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Michoacán town makes Guinness World Record-breaking guacamole

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The city of Tancítaro in the state of Michoacán — the world’s largest exporter of avocados — earned a Guinness World Record after whipping up the world’s largest serving of guacamole on Friday, weighing 7.2 tonnes.   The feat was achieved by 800 volunteers that included students and administrative staff of the Tancítaro campus of the College of Scientific and Technological Studies of Michoacán (Cecytem), in a mashing and mixing session that lasted approximately two and a half hours. During the event, participants mixed fresh avocados in hundreds of containers while attendees witnessed the guacamole grow in real time on screens installed across the venue. Its final weight, including the container, was 7.2 tonnes, though its qualifying weight was recorded at 6.8 tonnes. Cecytem Principal Luis Enrique Toscano Servín noted that the students’ and staff’s participation reflected the strong commitment and sense of identity of Tancítaro. “Our students demonstrated teamwork, dedication...

Sheinbaum praises Pope’s Christianity following Trump’s attack: Monday mañanera’s recapped

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Sheinbaum’s mañanera in 60 seconds 🌍 Mexico’s foreign policy stance: Sheinbaum reaffirmed Mexico’s constitutional commitment to non-intervention, self-determination and peaceful conflict resolution, after noting the U.S.-Iran talks in Pakistan failed to reach a definitive agreement to end their war. ⛪ Pope vs. Trump: Sheinbaum praised Pope Leo XIV’s calls for peace amid his public spat with Trump, calling the pontiff’s peacemaking stance “very Christian” — an implicit contrast with Trump’s social media broadside against the pope. 🏆 World Cup worries brushed off: With the tournament two months out and the possibility of protests intensifying, Sheinbaum insisted there will be “no problem” while defending the right to protest as a hallmark of Mexican democracy. Why today’s  mañanera  matters In the 18 months since President Claudia Sheinbaum took office, Mexico’s engagement with the wider world has increased. While former presiden...

Mexico’s week in review: Electoral reform becomes law and a new foreign minister takes charge

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The week opened with highways in gridlock as vacationers returned home from the Holy Week holidays. Truckers and agricultural producers launched a national transport strike on Monday , blockading major roads across at least nine states into Tuesday. By mid-week, the peso made a comeback as Washington and Tehran edged toward a ceasefire deal, a development President Sheinbaum openly welcomed at her Wednesday press conference , citing lower oil prices as a direct benefit to Mexico. By Friday, Sheinbaum’s landmark electoral reform had cleared its final constitutional hurdle, and a new poll showed her approval rating at a record high of 79.5%. When asked about it at Thursday’s mañanera , she quipped, “Every time a poll comes out, our political adversaries get very angry,” adding that opponents had accused her government of buying up all the polling companies. “Just imagine how much we would have spent,” she joked. Didn’t have time to catch this week’s top stories? Here’s what you missed....

Another fire breaks out at Pemex’s Dos Bocas refinery on the Gulf Coast

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For the second time in less than a month, a blaze was reported at Mexico’s newest oil refinery, where 150 “emergency specialists” were able to douse the flames on Thursday. State oil company Pemex confirmed the incident at the Olmeca refinery on the Gulf Coast in the state of Tabasco, though it did not offer specifics on the damage or possible cause of the fire at the site’s coke storage warehouse.  🚨 #ÚLTIMAHORA | Reportan incendio en bodega de la refinería Dos Bocas, Tabasco Un incendio se registró este jueves en la bodega de Coque de la refinería Olmeca de Dos Bocas, informó Petróleos Mexicanos Pemex, sin que hasta el momento se reporten personas lesionadas. La empresa… pic.twitter.com/kX37E6QJc0 — Milenio (@Milenio) April 9, 2026 Coke is a carbon-rich fuel used industrially in steel mills and foundries, though it is difficult to sell on international markets due to its high pollutant content. Unlike the March 17 fire that resulted in the death of five people , Pem...

Sinaloa mine collapse: Second miner rescued, third found dead, fourth still missing

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Nearly two weeks after a mine collapsed in the northwestern state of Sinaloa, a second miner has been rescued, while authorities confirmed that the body of a third was discovered. Efforts continue to locate a fourth miner, who has been trapped since March 25. Francisco Zapata Nájera, 42, was  pulled from the Santa Fe mine in the municipality of Rosario before dawn on Wednesday morning . He was located at a depth of 300 meters surrounded by large quantities of water. Buzos del Batallón de Atención de Emergencias del Ejército Mexicano rescatan a minero en el municipio de El Rosario, Sin. A las 1355 horas del 7 de abril de 2026, un equipo de buzos de rescate del Batallón de Atención a Emergencias del Ejército, localizó con vida a Francisco… pic.twitter.com/A8661sEHlr — @Defensamx (@Defensamx1) April 9, 2026 A team of divers reached Zapata on Tuesday afternoon. He was afforded basic medical attention while rescuers used a pump capable of extracting 9 liters of water per seco...

National Guard arrests truck driver hauling 66,000 liters of illegal fuel

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The National Guard (GN) detained the driver of a truck traveling on the Mexico City-Puebla highway with a load of 66,000 liters of alleged huachicol , as stolen fuel is colloquially known in Mexico. GN officers stopped the truck in México state and asked the driver to show his permit for transporting dangerous materials, the newspaper La Prensa reported on Wednesday. The driver was unable to produce the permit and had no documentation stating where the fuel came from. He was consequently arrested and turned over to a local prosecutor’s office. The GN also seized the truck, which will remain in the possession of authorities as the investigation into the driver and his cargo proceeds. The National Guard supplied a photo of the driver and his truck to La Prensa. Fuel theft has long been a problem in Mexico, including in México state and the Red Triangle region of the neighboring state of Puebla. One way thieves steal fuel is by perforating Pemex pipelines that transport gasoline and ...

A win for whales in their suit against huge vessels in the Gulf of California

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A federal judge in the northern state of Sonora has blocked mega-ship traffic in the Gulf of California tied to a planned liquefied natural gas (LNG) export terminal, giving whales at the center of a novel legal case a major — if temporary — victory. Last fall, a coalition of organizations filed a lawsuit on behalf of Gulf of California whales, saying they deserved their right to a livable habitat and legal protections equivalent to human rights. Collisions with oversized tankers, such as those that would carry LNG across the Gulf of California, are a major cause of whale deaths, according to the whales’ legal staff. (Chris Pagan/Unsplash) The suit cited Mexico’s General Wildlife Law, the Mexican Constitution and international treaties in seeking to have the area declared a “critical habitat.” On Tuesday the  judge approved an amparo (a type of constitutional injunction) granting a suspension that blocks tankers over 300 meters long — and linked to the planned Saguaro LNG e...