Mexico has turned the opening of the World Cup into its greatest showcase. A wave of protests threatens to turn him against him

Welcome the inauguration A World Cup is always a guarantee of something: visibility. There are few ‘showcases’ comparable to being the city in which the ball of a FIFA tournament begins to roll, something that will happen tonight (peninsular time) in Mexico City. What is not so clear is what the rest of the planet will see through that showcase: the Government hopes to offer a great sports festival, but there is seven protests summoned that threaten to spoil the day and leave a very different image. The World Cup ball is not the only one that rolls. And the day came. If you like sports (and if you don’t, too) it is likely that you had March 11 marked in red on your calendar. Barring an unforeseen catastrophe, this afternoon, at 9:00 p.m. peninsular time, the teams of Mexico and South Africa will play the opening match of the 2026 Soccer World Cup. They will do so in the Azteca stadium from Mexico City, after an opening ceremony in which several artists will participate and which will experience its climax when Shakira and Burna Boy perform the song of the World Cup, ‘Dai dai’. More than football. The normal thing on a day like today is that the host country of the World Cup dedicates itself to talking basically about football. Mexico knows it well, which has experience in the matter: this will be the third time in which it hosts the World Cup tournament, something it already did in 1970 and 1986. Today, however, the Mexican authorities (especially those in CDMX) are awaiting something else: half a dozen calls of protests that will start from different points of the city towards the vicinity of the stadium where athletes, authorities and fans will meet. What protests? The diary The Universal speaks of at least seven calls confirmed and organized by groups of transporters, health workers, peasant associations and pensioners who basically want to take advantage of two things: the media attention generated by the World Cup and the Government’s interest in avoiding any conflict that tarnishes the FIFA tournament. There are two mobilized groups that stand out above the rest due to the exposure they have achieved in recent weeks. The first are the ‘seeking mothers’that they cry out for justice for your missing relatives. The second, the teachersorganized in the National Coordinator of Education Workers (CNTE) and who have been demanding labor improvements for some time. Although the Executive has tried until the last moment reach an agreement with them to deactivate today’s protests, both parties (Education and CNTE) remain very distant. Claudia Sheibaum’s team does has been luckier with the farmers, who also threatened to mobilize. @lajornadaonline Hours before the soccer festival begins, the pain of the families of missing people is manifested in Mexico City. Collectives of searching mothers walk towards the Mexico City stadium, but the capital police prevented them from passing through Tlalpan. ♬ original sound – lajornadaonline – lajornadaonline “They want to provoke us”. The conflict does not catch the Government by surprise. The CNTE it takes months showing its discomfort and its relationship with the Sheinbaum Government has been strained in recent weeks, which has even led some of its members to break into the headquarters of the Ministry of Public Education. The most critical episode occurred a few days agowhen a teacher lost an eye after being hit by a rubber bullet while participating in a march. Incidents like this are the ones that now, a few hours before the start of the World Cup, the Government wants to avoid at all costs. “There are groups that want to provoke us, and they are not necessarily teachers. In other words, what they are looking for is repression, I say it clearly. What they are looking for is that before the opening of the World Cup the international note is: ‘The Government of Mexico represses teachers’. That is what they are looking for, but they are not going to have it,” Sheinbaum assured on Monday. The scenario is not simple. Both the president and the Government of CDMX assure that will respect the right to protest, but at the same time they are taking measures to shield the Azteca and prevent the protests from altering the World Cup agenda. “National Security Facility”. The Secretary of Government of CDM, César Cravioto, it was very clear about it on Tuesday: the capital’s stadium, he warned, “is already a national security facility.” Hence, access controls and protection have been reinforced. “They will have to understand that in less than 48 hours the World Cup will open here, in the stadium, and we have to protect it.” Cravioto insisted also that fans are “guaranteed” access to the Azteca, although he asked them to arrive “early” to avoid “complications.” ABC assures that there are professionals (journalists, stadium workers, sponsors…) who are already considering heading to the area at seven in the morning, six hours before the opening match starts. The focus is not only on the Azteca. The Secretariat of Citizen Security has also deployed a special device on the perimeter of the Mexico City International Airport to anticipate the arrival of CNTE protesters. Of laws and pensions. In the background is the clash between the Executive and the teachers represented by the CNTE, who on May 1, Labor Day, presented a document with their requests to the Government. In general lines propose eliminating the ISSSTE law of 2007, changes in educational reforms, recovering a solidarity pension system for teachers and a salary improvement. For now, and despite the eight-hour meeting held in extremison the eve of the World Cup, there has been no agreement with the Government, which maintains that the change in pensions would skyrocket its cost. The teachers’ protests will match today with those of the ‘seeking mothers’, who have been demanding that the Executive not forget the tens of thousands of people with unknown whereabouts that Mexico accumulates. Before, the group has … Read more

Activists condemn President Donald Trump’s “cruelty and divisiveness”

Leaders of the Coalition for Immigrant Rights (CHIRLA) and social leaders of the Immanuel Presbyterian Church of Los Angeles condemned the series of executive orders of President Donald Trump, as part of his promises on the “first day” of government and regretted the rescinding a memorandum that prevented immigration and Border Patrol agents from entering schools and hospitals and other sensitive locations. The president’s decrees include dozens of immigration measures that further divide the country, close access to asylum, end birthright citizenship, undermine due process and pave the way for mass arrests and deportations, which would end in an economic crisis in the country and separation of families. “While no one is safe, we continue fighting for our children,” said Mrs. Vianey Rojas, originally from Mexico City, who participated in the vigil. “We deserve respect and what the government wants to do is unfair,” he added, while dozens of immigrants chanted: From north to south! From east to west! We will win this fight! At all costs! Some people at the protest called for no more money to be used to deport people.Credit: Jorge Luis Macías | Impremedia There are no longer protected areas Under the new Trump administration, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) issued memos to lift limits on Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to perform work in “protected areas” under former director Alejandro Mayorkas. the news network first announced FoxNews. These protected areas were schools at all levels, health care facilities, places of worship, “places where children gather,” social service establishments, food banks, religious or civil ceremonies, and disaster relief and response centers. emergencies. “We have a network of workers and community organizations to fight together,” Felipe Cáceres, organizer of the SEIU Local 721 union, told La Opinion. “Despite what they do, we have rights and we are going to protect children and undocumented people. , even though they are saying that churches and schools will not be sanctuaries.” Angélica Salas is director of CHIRLA.Credit: Jorge Luis Macías | Impremedia What fell apart The Mayorkas policy was initially established in 2011 by then-ICE Director John Morton. At that time, the execution of specific coercive actions was prohibited. in a variety of sensitive spaces. Similar guidance was also issued to Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in 2013. While in 2021, Mayorkas issued guidance to ICE and CBP on enforcement actions in or near areas requiring special protection. “In our pursuit of justice, including the execution of our law enforcement responsibilities, we impact people’s lives and promote the well-being of our country in the most fundamental ways.” The guidance added that: As a result, when conducting a law enforcement action, ICE and CBP agents and officers must first examine and consider the impact of the location where the actions are likely to take place, their effect on the people and broader social interests. Raúl Murillo, director of Hermandad Servicios Comunitarios, indicated that Trump summarized what his administration will be with two gestures: the alleged Nazi salute of his main follower, Elon Musk, and “the totally racist and anti-immigrant measures that he announced from day one.” ”. One of the protesters shared the emergency number for immigrants who need help.Credit: Jorge Luis Macías | Impremedia “Trump is causing terror in our community; It is not satisfied with putting pressure on the workers; Now he also wants to sow fear in our children and parents when they go to drop their children off at school and encounter ICE agents,” declared the social activist. “Wanting to separate families is totally inhumane; something of those who have no sensitivity and of those who have no love for the most vulnerable, our children.” ‘Stay in Mexico’ takes effect immediately Likewise, DHS “immediately” reinstated the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), allowing the DHS Secretary return certain applicants for admission to the neighboring country from which they arrive, pending the completion of deportation proceedings pursuant to Section 240 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). End the “abuse” of humanitarian parole DHA Acting Secretary Benjamine Huffman issued further guidance “to end the widespread abuse of humanitarian parole and returns the program to a case-by-case basis.” That way, ICE and CBP will gradually eliminate any parole programs (humanitarian parole) that is not in accordance with the law. “This action empowers the brave men and women of CBP and ICE to enforce our immigration laws and catch foreign criminals—including murderers and rapists—who have entered our country illegally,” a DHA spokesperson said. Migration agents will be able to reach schools. Credit: Jorge Luis Macías | Impremedia “Criminals will no longer be able to hide in America’s schools and churches to avoid arrest. “The Trump Administration will not tie the hands of our brave law enforcement and instead trusts them to use common sense.” The DHS points out that the administration of former President Joe Biden “indiscriminately” allowed the entry of 1.5 million migrants. ‘Scapegoats’ Angélica Salas, director of CHIRLA, said Trump’s proposals at his inauguration indicate “an obsession with changing the United States and scapegoating immigrants in the most cruel and un-American way.” Salas said that the inauguration of a new president in the United States portends new beginnings, the opening of doors and the united search for possibilities for all. “Not this time,” he stressed. “A Donald Trump administration threatens to be a stark contrast to immigrant communities everywhere, and to a nation that just a few years ago praised the contributions of immigrants as essential and key to keeping our nation afloat during the days dark aspects of the Covid-19 pandemic,” he added. Trump’s measures are a direct attack on the Latino, migrant community, some of the protesters said. Credit: Jorge Luis Macías | Impremedia “President Trump continues his divisive and hateful rhetoric, demonizing immigrants and announcing numerous policies whose impact is already being felt on the border and in the interior,” Salas explained. In fact, CHIRLA rejects as “false, cruel and dangerous both the notions that there is some type of emergency or invasion on … Read more

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