The death toll from a fiery pipeline explosion in central Mexico last month reached 125, the government announced Sunday.
Another 22 people remain in hospital, many of them with burns covering at least 80% of their bodies, the social security office IMSS reported.
On 18 January, the fuel-line in Hidalgo state was deliberately punctured, drawing hundreds of people looking to gather gasoline before it ignited.
The disaster occurred as the government wages a huge effort to clamp down on fuel theft, which costs Mexico an estimated three billion dollars in 2017.
So-called "huachicol" - as the stolen fuel is known in Mexico - costs about half of market price.
Mexico is regularly rocked by deadly explosions at illegal pipeline taps, a dangerous but lucrative business whose players include powerful drug cartels and corrupt Pemex insiders.