Family members hold an urn containing the remains of Lucia Escobar Paredes, 75, who died of the COVID-19 outside of Izaz crematorium, in Mexico City on April 22.Luis Cortes / Reuters
Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who faced criticism early on in the pandemic for hugging and kissing his fans instead of social distancing, told reporters on Tuesday: "We are prepared to confront the most difficult moment."
He said this as the nation of 120 million people entered "Phase Three," its most serious level for dealing with the coronavirus. Phase one was beginning to prepare, phase two was putting in safety measures, like banning nonessential activities. Phase three is when the coronavirus accelerates through the country, according to the Los Angeles Times.
As of April 23, it had 10,554 confirmed cases of COVID-19 with 970 deaths, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. But Reuters reported on Thursday that a government's mathematical model estimated there were 55,951 cases across the country.
Mexico has been handling the coronavirus differently from much of the world. Along with the president defending hugging, Hugo López-Gatell, the man who's leading Mexico's coronavirus response, said as recently as April 17, he still wasn't sure how bad the coronavirus really is.
Mexico's economy has been a major factor, leading authorities to keep its borders open, and refusing to enforce a national lockdown. Mexico has also done little testing compared with other nations. As of March 31, it tested 65 people per million inhabitants, compared to the US which has tested 2,250 people per million, according to The Washington Post.
Here's how Mexico got to the point is it at now and what could come next.
Read the original article on InsiderSource: The New York Times
Source: Los Angeles Times
Sources: Wall Street Journal, US News
Source: Washington Post
Source: Washington Post
Sources: France24, The Guardian
As of March 31, it had tested 65 people per million inhabitants, compared to the US which had tested 2,250 people per million, according to The Washington Post.
Source: Washington Post
Sources: Los Angeles Times, NBC News
Sources: Los Angeles Times, Washington Post
Source: Los Angeles Times
Source: Washington Post
That same evening, 40,000 people attended a concert in Mexico City.
Sources: The New York Times, CNN
Source: The New York Times
Ten days later, he posted a video online of him hugging and kissing fans at a rally.
—Andrés Manuel (@lopezobrador_) March 14, 2020Source: The New York Times
Sources: Los Angeles Times, Washington Post
Source: Slate
Sources: Los Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal
Sources: Los Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal
Source: Los Angeles Times
Sources: Washington Post, Los Angeles Times
Source: Los Angeles Times
Source: Los Angeles Times