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Coronavirus: Mexico Marks Independence Day Without Big Crowds

Coronavirus: Mexico Marks Independence Day Without Big Crowds






Mexican Independence Day (Día de la Independencia de México) celebrations on Wednesday were muted by the coronavirus pandemic, with a small symbolic gathering replacing a usually much larger military parade.

The ceremony was dominated by the awarding of “Miguel Hidalgo” medals, the country’s highest civilian honor, to 58 doctors, nurses and health personnel involved in treating Covid-19 patients.

Independence Day marks the start of the 1810-21 struggle for freedom from Spain, and has also been celebrated the night before for over a century.

But both during Tuesday night’s fireworks and Wednesday’s small military display in Mexico City’s main plaza, spectators were few and kept far away as a precaution to prevent the spread of coronavirus.

Mexico has suffered over 676,000 cases and almost 72,000 deaths, the fourth-highest number in the world.

“Unfortunately, the pandemic stole the festivities as they normally are, but we were able to enjoy it anyway,” said Minerva Nuñez, a tourist visiting with her family from the northern state of Tamaulipas.

Rutsela Cardenas, a businesswoman from Cancún visiting the capital with her husband, said she understood the need to ban crowds at the Independence day celebrations, which usually attract some 100,000 rowdy revellers to the enormous plaza.

“These are measures that are necessary because we are not in a situation where we can just walk around normally.”

Each year, the president rings the bell that marks the call to arms during the independence struggle and shouts “Viva Mexico!” (Long live Mexico!) and “Long live the independence heroes!” That slogan, called “grito” in Spanish, gives the ceremony its name.

The event had not been cancelled since 1847, during the Mexican-American War, when U.S. troops occupied Mexico City.

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