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Nintendo’s PancitoMerge is a video game dedicated to Mexican bread

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Japanese kawaii charm meets Mexico magic in a Nintendo game with a twist. (PancitoMerge)

Rarely, if ever, does one utter the words: “Let’s play the Mexican panaderia game on Nintendo.” But thanks to PancitoMerge, an independent video game that was released on Nintendo Switch consoles last month, gamers — and pan dulce aficionados alike — can live out their Mexican bakery video game fantasies.

The game, an interactive ode to Mexico’s pan dulce (sweet bread), was developed by Antonio “Fáyer” Uribe — a Mexican indie game developer and cofounder of HyperBeard Games, who has long advocated for Mexican representation in the gaming industry with platforms like the “Mexican Entertainment System” —  and illustrated by Jessica Álvarez, known as Vanila Ryder online, where she has a massive following on Instagram for her pan dulce-themed art.

PancitoMerge - Official Launch Trailer | Latin American Games Showcase TGA Edition 2025

A Mexican Candy Crush?

PancitoMerge offers a twist on the mega-iconic Tetris puzzle format. As the town’s panadero (baker), you are tasked with filling a bread basket full of falling pan dulce for a stream of enthusiastic customers. The catch? While you scramble to serve your customers, each type of pan dulce that drops from the top of the screen, à la the aforementioned Tetris — or, for younger generations, Candy Crush — is a different shape: conchas, bollilos, orejas, puercitos and more. 

As a player, your job is to stack them in the correct order and sequence in order to gain points and avoid the bread basket from overflowing. 

Nintendo’s official store, which describes the game as “whimsical” and “adorable,” invites gamers to “step into the warm, flour-dusted world where pan dulce takes center stage” and calls the game a “love letter to Mexican culture and the joy of pan dulce… inspired by real treats found in local bakeries, celebrating the warmth, tradition, and creativity of Mexican baking.” 

It’s a perhaps appropriately timed ode to Mexican bread culture, on the heels of Richard Hart’s much-lambasted critique of Mexican bread — in which the British baker claimed that Mexico lacked sophisticated, high-quality breads. PancitoMerge proves otherwise — what other nation has made a Nintendo-backed video game based on its distinctive, at times iridescent, bread offerings?

The game has been celebrated by Mexican gamers and culture fanatics who have made viral videos and praised it for its highly decorative pan dulce illustrations and low-stakes, friendly gameplay. The game’s developers even wrote an original theme song for PancitoMerge, which lists off a variety of breads to the tune of a strumming mariachi guitar. 

PancitoMerge is one of the few games to have an entirely Mexican theme. (PancitoMerge)

Though the game’s framework is relatively simple, a variety of thoughtful touches add to its appeal. For instance, you can switch the panaderia’s appearance and customers from a traditional look to one based on Dia de Muertos, or to a Japanese-inspired theme. As customers approach your panaderia’s window, you might encounter an anthropomorphic axolotl, a skeleton, or an old señora, each in search of the right pan dulce. 

And that’s not all: You can rework your bread basket by giving it a shake, clearing off unwanted bread and creating new patterns and combos. And as you progress through the tasks, you unlock more bread types, and each bread comes with a paragraph-long explanation of the pan dulce’s characteristics and history. 

What is pan de melón, one might wonder, for example? 

“A popular Japanese pan dulce,” the description tells players, going on to outline the origin of the sweet bread’s name — which, it turns out, doesn’t come from the flavor resembling a melon but from its round shape and color. The game’s flavor texts are actually informative and not simply mindless filler.

As of now, the game is available in Spanish, English, and Japanese, currently is priced at US $7.99 — a bargain by today’s video game industry standards, in which the latest flagship Nintendo games cost US $79.99. 

It’s certainly not the most advanced or complex game out there, but that’s part of its appeal, as is its very existence in what isn’t a very deep roster of Mexican-inspired games to begin with. 

Mexican culture has been directly referenced in games like Super Mario, Pokémon and more, but rarely has Mexican culture been the centerpiece of an entire game’s design. A few exceptions include Lucha Libre AAA: Héroes del Ring (2010), Taco Master (2011), and Pato Box (2018), the latter being a beautifully rendered game in a black-and-white palette where you play a human with a duck’s head boxing his way through a corrupt organization to claim a world title. Beyond that, Mariachi Legends is slated to release later this year and has been garnering attention for its Mexicanized, action-adventure Metroidvania look and feel. More serious gamers may appreciate world builder Aztec: The Last Sun.

But none of those titles seem to fully satiate, or vividly represent, Mexico’s hunger for quirky gameplay and lighthearted storytelling as much as PancitoMerge. The fact that the game was developed by Mexican creators further gives it a taste of authenticity, care, and imaginative worldbuilding that gamers of any age or background are sure to delight in.

Alan Chazaro is the author of “This Is Not a Frank Ocean Cover Album,” “Piñata Theory” and “Notes From the Eastern Span of the Bay Bridge” (Ghost City Press, 2021). He is a graduate of June Jordan’s Poetry for the People program at UC Berkeley and a former Lawrence Ferlinghetti Fellow at the University of San Francisco. His writing can be found in GQ, NPR, The Guardian, L.A. Times and more. Originally from the San Francisco Bay Area, he is currently based in Veracruz.

Is it crazy to move to Mexico with a middle schooler? A new ‘Confidently Wrong’ podcast

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A dad and his middle schooler son take a selfie at a Maya pyramid in Mexico
Doing just about anything with a middle schooler can be a challenge. So what is it like moving to Mexico with a tween? (Shutterstock)

Moving is never easy. Moving with kids is even harder. Moving with kids to another country takes it up yet another level. But moving to another country with a middle schooler? That might just be the holy grail of moving masochism.

It is with that backdrop that we thought we would focus on this episode of Season 2 of our podcast, “Confidently wrong about raising kids in Mexico.” If it can be done with a middle schooler, anyone else should be easy, right? So we talked to the principal of the Middle School of the American School Foundation in Mexico City, as well as her husband, who also has teaching experience and is currently helping with curriculum development at the school.

They both have significant experience teaching expat kids, have taught abroad in Asia, and are now raising their own kids in Mexico. As a result, they bring an honest, unfiltered perspective on what it takes to move abroad with kids.

Check out the latest episode below, or find it on YouTube or Spotify.

CW about raising kids in Mexico: Is it crazy to move to Mexico with a middle schooler? - Episode 7

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

Are animal spirits returning to the business community in Mexico? A perspective from our CEO

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Mexico's Business Advisory Council chief Altagracia Gómez speaks into a microphone
Can charismatic leaders like Business Advisory Council chief Altagracia Gómez guide Mexico toward a brighter future? After several high-profile meetings, CEO Travis Bembenek shares his take on the state of Mexico's business community. (Galo Cañas / Cuartoscuro.com)

It’s easy to criticize the performance of the Mexican economy. The Economist magazine did so earlier this week with an article titled “Mexico’s broken economy,” complete with a picture of a man on a horse in front of a table with local beer bottles and Coca-Cola cans. It quoted a professor from Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., who said that the “unreliable supply of electricity is also constraining growth.” I have diligently read and always respected The Economist for nearly 30 years, but found this particular article to be intellectually lazy, superficial and incomplete.

I am by no means suggesting that the Mexican economy is performing at the level it should be — in fact, it is far from it. That being said, I had the opportunity in the past week to attend two separate large business conferences in Mexico City and left feeling upbeat, excited and optimistic.

My wife and I first started meeting with foreign ambassadors and foreign chambers of commerce in Mexico two years ago. It was near the end of both the AMLO and Biden presidencies, and the mood was somber. It was clear that commerce, especially with other countries, was not a priority for AMLO. Ambassadors told us that they stopped encouraging political and business leaders from their home countries to come to Mexico as there quite simply “was no interest from the government” to meet with, listen to or collaborate with foreign leaders. AMLO was clearly focused on Mexican domestic projects like the Maya train, the AIFA airport and the Dos Bocas refinery. He didn’t want to make time for foreigners.

On the U.S. side, I remember hearing the former U.S. ambassador, Ken Salazar, speak at a business meeting. An extremely affable person, he seemingly prioritized his relationship and support for AMLO and his initiatives over what the U.S. political and business community wanted and needed. He talked about how he had recently been to Oaxaca to see the building of the new train and highway projects there. He emphasized the growth and equality that this could bring to the poorer southern areas of the country. Don’t get me wrong, the domestic projects prioritized by AMLO are most certainly game-changing investments for the people living in those parts of the country. But their impact and results will be felt over decades, not years. They are simply not the kind of investments that can “move the needle” for the country in the short or even medium term.

Which brings me back to the meetings of this past week. The first one, the American Chamber of Commerce of Mexico annual meeting, began with a presentation by the new U.S. ambassador, Ron Johnson. Ambassador Johnson started affably enough, even speaking in Spanish for a bit, but then quickly got down to business. He switched to English and while remaining charming, rattled off the areas that the U.S. government was focused on that ultimately would, in his words, even further deepen the relationship between the U.S. and Mexico. His language wasn’t threatening like his boss President Trump’s oftentimes is. Rather, he was direct and crystal clear. Reducing the levels of violence, drug trafficking, human trafficking, cartel influence and unfair trade practices ultimately would be very good for both countries and very positive for the business community.

It felt a little bit like a parent lecturing a child. It hurt a little bit to hear the message, but you knew he was right. The tough love that the U.S. was giving to Mexico, in his telling, would make Mexico a better partner of the United States, and in turn make Mexico better. Now I understand that many people will be cynical upon hearing this, but it’s impossible to suggest that the levels of violence in Mexico have not been a significant drag on the people of Mexico, the business community and the economy as a whole.

At AmCham annual gathering, US ambassador to Mexico strikes optimistic note on USMCA

Next up was Altagracia Gómez, the 33-year-old Mexican businesswoman who leads President Sheinbaum’s Business Advisory Council, a group that provides vital input from the business community into government policy decisions. Altagracia was poised, calm and professional as she updated the audience on the progress of Sheinbaum’s ambitious Plan México initiative. She talked about roadblocks to progress and how they were going to overcome them. She talked about what the government was doing to accelerate approvals and better support the business community. As I listened to her give the update, I couldn’t help but think that I was witnessing the style and tone of a businessperson, not a politician. It was refreshing — inspiring really.

Just a few days later, I was invited to attend the first-ever Forum of Binational Trade Chambers in Mexico. Under the leadership of the Indian Embassy in Mexico and in close collaboration with Mexico’s Minister of the Economy, Marcelo Ebrard, a total of 23 chambers of commerce were brought together to form a new working group. The idea of the forum, as well as future meetings, is to work together to set common goals in support of the Plan México program. The goal is for the chambers to work in closer cooperation and collaboration to share best practices, lessons learned, and further enable growth of companies from their home countries in Mexico.

Minister Ebrard kicked off the forum with an update on the progress on the USMCA trade agreement between Mexico, the U.S., and Canada. He talked about the work done to improve trade relations with the European Union, Latin American countries and countries in the Middle East and Asia. Similar to Altagracia just days earlier, he had a calm, confident, optimistic tone. In a time of such global stress, his comments were reassuring. He emphasized and gave examples of how the government was working hard to improve the business climate in Mexico and working closely with the U.S. and other countries to do so.

Mexico has a long way to go to achieve its true economic growth potential. The per capita GDP of the United States — a measure of average economic output per person — is still an incomprehensible 6.4 times that of a person in Mexico. (For a point of reference, U.S. per capita GDP is 1.6 times larger than that of Canada). The previous administrations in both the U.S. and Mexico did not prioritize their business communities or trade between the two countries, and yet commerce still flourished. Both countries are now each other’s leading trading partners, and foreign direct investment is hitting record highs on both sides of the border. Just this week, two large multinationals committed to investing an additional US $1.5 billion in Mexico.

Government policy doesn’t move fast, but what I witnessed firsthand this past week in terms of engagement and commitment from the Mexican and U.S. governments, foreign embassies and chambers of commerce should go a long way towards helping bring some favorable animal spirits to the business community in Mexico. Let’s hope this positive momentum continues!

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

Xcaret theme park banned from using Maya culture for marketing, for now

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Xcaret themepark
The popular resort and theme park on the Quintana Roo coast has based its image on borrowing from Maya culture. That may not be possible anymore. (Xcaret)

Mexican theme park and resort Xcaret, located in the Riviera Maya near Playa del Carmen, must remove all references to Maya culture from its marketing and advertising campaigns, following a ruling by the Supreme Court (SCJN) in favor of Indigenous communities that had sued Grupo Xcaret.

The court’s decision will stay in effect only until it issues its final resolution, which could take months or even years. Still, it reveals a strong indication of how the SCJN may ultimately decide. 

rios
Supreme Court Minister María Estela Ríos González left no doubt about who has exclusive rights to an Indigenous community’s culture: “All cultural heritage of Indigenous and Afro-Mexican peoples and communities will be understood to be reserved by the corresponding people or community . . .” (SCJN/Cuartoscuro.com)

“All cultural heritage of Indigenous and Afro-Mexican peoples and communities will be understood to be reserved by the corresponding people or community and its use and exploitation will be prohibited unless they grant their free, prior and informed consent and in accordance with the law of consultation of Indigenous and Afro-Mexican peoples and communities,” Minister María Estela Ríos González wrote in a statement following the ruling.

The case started in 2022, when members of the Great Maya Council filed a complaint with the Copyright National Institute (Indautor) asking for Grupo Xcaret to refrain from using images and symbols of the Indigenous peoples of the state – a request that poses a major challenge to a company which built its image on cultural references to the Maya. 

As part of its procedure, Indautor ordered Xcaret to remove all marketing materials and online content that featured elements of Maya cultural heritage. It also ordered the company to stop any commercial exploitation of these elements while the matter was being resolved.

The newspaper El País reported that Grupo Xcaret complied by removing some advertisements during this period. However, the company brought the case to court, where a judge granted Xcaret permission to display Indigenous imagery again. 

The new ruling by the Supreme Court, however, has revoked that permission until the matter is finally solved.  

Culture Minister Claudia Curiel de Icaza celebrated the latest decision, saying that it represents “a significant step in the defense of the collective rights of Indigenous peoples, because it reaffirms that their cultural heritage cannot be treated as a resource available for private profit, but is rather  a living expression of their identity, their history and their community life.”

Two ministers, however, voted against the resolution. Minister Yasmín Esquivel Mossa defended Xcaret’s interest, arguing that the company had authorization from the Great Maya Council through a five-year contract that included a payment of 15 million pesos (US $829,000) for the use and exploitation of the Maya cultural heritage.

Furthermore, she said the rights of Indigenous peoples and the interests of investors in the tourism sector must be balanced, acknowledging the vital role investment in the hospitality industry plays in the Mexican economy.

With reports from Inversión Turística and El Universal

FIFA president Infantino attends Guadalajara qualifier, signaling confidence in Mexico as World Cup host

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Infantino
FIFA President Giovanni Vincenzo Infantino paid a visit to the Guadalajara area's Akron Stadium to monitor operations as the World Cup Play-off Tournament got under way. (Fernando Carranza García / Cuartoscuro)

FIFA president Gianni Infantino was in Guadalajara’s Akron Stadium on Thursday night to witness Jamaica’s victory over New Caledonia in a World Cup qualifier.

Just 34 days after a military operation near Guadalajara resulted in the death of notorious drug lord Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera, prompting violent repercussions across the country, Infantino’s presence demonstrated FIFA’s commitment to Mexico as host country of the World Cup.

On Monday, the FIFA president is scheduled to meet with President Claudia Sheinbaum at the National Palace to review Mexico’s ongoing preparations for the World Cup which will kick off in earnest at Azteca Stadium on June 11.

Infantino arrived fashionably late to Akron Stadium — he had attended Bolivia’s 2-1 Thursday afternoon win over Suriname at Monterrey’s BBVA Stadium— joining nearly 41,000 fans witnessing Jamaica’s win. He sat in a box seat alongside Mexican Soccer Federation president Mikel Arriola and Guadalajara Chivas owner Amaury Vergara.

Thanks to an 18th-minute goal from Jamaica striker Bailey Cadamarteri, the “Reggae Boyz” move on to face the Democratic Republic of Congo on Tuesday — also in Akron Stadium — for a spot in the 64-nation World Cup field.

The outcome of the match was less critical than the logistics and security operations, both of which were carried out smoothly. FIFA officials will keep a close watch on Tuesday’s match as well.

Thursday’s game marked the first major international sporting event in Guadalajara since last month’s violence, following a March 7 derby between the city’s two first-division clubs that attracted 36,767 fans to the nearby Jalisco Stadium. That game also went off without a hitch.

Infantino is expected to attend Mexico’s friendly against Portugal on Saturday, a game that will serve as the re-opening of Azteca Stadium which has been undergoing an extensive facelift since June 2024.

There have been concerns that the renovations would not be completed in time for the World Cup — five games, including the Cup’s inaugural match, are scheduled at Azteca Stadium — so stadium operations will be evaluated closely.

In Thursday’s contest in Monterrey, Bolivia’s come-from-behind victory sent “La Verde” into a final qualifier against Iraq on Tuesday. 

With reports from El Diario de Coahuila, El Informador and ESPN

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

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families of missing persons
Of the 132,534 Mexicans labeled as missing, 130,178 have been registered since 2006 when disappearances began to surge after former President Felipe Calderón launched a war against drug cartels. (Cuartoscuro)

President Claudia Sheinbaum has praised a new report on the government’s search for missing persons, highlighting findings that 31% of the more than 132,000 people currently listed as disappeared might actually be alive.

However, the report also found that official investigations of more than 46,000 of those considered missing have yet to begin due to a lack of data.

¨resident with missing persons figures
President Sheinbaum stands beside a wall projection containing a number of figures from a newly released report on missing persons in Mexico, including one that comes as a surprise to many: Of all the missing persons located, 92% of them are found alive. (Saúl López/Presidencia)

As part of the presentation, Sheinbaum provided an update on the search for missing persons, outlined progress made and challenges faced and explained strategies implemented since the beginning of her administration in October 2024.

“It is a comprehensive report that seeks to provide clarity on where we are and what actions we are taking,” she said, before turning the dais over to Marcela Figueroa, the executive secretary of the National Public Security System (SNSP).

Figueroa said the National Registry of Missing and Unlocated Persons carried out a year-long review of all the official data on the disappeared from 1952 through 2026.

“Of the 394,645 individual files in our possession, 262,111 have been located, of which 92% were located alive,” she said. “However, this means 132,534 people remain unaccounted for today.”

Of those 132,534 officially labeled as missing, 130,178 have been registered since 2006 when such disappearances began to surge after Mexico formally launched a war against drug cartels.

On the positive side, the SNSP review discovered that there was evidence of legal activity — such as tax filings, birth certificates or phone records — related to 40,308 individuals registered as missing. 

“As a result, 5,269 people have been located and their status has been changed from missing to located,” Figueroa said.

With regard to the 46,742 cases that lack sufficient information to initiate a search, Figueroa explained that the existing reports do not include name, sex or date of birth, or lack sufficient detail related to the place or date of disappearance.

Figueroa attributed this issue to the absence of legal parameters for carrying out such registrations, a shortcoming that was addressed by the July 16, 2025, enactment of the General Law on Disappearances.

Even without the descriptive information, Figueroa said, all cases will remain registered with the SNSP. However, the 2025 reform now blocks entries without minimum data.

Marcela Figueroa, titular del Secretariado Ejecutivo del Sistema Nacional de Seguridad Pública, y Martha Lidia Pérez, titular de la Comisión Nacional de Búsqueda,
National Public Security System chief Marcela Figueroa and Martha Lidia Pérez, head of the National Search Commission, also shared an update on the new National Search Alert Friday morning. The system streamlines the search for missing persons by activating a variety of agencies — such as state attorneys general, the National Guard, hotels and bus stations and airports — as soon as a missing persons report is filed. (Presidencia/Cuartoscuro)

That leaves 43,128 cases (33% of those still missing) with complete data, but for whom the authorities found no record of activity via cross-referencing of official databases. 

These cases are distinct from the 2,356 long-standing cases registered between 1952 and 2005.

All data reviewed was derived from SNSP records through March 26 this year, and from the National Database of Investigation Files records dating to Feb. 28.

The SNSP report further acknowledged that the ​registry was initially compiled by uploading unverified lists from federal and state prosecutors, search ​commissions, citizen reports and activist groups, which created duplications and incomplete entries.

Sheinbaum said Interior Minister Rosa Icela Rodríguez holds regular meetings with families of the missing and search groups, while also collaborating with the office in Mexico of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, which has provided support and technical advice.

Although activists such as Fernando Escobar of the NGO Causa en Común concede the government’s work is positive, he, and others, question the veracity of the data, especially in light of the recent and more frequent discoveries of clandestine graves.

“The true number of missing persons is becoming increasingly uncertain,” Escobar said.

The continuing rise in disappearances — 193 people have been reported missing this year in Mexico City alone — is also a concern.

With reports from Reuters, Infobae, La Silla Rota and Semanario Zeta

Mexico resumes package delivery to the US after seven-month suspension

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A mail drop box for Correos de México, the Mexican national mail service
Correos de México is back in the business of sending packages to the U.S. as of this week. (Shutterstock)

Mexico’s national mail service, Correos de México, resumed package shipments to the United States on Wednesday after a suspension triggered by changes to U.S. customs rules, the Mexican Foreign Ministry and Correos de México announced in a joint statement.

The full suspension began Aug. 27 last year, after the United States eliminated the so-called “de minimis” tax exemption, which had previously allowed packages valued under $800 to enter the U.S. duty-free. The change created uncertainty about how customs duties would be collected on international shipments, prompting Mexico and other countries to pause deliveries while new procedures were established. In September 2025, Correos de México partially restored service, resuming the delivery of letters and documents without commercial value, but packages remained suspended until now.

Under the new arrangements, Correos de México said it will maintain its existing shipping rates. However, senders must comply with new U.S. requirements, including a 10% charge on the declared value of each package, levied by the U.S. government.

Packages are also subject to a maximum declared value of $800 and a weight limit of 20 kilograms (44 lbs). Senders must provide a detailed description of the contents and the country of manufacture of all items included. Shipments must travel directly from Mexico to the United States without routing through a third country.

The resumption of service is welcome news for the many Mexicans who send packages to family members in the United States, as well as for small businesses that rely on Correos de México to export goods. As previously reported, Mexican businesses selling products in the U.S. faced higher costs, reduced supply and stricter customs controls as a result of the suspension.

For readers looking to send packages, Correos de México has published the new requirements and shipping rates on its website. Note that letters and documents without commercial value remain exempt from the new charges, and delivery times to the U.S. may be longer than usual while the new customs procedures are being implemented.

Mexico News Daily


This story contains press release summaries generated by Claude. It has been revised and fact-checked by a Mexico News Daily staff editor.

Mexico’s National Anthropology Museum receives UNESCO’s Blue Shield maximum protection designation

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MNA
The National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City is the first Latin American heritage site to receive UNESCO's highest Blue Shield category, affording it special protection in the event of armed conflict. (Camila Ayala Benabib/Cuartoscuro.com)

Mexico City’s famed National Museum of Anthropology has received the highest level of protection afforded to a cultural heritage site, making it the first building in Latin America and the Caribbean to receive such a safeguard.

The Blue Shield, granted by UNESCO, serves to identify highly valued cultural property in the event of armed conflict, natural disaster or any other threat to its integrity. Displaying  the shield on a cultural monument signals to military or civilian authorities that the site and its collections have enhanced immunity and must be safeguarded.

Develación de las placas de Escudo Azul UNESCO del Museo Nacional de Antropología

“Attacking cultural property during war not only violates the right to culture, but also undermines the identity and dignity of peoples,” Andrés Morales, the head of UNESCO México said at the unveiling ceremony.

The Blue Shield reads “Protected Cultural Property” and features a blue and white diamond with a bright red outline. It has been placed on the roof of the National Museum of Anthropology (MNA) to ensure visibility in satellite images, thereby helping prevent the safeguarded monument from becoming a military target. It has also been placed at the main entrance of the museum. 

Francisco Vidargas, head of World Heritage at Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH), noted that the MNA houses over 200,000 archaeological, artistic and ethnographic objects, many of which come from archaeological sites that have also been designated for protection under the Blue Shield emblem (such as Chichen Itzá and Monte Albán). 

However, unlike the MNA, those sites bear the standard Blue Shield design, which indicates general cultural protection rather than the enhanced protection – distinguished by the red outline – that is reserved for assets of greater importance under international law.   

Pablo Arrocha Olabuenaga, legal consultant at the Foreign Relations Ministry, said that this emblem highlights the “exceptional” value of the MNA, and underscores Mexico’s regional leadership in preserving memory and universal heritage.

“This symbol is not just an emblem. It is the visible manifestation of Mexico’s commitment to international law and its deep conviction that its cultural heritage is memory, identity and the legacy of its peoples, and therefore its protection is a shared responsibility of the international community,” Arrocha said. 

Mexico News Daily

Navy launches search for 2 missing aid boats bound for Cuba: Friday’s mañanera recapped

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President Sheinbaum
Friday's presser covered Mexico's search two missing sailboats carrying aid to Cuba, a border breach by U.S. soldiers and World Cup travel safety assurances. (Saúl López / Presidencia)

Sheinbaum’s mañanera in 60 seconds

  • 🚢 Missing aid boats: Two small vessels carrying humanitarian aid to Cuba have gone missing after departing Isla Mujeres — 9 crew members of mixed nationalities are on board and the Mexican Navy is searching.
  • 🪖 US soldiers crossed the border: US troops briefly entered Mexican territory in Nogales while installing barbed wire, but withdrew when asked. Sheinbaum called it unintentional and declared there was no “intervention” or “violation.”
  • World Cup tourism pitch: Sheinbaum assured tourists Mexico is safe to visit, pointing to an 8.6% jump in international arrivals in January and a dedicated security plan for the World Cup.

Why today’s mañanera matters

Just over a month after chaotic violence broke out across Mexico in response to a military operation targeting the now-deceased Jalisco New Generation Cartel leader Nemesio Rubén “El Mencho” Oseguera, President Claudia Sheinbaum declared that tourists have nothing to fear when visiting the country.

There is no doubt that the mayhem of Sunday, Feb. 22 — including the setting up of numerous fiery narco-blockades and armed clashes between cartel henchmen and security forces — damaged Mexico’s international reputation.

As she has done previously, Sheinbaum used her Friday press conference to attempt to dispel fears among foreigners planning to visit Mexico, including for the FIFA men’s World Cup, which Mexico will co-host with the United States and Canada in June and July.

Also of note at the final mañanera of the week were the president’s comments on two humanitarian aid vessels that are missing in the Caribbean Sea, and her remarks on an incident at Mexico’s northern border.

2 vessels carrying humanitarian aid to Cuba are still missing 

Sheinbaum told reporters that authorities are still searching for two sailboats that went missing after departing Mexico to take humanitarian aid to Cuba.

The Mexican Navy said in a statement on Thursday that it had begun a search and rescue mission aimed at locating two sailboats that departed Isla Mujeres, Quintana Roo, for Havana, Cuba, last Friday. It said that the vessels were carrying “nine crew members of different nationalities.”

The navy also said that the vessels were expected to reach Cuba between Tuesday and Wednesday of this week.

Sheinbaum said that a Navy vessel was monitoring the two “small boats” that are missing, but lost contact with them.

Mexican Navy vessels have also transported humanitarian aid to Cuba, where people are facing a situation of extreme hardship due to a U.S. oil blockade and other factors. Sheinbaum said that a Navy vessel carrying aid arrived in Cuba this morning.

US soldiers breach Mexico-US border 

A reporter noted that she had seen reports that U.S. soldiers entered Mexico earlier this week, crossing the border between Nogales, Arizona, and Nogales, Sonora.

Asked what she knew about the incident, Sheinbaum said that the soldiers crossed the border by two meters and immediately returned to the United States when they were asked to do so.

According to an El Universal newspaper report, at least eight U.S. soldiers were putting up barbed wire along the border when they entered Mexico on Tuesday. Citing witnesses, the newspaper said that the soldiers came up to eight meters into the “national territory” of Mexico. National Guard personnel reportedly asked the U.S. soldiers to withdraw. The incident occurred where rail tracks cross the border.

Sheinbaum played down the incident, saying that there was no “intervention” or “violation” of any kind because the soldiers entered Mexico unintentionally.

Militares de Estados Unidos ingresan a México sin autorización para reforzar el cerco internacional

Sheinbaum: Tourists can visit Mexico ‘safely’

A reporter declared that Mexico has been “very stigmatized,” described as a country where “you run the risk” of being abducted.

Asked what her message was for Mexico-bound tourists ahead of the World Cup, Sheinbaum responded that “they can come to the country safely.”

She went on to highlight that tourism has increased despite the dissemination of anti-Mexico “propaganda.”

Sheinbaum specifically highlighted that international tourist numbers increased 8.6% in January compared to the same month of last year.

“In particular for the World Cup … we have a series of actions to protect tourists,” she added.

Security Minister Omar García Harfuch presented the federal government’s World Cup security strategy earlier this month.

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

El Jalapeño: Mexican architect one vote away from completing 500 year revenge plan

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How the tables turn, eh, Spain? (Colin Meg/Unsplash)

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

BARCELONA — Javier Marín, a 63-year-old sculptor from Uruapan, Michoacán, confirmed Monday that he is a finalist to complete the Glory Façade of the Sagrada Família — the main entrance to Gaudí’s 143-year-old basilica and the most theologically loaded piece of real estate in Spain.

If selected, the face greeting every visitor to Spain’s most beloved monument will have been designed by someone from Mexico. This is, historians note, almost exactly the opposite of what Spain spent three centuries doing, except in that case nobody sent an invitation.

The stones of Mexico’s greatest temple were stolen by the Spanish to build their new religious monuments. Marín has not forgotten this. (Shutterstock)

To understand why this is ironic, some context: beginning in 1521, Spanish colonisers systematically demolished the great monuments of indigenous Mexican civilisation and replaced them with Catholic churches, using the rubble of the originals as building material. The Metropolitan Cathedral on Mexico City’s main square was constructed directly on top of the Templo Mayor, the sacred heart of the Aztec empire, using its own stones. In Cholula, Puebla, Spanish priests built a church on the summit of the largest pyramid ever constructed by human hands. They did this across an entire continent for three hundred years and appear to have genuinely expected no one to bring it up again.

Marín has not brought it up. He doesn’t need to. A separate Mexican architect, Mauricio Cortés Sierra, has already installed Gaudí’s cross at the basilica’s highest point — 172.5 metres above Barcelona. Between them, Mexico now controls the top and the front of Spain’s most visited monument.

“It’s amazing that I might be able to do this,” Marín told reporters, which is also, more or less, what Spain said in 1521. The key difference is that Marín was formally invited by the board of trustees. He has a letter. The conquistadors did not have a letter.

The board votes in April. The Templo Mayor is still underneath the cathedral. Everyone is being very gracious about all of it.

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