Tourism up
The Ministry of Tourism revealed this week that 4,098,750 tourists visited Mexico from January to April this year, 5.3 percent more than in the same period in 2011.
The Ministry of Tourism revealed this week that 4,098,750 tourists visited Mexico from January to April this year, 5.3 percent more than in the same period in 2011.
Websites such as Twitter and Facebook have already had an impact on Mexico’s first presidential election in the age of the social network.
A string of marches and demonstrations unfolded across Guadalajara and much of Mexico this week, with thousands of young people taking to the streets and finding their voices ahead of the July 1 elections.
The indigenous people of the Sierra Madre rejected a government pledge to return land from a Canadian mining company.
An attempted robbery on an inter-city bus in the northern Mexican state of Coahuila went horribly wrong early Thursday morning, when the passengers fought back and killed one of the assailants.
An opinion poll released May 31 by the Reforma newspaper chain shows leftist presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador just four percentage points behind frontrunner Enrique Peña Nieto.
The peso closed at a six-month low Thursday as the euro-zone debt crisis, combined with lackluster U.S. economic forecasts, continued to hit currencies in emerging economies across the globe.
Employment and quality job creation were the focus of last week's G-20 Labor and Employment Ministerial Meeting.
Five days after his well received performance in Guadalajara’s Omnilife Stadium, Sir Paul McCartney staged an enormous free concert in the Zocalo in Mexico City.