domestic celebration: It survives wherever the families of San Miguel live. Each altar reflects the personality of a household and the fabric of a neighborhood. 

A Mexican man and woman and a teenage girl next to them stand in front of a church in San Miguel de Allende, looking at a niche with a statue of the Virgin Mary and adorned with flowers.
Viernes de Dolores is an important feast day in San Miguel de Allende, where many longtime residents are devout practicing Catholics. (María Ruiz)

As San Miguel’s Historic Center has emptied of residents and is increasingly oriented toward tourism and short‑term rentals, home altars have decreased in this part of the city. Many of the most beloved ones now persist only in memory. However, the tradition does not disappear: It moves. 

In recent decades, altars have flourished in neighborhoods outside the city center, such as Guadalupe, San Antonio, San Rafael and Infonavit Allende. Viernes de Dolores moves with its people and seeks new spaces where it can take root once again.

Viernes de Dolores offers anyone the chance to experience San Miguel in a hospitable, family atmosphere. Opening one’s front door to strangers and offering them something to eat or drink, without expecting anything in return, is a simple gesture that reminds us how urgent it is to trust one another, to weave bonds with our neighbors, to acknowledge each other and greet each other.

It also invites us to look back and acknowledge the work of the wool and cotton weavers who gave renown and prosperity to this viceregal city. Without their craft, the architectural beauty of San Miguel simply would not exist as we know it. 

Today, few of these artists remain, and it is urgent to create spaces where their guild is recognized as one of the fundamental pillars of the city’s history.

What the day represents 

Residents preparing San Miguel de Allende’s streets with colorful carpets of flower petals, sawdust and other materials last week in the city center, in honor of Viernes de Dolores. (Siente San Miguel/Facebook)

In many cities, traditions like Viernes de Dolores survive only behind museum glass. San Miguel de Allende, by contrast, still celebrates its traditions in the streets, in patios and in living rooms, with festivities that are two, three or even four centuries old. 

This speaks to the deep roots of its inhabitants and to a capacity for resilience that has carried them through wars, epidemics, droughts, migration and crises that at various points nearly turned the town into an empty place. Keeping these practices alive is not just a matter of nostalgia: It means caring for a community network, a tradition that has allowed the city to rise again and again.

“Setting up the altar means continuing a chain of family memory. It means preserving a custom that my mother, Guadalupe, instilled in me when I was a child and that she, in turn, learned from aunts and grandmothers who lived on Loreto and Barranca Streets,” said Mota. “As I prepare the altar, I remember the afternoons when I helped her; although she is no longer here, I feel her presence among the flowers, the scents of the herbs and the wax sculpture she commissioned for our home.”

Tourist cities like San Miguel de Allende run the risk of sacrificing their identity in exchange for pretty but empty backdrops, designed for the perfect photo rather than for everyday life. When traditions are shaped only to please visitors, they cease to be community rituals and become mere scenery.

This phenomenon is not unique to San Miguel: it is repeated in many destinations around the world. That is why, faced with the city’s enormous popularity, the community must remain firm in protecting what makes it unique and what, paradoxically, is what attracts those who choose to live here.

In times marked by media saturation, war, climate crisis, political uncertainty, the irruption of artificial intelligence and an excess of digital life, it is vital to have real spaces in which to disconnect from the noise and return to what is essential. Traditions like Viernes de Dolores offer exactly that: a reason to go out into the street, look others in the eye, share food, stories and silences. Ultimately, they are a way to remember that we are not alone.

María Ruiz is the Director of Digital Marketing at Mexico News Daily. She enjoys photographing her hometown of San Miguel de Allende in her spare time.

Dueling skyscrapers: Monterrey’s Torre Rise will soon pass the T.OP Tower 1 as Mexico’s tallest building

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Monterrey skyscrapers
An artist rendering shows how the two buildings will align once the new construction is finished, giving a preview of how the two skyscrapers will dominate downtown Monterrey. (risetower.mx)

Three years and nine months after its builders went to work, the under-construction Monterrey skyscraper known as Torre Rise has reached the height (305 meters) of its established neighbor, the T.OP Tower 1, until now the tallest building in Mexico.

To the naked ground-level eye, the two towers appear equal in height for now, rising parallel to each other over the western part of the Nuevo León capital.

Monterrey skyscrapers
As of March, the under-construction Torre Rise had reached the height of the existing tallest building in Mexico, the T.OP Tower 1. (Proyectos México)

Torre Rise, being built alongside its rival as though in planned competition, will become the tallest skyscraper in Mexico and Latin America, its projected 101 stories and 484 meters leaving T.OP Tower 1 far below, and making it the second-highest building in the Americas (behind One World Trade Center in New York City) and the 13th-highest in the world.

Currently, the two towers (both developed by the same consortium) dominate the urban landscape of the Nuevo León state capital, competing with the Cerro de Obispado, the landmark hill in the middle of the city that houses the 18th-century Bishopric Palace.

Construction of Torre Rise, which began in May 2022 as a private investment project, is expected to be finished before the start of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, an event for which Monterrey will serve as a host city beginning with the June 14 Sweden-Tunisia match.

The new tower — being built by Nest development group and designed by architect Esteban Ramos of the Ancore Group — will consist of a hotel with 10 floors, 40 floors of offices and 20 floors of apartments. It will also feature an observation deck, a restaurant, a space for cultural exhibitions, two floors of shops and 14 floors of parking.

The Torre Rise is being touted as a symbol of competitiveness, capital attraction and urban modernization. It is hoped that the new tower will have a direct impact on attracting real estate investment, generating employment and enhancing Monterrey’s international profile. 

“It signals a shift toward high-density, sustainable growth in Monterrey, driving economic opportunity and city-center repopulation,” a Nest spokesman told the digital magazine Dezeen.

Last year, Nuevo León Governor Samuel García posted on his Facebook page an animation of how the new, rectilinear skyscraper will look. 

With reports from El Norte, Lider Empresarial, Top Seven and Dezeen

Mexico rejects UN findings that country’s enforced disappearances are crimes against humanity

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A man walks by a wall of posters of missing people in Mexico City
The U.N. report found that the crime of enforced disappearance — the disappearance of a person with the support or acquiescence of the state — is ongoing in Mexico. Pictured: A man walks by a wall plastered with posters of the missing in Mexico City. (Edgar Negrete Lira / Cuartoscuro.com)

Mexico is pushing back against a U.N. report that asks the General Assembly to examine the situation of forced disappearances in the country, concluding that crimes against humanity have been and continue to be committed here.

The U.N. Committee against Enforced Disappearances said it has “well-founded indications that … multiple widespread or systematic attacks against the civilian population have taken place at different moments and in different parts of the country.”

In an unprecedented move, the committee requested that U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres “urgently refer” the issue to the General Assembly so that it may consider measures to support Mexico in the prevention, investigation, punishment and eradication of this crime.

The Mexican government issued a statement strenuously rejecting the findings, describing the committee’s resolution as “biased” and lacking legal rigor, while also insisting it ignored “the institutional progress achieved since 2019.”

Almost immediately thereafter, human rights activists and relatives of the disappeared condemned the official response, demanding that the government accept international aid to face a crisis that has resulted in more than 132,400 missing persons in Mexico, more than 4,500 clandestine graves and nearly 72,000 unidentified human remains.

The committee report does not seek to establish individual criminal responsibilities, but instead issues an urgent call for technical and financial cooperation for forensic and search work.

A Zacatecas search collective member displays dirty clothing while in the background, other searchers dig holes in the dry ground
A Zacatecas search collective member displays clothing found at a clandestine grave in late March. (Adolfo Vladimir / Cuartoscuro.com)

While asserting that its report is informed by more than a decade of monitoring and contributions from civil society, the U.N. clearly states that it found no evidence of a deliberate federal policy to commit disappearances.

Even so, it provides considerable documented evidence of regular patterns of disappearances perpetrated by organized crime with the direct participation, support or acquiescence of public officials at the municipal, state and federal levels.

“Authorities remain overwhelmed by the scale of the crisis,” it said, suggesting that the virtually absolute impunity with regard to disappearances encourages the proliferation of these crimes.

In a joint statement issued by the Foreign Affairs and Interior ministries, the government rejected the report, saying it “failed to consider the observations, analyses and updates submitted by the government, which demonstrate that the arguments do not align with either the Committee’s own definition of enforced disappearance or the institutional progress achieved since 2019 and particularly since 2025.”

While acknowledging that the report mainly refers to events that occurred from 2009-2017 and is limited to four states, it called the committee’s decision “partial and biased.”

The joint statement claims that the committee refused to “study updated information before publishing its resolution” and also ignored new tools such as the National Search Alert, improvements to the National Forensic Data Bank and the creation of special prosecutors’ offices.

Signs of life found for 40,000 of Mexico’s 132,000 missing persons

Human rights groups and civic organizations were quick to decry the government reply.

In a social media post, the Centro Prodh, a prominent Mexican non-profit human rights organization, criticized the government’s condemnation of the report.

“We regret the State’s response to this determination … [which] does not rise to the level of the crisis the country is experiencing in terms of disappearances,” it said.

The rights group added that the government is “repeating previous actions by various administrations that have disparaged international organizations when they have revealed the reality of human rights violations in the country.”

The Jesuit University System also backed U.N. General Assembly involvement, saying in a statement that “[f]or years, there has been a profound crisis regarding the disappearance of people.”

Guadalupe Fernández, a member of the United Forces for Our Disappeared in Coahuila search collective, expressed sadness regarding the government’s response.

“You can see the intolerance, you can see the denigration of what is happening,” she told the digital news outlet Animal Político.

With reports from  La Jornada, Proceso, Animal Político and El Universal 

Highest housing prices in Mexico? That would be Mexico City, Baja California Sur and Querétaro

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house for sale i CDMX
Housing units in Mexico City are on average twice as expensive as those of the nation as a whole. (Camila Ayala Bernabib/Cuartoscuro.com)

It should come as no surprise that the foundational real estate motto “Location, location, location” is just as valid in Mexico as anywhere else.

And the locations of the highest housing prices are Mexico City, Baja California Sur and Querétaro. 

So says a survey of records compiled by the Federal Mortgage Society (SHF), a state-run development bank created in 2001 to boost the housing market.

It also confirmed that popular tourist hubs like Cancún, Los Cabos and Playa del Carmen tend to be more expensive due to high demand.

In a survey, the newspaper El Economista found that the average appraised value of a home in Mexico was 1.86 million pesos (US $104,323), whereas the average price of a house in the capital was more than double that at nearly 4 million pesos (US $222,088).

In Baja California Sur, the average hovered just above 2.5 million pesos (US $144,911) and in Querétaro it exceeded 2.3 million pesos (US $130,077).

The states of Yucatán and Nayarit — both featuring desirable beach locations — were also well above the average, with the former coming in at nearly 2.26 million pesos (US $126,000) and the latter just above 2.2 million pesos (US $124,339).

More moderate homes, with prices hovering just above 1 million pesos (US $56,000), can be found in the northern states of Tamaulipas and Durango, as well as to the east of the capital in the states of Tlaxcala and Veracruz (under US $72,000).

The Global Property Guide reported last month that “sales prices in the Mexican housing market exhibit a resilient but moderating growth trend,” attributing the affordability to a slowing economy and a gradually improving supply outlook.

El Economista found that 21 states registered increases above the average appraised value of a home in 2025. The Caribbean state of Quintana Roo showed the largest cumulative annual increase (14.3%), followed by Baja California Sur (12.9%) and Nayarit (12.2%). 

Conversely, the most modest increases were those recorded in Durango (4.7%), Mexico City (4.7%) and México state (5.2%).

With regard to metropolitan areas, Guadalajara showed the biggest increase (11.3%), with Tijuana (10.6%) and León (10.1%) also surpassing double digits, with Monterrey (9.4%), Puebla-Tlaxcala (8.7%) and Querétaro (7.2%) rounding out the top five.

With reports from El Economista, Global Property Guide and Remitly

Iztapalapa’s 183-year-old annual Passion Play returns with its new UNESCO World Heritage status

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Iztapalapa Passion Play
Iztapalapa, Meixico City's largest borough, stages the capital's largest Holy Week spectacle, a locally conceived and performed outdoor Passion Play that has gained international status as a UNESCO Cultural Heritage event. (Cossiac)

Mexico City’s biggest borough turned into a vast open-air stage Friday as Iztapalapa held its famous Passion Play for the first time since winning UNESCO recognition as a piece of world cultural heritage.

“It feels different this year,” local resident Juan López commented. “There are more people coming from outside, as if the news has opened the door to the world.”

Bearing the cross
The play depicts the passion of Christ, including his bearing of the cross before his death and, according to the Catholic and other Christian religions, his eventual resurrection, both events believed to have taken place during the Holy Week being celebrated today in Mexico. (Mario Jasso/Cuartoscuro.com)

Iztapalapa, a densely populated, working-class area in the city’s east, hosts one of the world’s largest reenactments of Christ’s trial, crucifixion and resurrection.

The Holy Week play, now in its 183rd year, draws crowds that local officials say can top 2 million people over Good Friday.

UNESCO added the “Representation of the Passion, Death and Resurrection of Christ in Iztapalapa” to its Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in December.

The designation recognizes the event as a living community tradition and highlights nearly two centuries of neighborhood organizing, faith and local identity.

The Passion Play runs across Holy Week, typically beginning on Palm Sunday and peaking on Good Friday with the Via Crucis and crucifixion. (Mario Jasso/Cuartoscuro.com)

On Good Friday, streets fill with Nazarenes in purple robes, barefoot penitents and costumed Roman soldiers moving in a procession that covers more than 10 kilometers.

The route winds through Iztapalapa’s eight historic neighborhoods before climbing Cerro de la Estrella, a hill overlooking the borough that becomes a symbolic Mount Calvary for the crucifixion scene.

Portraying Jesus this year is 25-year-old Arnulfo Morales Galicia, described by the news source Infobae as a medical surgeon and a graduate of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM).

He was chosen after a demanding selection process that tests physical endurance, discipline and conduct. On Friday, he is actually bound to the cross for 20 minutes at around 3 p.m., said to be the time at which Jesus was crucified.

Passion play
The Good Friday procession covers more than 10 kilometers, through Iztapalapa’s eight historic neighborhoods before climbing Cerro de la Estrella, a hill overlooking the borough that becomes a symbolic Mount Calvary for the crucifixion scene. (Cossiac)

Actress Erika Morales Hernández has stepped up to play the Virgin Mary after last year portraying a different character, the play’s “adulterous woman.”

Both actors come from the borough and are part of a cast drawn from local families.

Mexico City authorities have deployed more than 9,000 police officers, along with paramedics, patrol vehicles and helicopters, and shut key avenues around the borough to manage the influx.

For residents, the new UNESCO label adds global prestige, but the core remains local: a promise made during a mid-1800s cholera outbreak that has grown into one of Mexico’s most emblematic Holy Week rituals.

The Passion Play runs across Holy Week, typically beginning on Palm Sunday with Jesus’s entry into Jerusalem, continuing on Tuesday and Holy Thursday, and peaking on Good Friday with the Via Crucis and crucifixion.

The narrative usually concludes on Holy Saturday (also called Black Saturday) with the resurrection and final curtain call — one day before Easter Sunday.

With reports from La Jornada, Infobae and N+

‘My favorite city in the world:’ Pedro Pascal declares his love for CDMX

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Mexico City Mayor Clara Brugada and actor Pedro Pascal pose with an axolotl figurine
Mexico City Mayor Clara Brugada surprised actor Pedro Pascal on the set of his upcoming movie, "De Noche," on Thursday. (Clara Brugada)

Mexico City has won another high-profile endorsement, this time from Chilean American actor Pedro Pascal.

The actor, who found himself on set in Mexico City’s Historic Center filming for his new movie, “De Noche” (“At Night”), declared Mexico City his “favorite city in the whole world” during a surprise visit from Mexico City Mayor Clara Brugada.

Brugada arrived on set to meet the actor and celebrate his birthday, hailing him as “one of the great Latino icons of the audiovisual industry at the international level.”

She also expressed the city’s support for Pascal’s new project, a period drama following the romance between a hardened detective (Pedro Pascal) and a young boarding school teacher (Danny Ramirez) who must flee together to Mexico from Los Angeles in the 1930s.

Pascal replaced actor Joaquín Phoenix — who developed the story along with director Todd Haynes — in the lead role after Phoenix unexpectedly quit in 2024.

“The movie wouldn’t exist if it wasn’t for Mexico, really. Mexico’s beauty, the city — it’s a visual magic that could not happen in any other country,” Pascal said.

During the encounter, Brugada revealed it was Pascal’s birthday and presented him with an artisanal figurine of an axolotl as a gift.

Known for charismatic portrayals of paternal figures, Pascal rose to fame in his early forties after starring in the series “Narcos,” “The Mandalorian” and “The Last Of Us.” His prolific acting career now includes starring roles in recent movies like “The Fantastic Four,” “The Materialists” and “Wild Robot.”

The production of “De Noche” in Mexico dovetails with President Claudia Sheinbaum’s support to the movie industry. In February, Sheinbaum announced a new tax incentive to boost film production in Mexico.

Mexico News Daily

El Jalapeño: Mexican restaurants assure customers that, technically, everything still counts as fish

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Mystery fish
Is it a bird? Is it a plane? Well, it's probably a fish, which is start at least.

All stories in El Jalapeño are satire and not real news. Check out the original article here.

MEXICO CITY — A new study by ocean conservation group Oceana has found that over one third of all seafood sold in Mexico is not the species it claims to be, with researchers describing the findings as “alarming” and marine biologists describing them as “a lot to process before lunch.”

The report’s most striking finding concerns marlin, which was substituted at a rate of 91% and replaced in multiple cases with shark species currently listed as endangered. This means that during Lent, customers who ordered marlin, a large, commercially fished billfish of no particular conservation concern, were instead served — at a markup — a protected animal whose continued existence scientists are actively trying to secure, by restaurants that apparently decided the most efficient response to marine conservation law was to charge extra for violating it.

One Mazatlán restaurant was trying to pass this off as a blue whale. (Christian Mehlführer/Wikimedia Commons)

Red snapper, meanwhile, was found to have been substituted with up to 16 different species — a finding that raises the question of what, precisely, a restaurant means when it writes “red snapper” on a menu. Researchers concluded it means, broadly, “fish.” It may be one of 16 fish; it will not be red snapper.

The menu is, in this sense, less a list of available dishes than a starting point for a conversation the customer does not know they are having.

Perhaps most philosophically troubling is the situation in Mazatlán — one of Mexico’s premier fishing ports. Here, boats leave at dawn and return with fresh Pacific seafood that is unloaded onto the dock, sold to vendors, transported to restaurants and yet somehow arrives on the plate as tilapia — a freshwater species farmed primarily in inland tanks. Its presence in a coastal Pacific seafood restaurant represents either a supply chain of remarkable ambition or a substitution so brazen that it has lapped itself and become something approaching performance art.

Oceana is calling for a national seafood traceability standard. The tilapia was unavailable for comment, possibly because it was busy being sold as something else.

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