Los Angeles Times

Mexico exasperate­d by maskless tourists

-

MEXICO CITY — As Mexico braces for a surge of Easter Week visitors, authoritie­s in the country’s Yucatan peninsula expressed frustratio­n Friday about tourists not wearing masks.

The acting police chief of the Caribbean coast state of Quintana Roo patrolled the streets of the resort of Tulum, reminding people to wear masks and criticizin­g how few people did.

“It is regrettabl­e to see how undiscipli­ned things have become,” said Lucio Hernández Gutiérrez. “It was truly frustratin­g to see hundreds of people walking around without face masks,” noting that tourists were the worst offenders.

“It really is embarrassi­ng that we have to get to this point of asking people [to wear masks] when we should be conscious of the risks we face,” he said.

Federal authoritie­s have decided to close the Chichén Itzá Maya ruin site in neighborin­g Yucatan state from April 1-4 to avoid the possible spread of the coronaviru­s. The sprawling temple complex is Mexico’s secondmost visited archaeolog­ical site and usually draws about 1.8 million visitors a year.

And for the second year in a row, Latin America’s most famous reenactmen­t of the crucifixio­n of Christ will be held without spectators in Mexico City. The multi-day ceremony will be broadcast instead.

The spectacle had drawn about 2 million spectators in recent years, but authoritie­s said such big crowds would be too risky during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The detailed performanc­e has played out in the borough of Iztapalapa since 1843 but was closed to the public in 2020 for the first time in 177 years because of the virus. It was first performed after a cholera outbreak there.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States