1999 in Mexico
| |||||
Decades: | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
See also: |
Events in the year 1999 in Mexico.
Incumbents
[edit]Federal government
[edit]- President: Ernesto Zedillo
- Interior Secretary (SEGOB): Francisco Labastida (until 21 May); Diódoro Carrasco (from 21 May)
- Secretary of Foreign Affairs (SRE): María del Rosario Green Macías
- Communications Secretary (SCT): Carlos Ruiz Sacristán
- Education Secretary (SEP): Miguel Limón Rojas
- Secretary of Defense (SEDENA): Enrique Cervantes Aguirre
- Secretary of Navy: José Ramón Lorenzo Franco
- Secretary of Labor and Social Welfare (STPS): José Antonio González Fernández/Mariano Palacios Alcocer
- Secretary of Welfare: Esteban Moctezuma (until 4 August); Carlos Jarque (from 4 August)
- Secretary of Public Education: Miguel Limón Rojas
- Tourism Secretary (SECTUR): Óscar Espinosa Villarreal
- Secretary of the Environment (SEMARNAT): Julia Carabias Lillo
- Secretary of Health (SALUD): Juan Ramón de la Fuente (until 30 November); José Antonio González Fernández (from 30 November)
Supreme Court
[edit]- President of the Supreme Court: José Vicente Aguinaco Alemán then Genaro David Góngora Pimentel
Governors
[edit]- Aguascalientes: Felipe González González, (National Action Party, PAN)
- Baja California: Alejandro González Alcocer, Substitute, (PAN)
- Baja California Sur: Leonel Cota Montaño (PRD)/Guillermo Mercado Romero (PRI)
- Campeche: José Antonio González Curi
- Chiapas: Roberto Albores Guillén
- Chihuahua: Patricio Martínez García (PRI)
- Coahuila: Enrique Martínez y Martínez/Rogelio Montemayor Seguy (PRI)
- Colima: Fernando Moreno Peña (PRI)
- Durango: Ángel Sergio Guerrero Mier (PRI)
- Guanajuato: Vicente Fox/Ramon Martin Huerta (PAN)
- Guerrero: Angel Aguirre Rivero/René Juárez Cisneros (PAN)
- Hidalgo: Alberto Cárdenas Jiménez (PAN)
- Jalisco: Humberto Lugo Gil/Manuel Angel Nunez Soto (PAN)
- State of Mexico: César Camacho Quiroz/Arturo Montiel Rojas (PRI)
- Michoacán: Víctor Manuel Tinoco
- Morelos: Jorge Morales Barud (Substitute—PRI).[1]
- Nayarit: Rigoberto Ochoa Zaragoza/Antonio Echevarría Domínguez
- Nuevo León: Fernando Canales (PRI)
- Oaxaca: Heladio Ramírez López (PRI)
- Puebla: Melquiades Morales Flores/Manuel Bartlett Díaz (PRI)
- Querétaro: Ignacio Loyola Vera (PRI)
- Quintana Roo: Mario Villanueva Madrid/Joaquín Hendricks Díaz (PRI)
- San Luis Potosí: Fernando Silva Nieto (PRI)
- Sinaloa: Juan S. Millán (PRI)
- Sonora: Armando López Nogales (PRI)
- Tabasco: Roberto Madrazo Pintado (PRI)
- Tamaulipas: Manuel Cavazos Lerma/Tomás Yarrington
- Tlaxcala: José Antonio Álvarez Lima/Alfonso Sánchez Anaya (PRI)
- Veracruz: Miguel Alemán Velasco
- Yucatán: Víctor Cervera Pacheco (PRI)
- Zacatecas: Ricardo Monreal Ávila (PRI)
- Head of Government of the Federal District
- Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas, Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), (until September 29)[2]
- Rosario Robles (PRD) (starting September 29)
Events
[edit]- The banderas monumentales program is initiated.
- January: 1999 UNAM strike
- March 21: 1999 Mexican referendums
- June 15: 1999 Tehuacán earthquake
- August 18–25: Hurricane Bret
- September 5–9: Hurricane Greg
- September 12: Nuestra Belleza México 1999
- September 30: 1999 Oaxaca earthquake
- September – October: 1999 Mexico floods
- November: Mexico hosts the first Parapan American Games[3]
Awards
[edit]Sport
[edit]- Primera División de México Verano 1999.
- Primera División de México Invierno 1999.
- 1999 FIFA Confederations Cup Final.
- Mexico participate in the 1999 Copa América and become 3rd.
- Homenaje a Dos Leyendas: El Santo y Salvador Lutteroth (1999).
- Ruleta de la Muerte (1999).
- 1999 Women's NORCECA Volleyball Championship in Monterrey.
Television
[edit]Debuted
[edit]- Alma Rebelde
- Catalina y Sebastián
- Háblame de amor
- Laberintos de pasión
- Mujeres engañadas
- Nunca Te Olvidaré
- Por tu amor
- Rosalinda
- Tres mujeres
- Yacaranday
Ended
[edit]- Alma Rebelde
- Camila
- Catalina y Sebastián
- El diario de Daniela
- Nunca Te Olvidaré
- Por tu amor
- El Privilegio de Amar
- Rosalinda
- Yacaranday
Births
[edit]Deaths
[edit]- March 19: Jaime Sabines, Mexican poet (Horal, 1950) and Tarumba in Mexico City (b. 1926).[5]
- May 15: Gutierre Tibón, Italian-Mexican writer (b. 1905)
- July 22: Lauro Ortega Martínez, 89, governor of Morelos 1982-1988 (b. 1910)[6]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Frikas, Javier Jaramillo (Nov 12, 2012). "El doctor Morales Barud". La Unión (in European Spanish). Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- ^ "Biografia de Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas". www.biografiasyvidas.com (in Spanish). Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- ^ "Mexico 1999 Parapan American Games". International Paralympic Committee. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
- ^ "Medalla Belisario Domínguez" (in Spanish). Senado de la Republica. 7 Oct 1999. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
- ^ "Jaime Sabines, el poeta de todos nosotros" [Jaime Sabines, the poet of all of us], El Pais (in Spanish), Madrid, March 19, 2019, retrieved May 2, 2019
- ^ Cinta, Guillermo (July 24, 2010), "Aniversario luctuoso de don Lauro" [Anniversary of the death of Don Lauro], La Union de Morelos (in Spanish), Cuernavaca, retrieved June 1, 2019
External links
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1999 in Mexico.