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Oke Göttlich, the man shaking up German soccer over Trump: ‘We discussed at length our red lines for boycotting the World Cup’

He takes this newspaper’s call on a train bound for Hamburg, home of St. Pauli, continues by car and says goodbye almost an hour later in his office at the headquarters of the modest club, which he has chaired since 2014. Oke Göttlich (Hamburg, Germany; 50) is also one of the 13 vice presidents of the DFB, the German Football Association. And earlier this year, amid threats from Donald Trump’s administration to invade Greenland, Göttlich, a trained journalist, said enough was enough. “What reasons justified the boycotts by certain countries of Olympic Games in the 1980s?” he asked, referring to Moscow 1980 and Los Angeles 1984, in the Hamburger Morgenpost. “In my view, the current threat is greater than back then, so we must have this discussion; a footballer’s life is not worth more than the life of any of the people being directly or indirectly attacked by the host country of the next World Cup.”

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© Stuart Franklin (Getty Images)

Oke Göttlich during a Bundesliga match.

An army of lawyers is fighting so you can order an Uber at Mexico City’s airport

3 June 2026 at 17:51
An Uber user waits at Mexico City International Airport on Tuesday.

Everything a traveler encounters upon leaving Mexico City International Airport (AICM) illustrates the problems facing the country’s largest terminal. The first thing you see after stepping outside is long lines, cars being towed away, and National Guard officers handing out fines. The standoff between licensed taxi drivers and ride‑hailing apps over control of the airport has been simmering for months, becoming a strange daily routine of enforcement operations and drivers losing their cars at both terminals of the airport. But with only eight days before the World Cup begins in the capital — bringing millions of visitors— the conflict is intensifying.

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Taxi bay for app services at Terminal 1 of the AICM, installed outside the airport.

© REBECA HERRERA

Airport taxi company, with its own parking area.

© REBECA HERRERA

Signage for the ride-hailing stand at Terminal 1 of the AICM.

© REBECA HERRERA

Passersby head to the taxi pick-up area at Terminal 2 of the AICM on Tuesday.

© REBECA HERRERA

The new ride‑hailing bay at Terminal 1 is almost empty.

Mexican teachers expand protest camp and threaten to shut down the capital

3 June 2026 at 16:07
CNTE teachers at the protest camp on the streets of the Historic Center in Mexico City on Tuesday.

Teachers in Mexico have launched a nationwide strike that is bringing mounting pressure on President Claudia Sheinbaum’s government ahead of the start of the soccer World Cup.

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© Nayeli Cruz

Teachers from the CNTE (National Coordination of Education Workers) demonstrating on Paseo de la Reforma.

© Nayeli Cruz

Members of the CNTE playing a game during Tuesday's demonstration.

© Nayeli Cruz (EL PAÍS)

Statues toppled by CNTE members.

© Nayeli Cruz

On Tuesday, the CNTE’s Single National Negotiating Commission attended a roundtable discussion with federal authorities at the Ministry of the Interior.

Most Americans oppose ICE’s presence at stadiums during the World Cup, according to poll

With just a few days to go before the start of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the world’s largest sporting event faces the question of what role U.S. immigration authorities will play. Now, a new poll by The Washington Post and the University of Maryland has found that most Americans would prefer they play no role at all.

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© David Dee Delgado (REUTERS)

Federal agents secure a detention center in New Jersey on May 29.

The US men’s soccer team, between staying quiet and speaking out

1 June 2026 at 10:33

Timothy Weah used his platform as a member of the U.S. men’s national soccer team to speak out about what he sees as an injustice. The Marseille player — son of Ballon d’Or winner and former Liberian president George Weah — joined New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani onstage as he announced he had secured 1,000 tickets priced at $50 for the matches to be played at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, just across the river from Manhattan. They are a drop in the bucket for this venue — the stadium, expanded to a capacity of 87,000, will host eight matches including the final, meaning 696,000 total tickets — but it’s something.

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© Pamela Smith (IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect)

Timothy Weah walks onto the stage at the event where the U.S. World Cup roster was announced.

‘México ’86,’ a satire about the inner workings of a World Cup, complete with a scheme to deceive FIFA

26 May 2026 at 11:02

Diego Luna was seven years old in 1985. A devastating magnitude 8.1 earthquake struck Mexico City just nine months before the start of the FIFA World Cup. He recalls that the overall feeling among residents of the capital was “really intense,” “very sad,” and that there was a “sense of helplessness” because of the state’s absence. Amid that, as in other tragedies that have hit the country, the actor says there was also a “very beautiful” feeling of solidarity and community response — but “it seemed like the destruction made it impossible to imagine a World Cup.” What lay behind Mexico becoming the first nation to host the tournament twice is a mix of true events, anecdotes, acts of corruption, and a few urban legends. Or at least that is how Netflix movie México 86 frames it: a satirical account of how those who run soccer off the field focused national efforts to turn the event into a symbol of unity and recovery after mourning, but which also helped trigger the Mexican national team’s ban from the 1990 World Cup in Italy.

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© Netflix

A still from the movie 'México 86.'
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