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North America put to the test: Countdown to an (almost) ready World Cup

“The world will stand still, and the eyes of the world will be focused on North America,” the 56-year-old Swiss president of FIFA, Gianni Infantino, said a few days ago from the United Nations headquarters in New York. With four days to go before the ball starts rolling, the three host countries — the United States, Mexico, and Canada — say they have everything ready. Or, more precisely, almost everything. The biggest soccer tournament in history — 48 national teams playing a total of 104 matches — takes place amid various circumstances that complicate organization: the United States remains at war with Iran, President Donald Trump’s strict immigration policies are frightening away many supporters, and FIFA’s dynamic-pricing ticket system has put seats out of reach for much of the fan base.

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Reopening match at Estadio Azteca between Mexico and Portugal in Mexico City on Saturday, March 28, 2026.

© Jeffrey McWhorter (EFE)

Mural commemorating the World Cup in Dallas.
  • ✇El País in English
  • The CIA’s shadow grows larger over Mexico Pablo Ferri
    A bitter spring in the southern part of North America. Tensions between Mexico and the United States are escalating rapidly, straining the very fibers and tendons that, until a few weeks ago, had sustained the bilateral relationship without much difficulty. The smooth and fruitful security cooperation that characterized the first year of Donald Trump’s administration has recently turned into a nightmare, with developments that paint a rather bizarre picture — some of which are cause for concern
     

The CIA’s shadow grows larger over Mexico

14 May 2026 at 13:22

A bitter spring in the southern part of North America. Tensions between Mexico and the United States are escalating rapidly, straining the very fibers and tendons that, until a few weeks ago, had sustained the bilateral relationship without much difficulty. The smooth and fruitful security cooperation that characterized the first year of Donald Trump’s administration has recently turned into a nightmare, with developments that paint a rather bizarre picture — some of which are cause for concern for the Mexican government led by Claudia Sheinbaum, such as the growing presence of CIA agents in the country. This week, U.S. media outlets revealed that the intelligence agency orchestrated the March car bomb attack against a mid-level operative of the Sinaloa Cartel near the capital. Both governments have denied the information, with varying degrees of intensity.

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The incident in which Francisco Beltrán died in the State of Mexico.

The Julio César Chávez family: Mexico’s most famous boxing dynasty faces a different kind of fight

25 May 2026 at 12:01

In the past 10 months, two sons of Mexican boxing champion, Julio César Chávez, have been arrested. The eldest, who shares his father’s name and is known as Junior, was detained last July on charges of arms trafficking, drug offenses, and organized crime. And Last Wednesday, the story repeated itself with his younger brother, Omar, who was arrested in Culiacán, Sinaloa, on suspicion of domestic violence.

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© Richard Vogel (AP)

Julio César Chavez Jr. poses with his father in Los Angeles on June 4, 2011.

Mexico wins 2-0 over South Africa in opening match of 2026 World Cup

11 June 2026 at 20:19
With a capacity crowd of 80,824 watching at the iconic Azteca Stadium, co-host Mexico started the largest World Cup tournament in history by getting goals in each half while three red cards were shown — two for South Africa and one for Mexico.

Organized crime weaves a new maritime trafficking network between Mexico and Guatemala

31 May 2026 at 04:00
Guatemalan troops patrol the border with Chiapas on February 12, 2024.

Organized crime has returned to the Pacific route for drug trafficking. Since the start of 2026, at least eight vessels have been detected on the “maritime bridge” between Guatemala and Chiapas, Mexico with dozens arrested and several tons of cocaine seized. The detection and interdiction of these speedboats at sea is further evidence of the pressure the United States is exerting on the governments of Mexico and Central America.

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Guatemalan troops patrol the border with Chiapas.

Edith Sánchez fights for her severance after 25 years working for Luis Miguel: ‘He told me I was like his mother; thank God I never believed it’

21 May 2026 at 14:50
Edith Sánchez, in Mexico City, April 16, 2026.

If photographs could make a sound, the one Edith Sánchez keeps in a small plastic bag would play Luis Miguel’s version of Las Mañanitas. Dated September 16, 1994, the photo shows the Mexican singer hugging her as she looks at the camera. It is the only picture she has left beside the man who was her boss for more than 25 years.

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Edith Sánchez shows a photograph next to Luis Miguel at a 1994 celebration.An invitation to a party during Luis Miguel's 1999–2000 tour, featuring the name Edith Sánchez.Edith Sánchez's medical record from the Cancer Institute, dated 2017.
  • ✇El País in English
  • ICE arrests one of the soldiers linked to Mexico’s Ayotzinapa case in California Rodrigo Soriano
    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detained Enrique Martínez Chávez on Wednesday in Los Angeles, California, according to a statement the agency released Thursday on social media. The 32‑year‑old detainee is one of the military officers linked to the disappearance of 43 student teachers in the Mexican municipality of Iguala, Guerrero, in 2014. Martínez Chávez is wanted in Mexico for the alleged crime of enforced disappearance and has been a fugitive from justice for years. ICE says h
     

ICE arrests one of the soldiers linked to Mexico’s Ayotzinapa case in California

5 June 2026 at 06:49

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detained Enrique Martínez Chávez on Wednesday in Los Angeles, California, according to a statement the agency released Thursday on social media. The 32‑year‑old detainee is one of the military officers linked to the disappearance of 43 student teachers in the Mexican municipality of Iguala, Guerrero, in 2014. Martínez Chávez is wanted in Mexico for the alleged crime of enforced disappearance and has been a fugitive from justice for years. ICE says he will remain in its custody “until he can be sent home” to Mexico.

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© ICE Los Ángeles

Arrest of Enrique Martínez Chávez in Hawthorne, California, U.S., this Thursday.
  • ✇Latin America Reports
  • Mexico City teacher strike threatens to disrupt 2026 World Cup kick-off Jorge Alfonso
    Mexico City, Mexico – A national strike by hundreds of teachers affiliated with Mexico’s National Coordinating Committee of Education Workers (CNTE) has entered its fourth day, paralyzing much of the country’s capital.  View Post(opens in a new tab) The mobilization – which opposes pension reforms – escalated on Wednesday when protesters broke into the headquarters of the Public Education Secretariat (SEP), damaging the government building and injuring at least two police officers. Wi
     

Mexico City teacher strike threatens to disrupt 2026 World Cup kick-off

4 June 2026 at 22:43

Mexico City, Mexico – A national strike by hundreds of teachers affiliated with Mexico’s National Coordinating Committee of Education Workers (CNTE) has entered its fourth day, paralyzing much of the country’s capital. 

View Post(opens in a new tab)

The mobilization – which opposes pension reforms – escalated on Wednesday when protesters broke into the headquarters of the Public Education Secretariat (SEP), damaging the government building and injuring at least two police officers.

With no end in sight to negotiations between union representatives and authorities, the ongoing demonstrations threaten to disrupt the World Cup, which begins one week from today.  

The union has blocked highways connecting Mexico City to nearby cities, vandalized public monuments, and established a large encampment a few blocks from the presidential palace. 

The CNTE is simultaneously deploying actions in at least four other states, with more regions expected to join in the coming days.

The CNTE’s central demand is the derogation of a 2007 reform to a law passed by Mexico’s social security institute dismantling a solidarity-based pension scheme and shifting workers into individually managed private accounts. Teachers are also demanding a 100% salary increase and the elimination of the USICAMM, the body that oversees teacher hiring and promotions.

Negotiations have been conducted jointly by Secretary of Government Rosa Icela Rodríguez, Education Secretary Mario Delgado, and the director general of the ISSSTE, but no agreements have been reached so far. 

The three officials were formally authorized by President Claudia Sheinbaum to conduct and close negotiations on the government’s behalf, despite CNTE demands for a direct meeting with the president. 

Secretary Rodríguez said the state’s ability to grant concessions is limited by fiscal constraints: “What cannot be done is due to a lack of budget, not a lack of will.” 

Filiberto Frausto Orozco, a CNTE leader from Zacatecas, warned that if the government rejects their demands, “there will be no more negotiations.” 

The union has also threatened to disrupt the FIFA World Cup inauguration, scheduled for June 11 at Estadio Ciudad de México. 

Earlier this week, teachers blockaded Paseo de la Reforma and toppled statues of footballers installed to promote the tournament. 

Sheinbaum campaigned on promises to address teachers’ labor grievances, but after one and a half years in office, her government has yet to deliver on the pension reform rollback the CNTE has long demanded.

On the streets, rank-and-file teachers say they are prepared for a prolonged fight. Saray López Alamillo, who has been in the classroom for six years and is an active CNTE member, expressed full support for the union’s escalation strategy.

“In my school we have talked about it and we are ready to take this fight to the end,” she told Latin America Reports.

For many teachers, the cost of protest is immediate and personal. The government docks wages for each day teachers miss class while demonstrating. 

López Alamillo knows this firsthand: “Last year, they deducted 3,000 or 4,000 pesos from my paycheck for almost eight consecutive pay periods.”

The teacher added that the losses directly hurt her ability to cover basic household expenses. 

For some teachers those deductions are enough to keep them home. For others, like López Alamillo, the financial punishment only sharpens their resolve.

With negotiations deadlocked and the World Cup opening a week away, the standoff is entering a critical phase. Neither side has shown signs of yielding.

Featured image description: Union members marched in Mexico City this week.

Featured image credit: CNTE via Facebook.

The post Mexico City teacher strike threatens to disrupt 2026 World Cup kick-off appeared first on Latin America Reports.

Cuba’s blackouts in charts: More hours without power than with it as Trump’s pressure intensifies

Humor is often the Cuban people’s best tool for capturing their reality. That’s why, on an island that now spends more hours in darkness than with electricity, people no longer talk about apagones (blackouts) but about alumbrones — fleeting moments when the lights actually come on.

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  • ✇Colossal
  • Linocuts by Eduardo Robledo Celebrate Mexican Heritage and Community Kate Mothes
    In the richly detailed linocuts of Eduardo Robledo, festive ceremonies, spiritual motifs, and dream-like interactions unfurl. The Mexico City-based artist was born and raised in the southern borough of Xochimilco, which is famous for its canals—vestiges of a huge Aztec water transport system still used today for bringing goods into the city. This area and its time-honored customs provide a bounty of inspiration for Robledo. Community and celebration are at the heart of his work, as creatur
     

Linocuts by Eduardo Robledo Celebrate Mexican Heritage and Community

29 April 2026 at 17:02
Linocuts by Eduardo Robledo Celebrate Mexican Heritage and Community

In the richly detailed linocuts of Eduardo Robledo, festive ceremonies, spiritual motifs, and dream-like interactions unfurl. The Mexico City-based artist was born and raised in the southern borough of Xochimilco, which is famous for its canals—vestiges of a huge Aztec water transport system still used today for bringing goods into the city. This area and its time-honored customs provide a bounty of inspiration for Robledo.

Community and celebration are at the heart of his work, as creatures and figures converge in enigmatic, sometimes ritualistic choreographies. Traditional motifs like skulls and skeletons, which represent remembrance, joy, and an acceptance of the cycle of life and death, interact with denizens of the region like armadillos, birds, reptiles, and more.

a linocut print by Eduardo Robleno of a peacock and an armadillo on either side of an upside-down rose
“Adiós” (2021), three-color linocut, 15 x 22 inches

Social activism has also played a strong role in Robledo’s practice, tapping into the power of printmaking to spread messages about causes he cares deeply about. “Printmaking is democratic; it’s more supportive,” he shares in a profile. “There is a very strong graphic arts tradition in social movements.”

Robledo’s compositions are playful yet mysterious, universal and also arcane. Winged hearts, known as Sagrado Corazón, or the Sacred Heart, symbolize love, healing, and spiritual devotion. Armadillos represent protection and abundance, and numerous other foods, plants, and nods to culture—such as Xochimilco’s colorful canal boats known as trajineras—are venerated in scenes of dancing or totem-like configurations.

Robled’s prints can be found at Hecho a Mano in Santa Fe, and the artist is also a co-founder of Lugar de Huida in Mexico City, a gallery highlighting Mexican printmakers. See more on the artist’s Instagram.

a linocut print by Eduardo Robleno of an armadillo or reptile-like creature with a huge cornucopia of flowers and other motifs on its back
“Arbol de la Vida” (2025), linocut, 30 x 22 inches
a linocut print by Eduardo Robleno of dancing skeletons, birds, and other creatures
“Carnaval” (2023), linocut, 15 x 22 inches
a linocut print by Eduardo Robleno of two skeletons inside of a larger motif of a skull-headed figure, holding a hybrid bird-tree
“El Pacto” (2024), linocut, 15 x 11 inches
a linocut print by Eduardo Robleno of an armadillo amid a number of red hearts with winds
“Soltar” (2024), three-color linocut, 22 x 15 inches
a linocut print by Eduardo Robleno of a figure perched atop a group of compartments with snakes and other motifs
“Hombres de Conocimiento” (2020), linocut, 44 x 30 inches
a linocut print by Eduardo Robleno of a deer standing over purple agave plants, in front of an orange sun, looking at an anatomical heart
“El Camino” (2026), serigraph, 15 x 11 inches

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Linocuts by Eduardo Robledo Celebrate Mexican Heritage and Community appeared first on Colossal.

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