Tlatelolco: A stain that has haunted Mexico for 50 years
Commemorations will take place across Mexico on Tuesday, October 2 as the nation remembers one of its most iniquitous chapters: the Tlatelolco Massacre of 1968.
Commemorations will take place across Mexico on Tuesday, October 2 as the nation remembers one of its most iniquitous chapters: the Tlatelolco Massacre of 1968.
Following Mexico’s July 1 election process, new government officials are being sworn into office on a sliding calendar.
Many eyebrows were raised last week when Argentine soccer legend Diego Maradona, 57, took over as the new coach of a struggling second-tier Mexican club, the Dorados de Sonora, based in the city of Culiacan.
Even though he is reckoned to have pilfered more than $US3 billion from state coffers, Javier Duarte, the former governor of the state of Veracruz, will only spend three more years in jail for his misdeeds.
We all know that Mexico will never pay for a border wall, despite U.S. President Donald Trump’s insistence that it will eventually.
Mexican President-Elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has invited Russian President Vladimir Putin to his inauguration on December 1.
Pilots working for Aeromexico announced they will strike on October 1 over a company decision to axe some of their benefits in the wake of a recent accident in northern Mexico.
Patriotic fervor will be to the fore on the evening of Saturday, September 15 as Miguel Hidalgo’s 1810 call-to-arms against the Spanish is reenacted in plazas the length and breadth of the nation.
Online shopping for groceries is still in its infancy in Mexico but is expected to grow at a rapid rate over the next decade.