Shakira deslumbra en la ceremonia de inauguración, con Sheinbaum como gran ausente


Ciudad de México, 11 jun (Prensa Latina) La presidenta de México, Claudia Sheinbaum, disfruta hoy de la inauguración del Mundial de Fútbol 2026 en el Deportivo Hermanos Galeana, uno de los 18 espacios abiertos en esta capital para proyectar gratuitamente los partidos.
The post Presidenta mexicana verá partido del Mundial desde recinto capitalino first appeared on Noticias Prensa Latina.
Ciudad de México, 11 jun (Prensa Latina) El Gobierno de México descartó problemas durante la inauguración del Mundial de Fútbol 2026, adelantó que estará abierto el Fan Fest del Zócalo capitalino y señaló un interés político en movilizaciones programadas para hoy.
The post México descarta problemas durante apertura del Mundial de Fútbol first appeared on Noticias Prensa Latina.

© Luis Antonio Rojas for The New York Times
Brasilia, 10 jun (Prensa Latina) Los presidentes de Brasil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, y de México, Claudia Sheinbaum, ratificaron hoy su rechazo al bloqueo impuesto por Estados Unidos contra Cuba, durante una videoconferencia en la que abordaron temas bilaterales e internacionales.
The post Lula y Sheinbaum ratifican rechazo al bloqueo de EEUU contra Cuba first appeared on Noticias Prensa Latina.
Ciudad de México, 10 jun (Prensa Latina) La presidenta de México, Claudia Sheinbaum, dio la bienvenida hoy en Palacio Nacional al titular de la FIFA, Gianni Infantino, y a representantes de federaciones y confederaciones, en vísperas de la inauguración del Mundial 2026.
The post Presidenta de México da bienvenida a Infantino en Palacio Nacional first appeared on Noticias Prensa Latina.
Segundo presidente, em 2013, as manifestações que reivindicavam contra aumento de passagem de ônibus serviram para atuação da extrema-direita, o que levou ao impeachment de Dilma Rousseff.
Lula sugeriu que a situação mexicana pode ter influências externas.
“Eu acho que tem o dedo de alguém e que, talvez, nem seja mexicano.”
O México enfrenta uma série de protestos na véspera da abertura da Copa do Mundo, competição que o país, junto com Estados Unidos e Canadá, irá sediar. As manifestações são lideradas por professores, que pressionam o governo por reajuste salarial. Nas últimas horas, vias foram bloqueadas e houve confronto com forças de segurança na capital mexicana, aumentando a tensão.
Na reunião, o presidente Lula criticou a velocidade de disseminação de notícias falsas, em detrimento do debate público.
“Estamos vivendo um momento muito delicado na política e na humanidade. A narrativa e o argumento não valem mais nada. O que vale é a rapidez da mentira nas redes digitais, tanto para a direita quanto para a esquerda. É uma disputa do quanto mais curto, melhor. E quanto menos explicado, melhor.”
“O mundo só vai ser civilizado quando a gente voltar a ter em conta o que é o argumento, é a narrativa das coisas que podem convencer a seriedade de alguém que disputa um cargo em qualquer lugar. E não estamos vivendo este momento”, acrescentou.
Segundo presidente, em 2013, as manifestações que reivindicavam contra aumento de passagem de ônibus serviram para atuação da extrema-direita, o que levou ao impeachment de Dilma Rousseff.
Lula sugeriu que a situação mexicana pode ter influências externas.
“Eu acho que tem o dedo de alguém e que, talvez, nem seja mexicano.”
O México enfrenta uma série de protestos na véspera da abertura da Copa do Mundo, competição que o país, junto com Estados Unidos e Canadá, irá sediar. As manifestações são lideradas por professores, que pressionam o governo por reajuste salarial. Nas últimas horas, vias foram bloqueadas e houve confronto com forças de segurança na capital mexicana, aumentando a tensão.
Na reunião, o presidente Lula criticou a velocidade de disseminação de notícias falsas, em detrimento do debate público.
“Estamos vivendo um momento muito delicado na política e na humanidade. A narrativa e o argumento não valem mais nada. O que vale é a rapidez da mentira nas redes digitais, tanto para a direita quanto para a esquerda. É uma disputa do quanto mais curto, melhor. E quanto menos explicado, melhor.”
“O mundo só vai ser civilizado quando a gente voltar a ter em conta o que é o argumento, é a narrativa das coisas que podem convencer a seriedade de alguém que disputa um cargo em qualquer lugar. E não estamos vivendo este momento”, acrescentou.

Only 24 hours remain before the World Cup kicks off in Mexico and the country is going though its final dress rehearsals. Preventing demonstrations on opening day is already a pipe dream: negotiations with teachers have stalled and search groups will march to make their missing relatives visible. With everyone in position and the cards on the table, attention is focused on avoiding the worst-case scenario for the government of Claudia Sheinbaum — an image of a police officer striking a teacher circling the globe on the day the country is playing for its international image. The concern is not unfounded: on the first day of protests a teacher lost an eye in clashes with police. The past two weeks have tested containment measures, and Wednesday will be the last chance to fine-tune the public staging. To ease the pressure, authorities have canceled classes for Thursday and ordered remote work for public servants.

© Rogelio Morales Ponce (Cuartoscuro)
Ciudad de México, 10 jun (Prensa Latina) La empresa de comercio electrónico Mercado Libre anunció hoy una inversión en México de cuatro mil 600 millones de dólares durante este año, 35 por ciento más con respecto a lo registrado en 2025.
The post Mercado Libre invertirá cuatro mil 600 millones de dólares en México first appeared on Noticias Prensa Latina.
“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.

© Jeffrey McWhorter (EFE)
The journalist Roxana Berenice Guzmán was inside her home when armed men showed up and smashed the door. Like in a nightmare, they did not succeed immediately: they broke the glass and then began hammering at the lock. Blow after blow, up to a dozen. A man inside asks them to wait, but one of the attackers silences him, sticking a rifle through the broken glass and taking aim. They begin to kick at the door. The kicks are combined with the hammer blows. The man inside the house pleads again: “There’s a baby, calm down!” But, as in nightmares, the squad finally manages to break a piece of the door and enter the house. “Get on the floor!” one of the hooded men shouts, before grabbing the phone that is recording him. There are no images after that, but the attackers took the founder of the local media outlet Pulso Informativo del Sureste. The recording has shaken a country used to attacks on its journalists.

© El País

Former Mexican president Andrés Manuel López Obrador reappeared on the public stage on Wednesday with a message in which he harshly criticized U.S. President Donald Trump’s pressure on Mexico under the guise of combating “narco-terrorism” and illegal immigration. López Obrador, who retired from politics after leaving the presidency in 2024, has given his full support to his successor Claudia Sheinbaum against Washington’s interference and its attempt, as he put it, to weaken Morena, the leftist political party and movement he founded and which the current president continues to lead.

© Fernando Llano (AP)
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.

© Nayeli Cruz

© Nayeli Cruz

© Nayeli Cruz (EL PAÍS)

© Nayeli Cruz

The Mexican government’s campaign against foreign interference has reached U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Ronald Johnson. The U.S. representative this week clashed with President Claudia Sheinbaum after her Sunday speech, in which she protested U.S. interference in Mexico’s internal politics. Johnson, a former Green Beret appointed by Donald Trump to press for action against the drug cartels, replied with a social media post that the Mexican leader acknowledged almost immediately: “Ambassadors must be respectful of countries’ internal political affairs.”

© Raquel Cunha (REUTERS)
Mexico’s president, Claudia Sheinbaum, is going through her most delicate moment just as she reaches a year and a half in office. Faced with multiple open fronts, the president is showing signs of wear, with a seven-point drop in approval since last March. It is the steepest fall so far in her term, although approval ratings remain high at 68%, according to an Enkoll poll conducted for EL PAÍS and W Radio. To the crisis triggered by the indictment of the governor of Sinaloa, along with nine other senior officials accused by a New York prosecutor of collaborating with drug traffickers, is added a worrying economic weakness that threatens the viability of social policies—a flagship of the leftist Morena government. Insecurity, corruption and the economy are the president’s main shortcomings and the principal concern of Mexicans, with rates slightly up since the last poll in early March.
1,207 interviews with men and women aged 18 and over, with valid voter ID and resident in Mexico.

© Quetzalli Nicte-Ha (REUTERS)