Más Información

Monreal señala que errores de Morena afectan directamente a Sheinbaum; advierte fuertes disputas internas

Claves de la nueva reforma laboral paulatina de 40 horas; ¿patrones podrán descontarte salario?, aquí te contamos

Continúa baja de Vicealmirante Roberto de la Marina tras acusación de liderar red de huachicol; juez niega amparo

Noroña se lanza contra Díaz Ayuso tras dichos sobre México; quisieran en Madrid tener a Sheinbaum como gobernante, responde

Felipe Calderón acusa “negligencia criminal” por brote de sarampión; “crisis pudo evitarse”, asegura bancada del PAN

Violencia en Sinaloa se intensifica; mineros desaparecidos, fosas clandestinas y secuestros encienden alertas
Cities on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border are preparing for Pope Francis' visit to the Mexican city of Juárez as Roman Catholic Church officials caution would-be visitors about scams.
Roman Catholic Church officials in the U.S. said the Diocese of Ciudad Juárez is the official distributor of tickets for the Papal Mass on Feb. 17 and will be giving a limited number of tickets to El Paso parishes for the scheduled open-air Mass in the Mexican city.
Due to limited seating, the Diocese of Las Cruces in New Mexico won't get any tickets. Officials also say the open-air Mass tickets are not for sale and warned against buying any.
People who want to experience the Mass but can't get tickets could hear Pope Francis during a live video feed to be streamed at El Paso's Sun Bowl, said El Paso Diocese spokeswoman Elizabeth O'Hara. She said tickets for that event will be sold at a low price to cover production costs.
The possible Sun Bowl event is being discussed after Roman Catholic Church officials cited safety concerns and scrapped plans for a celebration with the pope at the El Paso, Texas, side of a U.S.-Mexico border fence.
The pope is not scheduled to visit any U.S. border cities.
Ciudad Juárez, on Mexico's northern border across from El Paso, is the last stop in the pope's scheduled 5-day visit to Mexico, slated to begin Feb. 12 in Mexico City. During the visit in Mexico City, the pope is expected to visit the basilica of the Virgin of Guadalupe, the country's patron saint.
The pope will continue his Mexican trip in the southern border state of Chiapas, one of the nation's poorest areas and home to a large indigenous population, followed by Morelia, the capital of Michoacan state and a hotspot in Mexico's drug conflict.
In Ciudad Juárez, advertisements for Pope Francis' upcoming trip are all over the city, especially near its main cathedral.
Images of the pope are shown with the words "Ciudad Juárez is love" in an attempt to transform the city's image as one of suffering from drug cartel violence from a few years ago. The pope's open-air Mass will be in a field with a capacity of 220,000. The pope is expected to discuss immigration to the U.S. and poverty on both sides of the border.
The Diocese of El Paso isn't organizing any official pilgrimage to Ciudad Juárez but visitors are expected to travel to the Mexican city to see the pope pass by on the street or attend the Mass.
"The visit is to Mexico but it's also a visit to us," Allen Sánchez, executive director of the New Mexico Conference of Catholic Bishops. "He'll be next door."
Noticias según tus intereses
[Publicidad]
[Publicidad]








