| |||||
| Decades: | 
  | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| See also: | |||||
Events in the year 1992 in Mexico.
Incumbents
Federal government
- President: Carlos Salinas de Gortari
 - Interior Secretary (SEGOB): Fernando Gutiérrez Barrios
 - Secretary of Foreign Affairs (SRE): Fernando Solana Morales
 - Communications Secretary (SCT): Andrés Caso Lombardo/Emilio Gamboa Patrón
 - Secretary of Defense (SEDENA): Antonio Riviello Bazán
 - Secretary of Navy: Luis Carlos Ruano Angulo
 - Secretary of Labor and Social Welfare (STPS): Arsenio Farell Cubillas
 - Secretary of Welfare: Patricio Chirinos Calero/Luis Donaldo Colosio
 - Secretary of Public Education: Manuel Bartlett Díaz/Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León
 - Tourism Secretary (SECTUR): Silvia Hernández Enríquez
 - Secretary of the Environment (SEMARNAT): Guillermo Jiménez Morales
 - Secretary of Health (SALUD): Jesús Kumate Rodríguez
 
Supreme Court
- President of the Supreme Court:
 
Governors
- Aguascalientes
- Miguel Ángel Barberena Vega, (Institutional Revolutionary Party, PRI), until November 30
 - Otto Granados Roldán, PRI, starting December 1.
 
 - Baja California: Ernesto Ruffo Appel, (National Action Party PAN)
 - Baja California Sur: Víctor Manuel Liceaga Ruibal
 - Campeche: Abelardo Carrillo Zavala/Jorge Salomón Azar García
 - Chiapas: Patrocinio González Garrido
 - Chihuahua: Fernando Baeza Meléndez/Francisco Barrio
 - Coahuila: Eliseo Mendoza Berrueto
 - Colima: Carlos de la Madrid Virgen
 - Durango: José Ramírez Gamero/Maximiliano Silerio Esparza
 - Guanajuato: Carlos Medina Plascencia
 - Guerrero: José Francisco Ruiz Massieu (PRI)
 - Hidalgo: Adolfo Lugo Verduzco
 - Jalisco: Guillermo Cosío Vidaurri/Carlos Rivera Aceves (PRI)
 - State of Mexico: Ignacio Pichardo Pagaza/Emilio Chuayffet (PRI)
 - Michoacán: Genovevo Figueroa Zamudio/Eduardo Villaseñor Peña/Ausencio Chávez Hernández
 - Morelos: Antonio Riva Palacio (PRI).[1]
 - Nayarit: Celso Humberto Delgado Ramírez
 - Nuevo León: Sócrates Rizzo (PRI)
 - Oaxaca: Diódoro Carrasco Altamirano (PRI)
 - Puebla: Mariano Piña Olaya/Manuel Bartlett Díaz (PRI)
 - Querétaro: Enrique Burgos García (PRI)
 - Quintana Roo: Miguel Borge Martín (PRI)
 - San Luis Potosí: Horacio Sánchez Unzueta (PRI)
 - Sinaloa: Francisco Labastida/Renato Vega Alvarado (PRI)
 - Sonora: Manlio Fabio Beltrones Rivera (PRI)
 - Tabasco: Salvador Neme Castillo/Manuel Gurría Ordóñez (PRI)
 - Tamaulipas: Américo Villarreal Guerra/Manuel Cavazos Lerma (PRI)
 - Tlaxcala: Samuel Quiróz de la Vega/José Antonio Álvarez Lima (PRD)
 - Veracruz: Dante Delgado Rannauro/Patricio Chirinos Calero (PRD)
 - Yucatán: Dulce María Sauri Riancho (PRI)
 - Zacatecas: Pedro de Leon/Arturo Romo Gutiérrez (PRI)
 - Regent of Mexico City: Manuel Camacho Solís[2]
 
Events
- January 16: Signing of the Chapultepec Peace Accords in Mexico City.
 - April 22: 1992 Guadalajara explosions.
 - July 8: The José Luis Cuevas Museum opens.
 
Awards
- Belisario Domínguez Medal of Honor – Ramón G. Bonfil
 
Sport
- 1991–92 Mexican Primera División season.
 - 1991–92 Copa México.
 - 1992 Caribbean Series played at the Héctor Espino Baseball Stadium in Hermosillo.
 - Tigres del México win the Mexican League.
 - 1992 Mexican Grand Prix.
 - Mexico at the 1992 Winter Olympics.
 - Mexico at the 1992 Summer Olympics.
 - Mexico at the 1992 Summer Paralympics.
 - Monterrey La Raza is founded.
 - August 5: Tigrillos de Chetumal are founded.
 
Births
- February 2: David Sánchez (boxer) (d. 2017).
 - March 13: Frida Sofía, singer/songwriter
 - April 16: Félix Eduardo Rodríguez, footballer
 - May 23: Ramiro Alejandro Celis, bullfighter (d. 2017).
 - June 24: Germán Sánchez, diver.
 - July 8: Ariel Camacho, singer-songwriter (Los Plebes del Rancho de Ariel Camacho), (d. February 25, 2015).
 
Deaths
- January 19: Augusto Benedico, Spanish-Mexican actor (Los ricos también lloran)[3]
 - February 5: Sergio Méndez Arceo, Roman Catholic bishop of Cuernavaca 1953-1983 (b. 1907)[4]
 
References
- ↑ Monroy, David (July 15, 2014). "Muere Antonio Riva Palacio, ex gobernador de Morelos". www.milenio.com (in Spanish). Retrieved August 28, 2020.
 - ↑ "¿Los conociste?, ¿los recuerdas? Ellos fueron los regentes y jefes de Gobierno CDMX". Sopitas.com (in Spanish). 5 December 2018. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
 - ↑ Juan Pablo Heras González, "Augusto Benedico, actor del exilio.", vdocuments.mx, retrieved Aug 30, 2019
 - ↑ Elena Poniatowska (Oct 7, 2007), "Los cien años del obispo Sergio Méndez Arceo" [100 years of Bishop Sergio Mendez Areco], La Jornada (in Spanish), retrieved Aug 30, 2019
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
