More than 177 thousand Mexicans detained by ICE in the new government

Chancellor reveals alarming numbers of Mexicans detained in the US while presenting a new consular protection strategy.

The figures that hurt

The statistics are cold but the human drama it represents burns. Since January, 177,192 compatriots have been detained by US immigration authorities. Of them, 13,722 remain behind bars today.

Juan Ramón de la Fuente, our chancellor, released these numbers during a conference with President Sheinbaum. It’s not just data—it’s lives interrupted, families fractured.

“The consular care model is still in the process of evolution, but today it has greater responsiveness and efficiency”

A new script for protection

While the arrests continue, Mexico moves pieces on the consular board. They have evaluated the 53 consulates in the US and removed 15 holders. It’s not purging—it’s script adjustment.

RelatedTen Mexicans die in ICE custody in the United States

The smartest move: digitize everything. Online procedures, attention by WhatsApp, even correcting birth certificates without setting foot in Mexico. They are small bureaucratic triumphs that change lives.

But the most specific: 20,908 legal advice granted. Of those, 5,285 cases are currently in litigation. Lawyers fighting for our countrymen from within the system.

And here is the data that hurts differently: of the 192,500 repatriates, 152,625 received consular support before the forced flight. At least we didn’t leave them alone in the end.

My father always said that politics is measured by how it treats its citizens far from home. Today we have alarming figures… and a strategy that at least attempts to respond. The geopolitical theater continues its function—but the human drama does not wait for the curtains to fall.

CRT foresees 85% of registered lines before staggered cuts

The CRT estimates that between 120 and 130 million cell phones will be registered before the progressive cut.

Mobile line registration: 85% will be linked before cuts

The Telecommunications Regulatory Commission (CRT) expects that between 120 and 130 million cell phones will be registered, which represents about 85% of the total active lines in the country.

Currently there are 144.6 million lines. Ricardo Castañeda Álvarez, general director of Regulatory Policy of the CRT, estimated that between 14 and 24 million will not be registered and will be deregistered as the process progresses.

The suspension process will begin on August 15. Lines ending in 0 will be deactivated first and then in stages until the end of the year, with the aim of avoiding technical saturations.

Castañeda explained that the extension was due to the risk that millions of users would not meet the original deadline, which would have generated operational complications similar to massive saturations in emergencies. He ruled out a new extension of the deadline.

He assured that the registry does not violate privacy because the information is managed by the operators. The main objective is to combat crimes such as extortion, fraud and virtual kidnappings.

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They accuse the PAN of an irregular scheme in social support

Morena accuses the PAN of an alleged scheme to collect commissions on social programs.

Accusations for alleged diversion in social programs

Morena deputies in Mexico City accused PAN legislators of operating an irregular scheme through the sale and purchase of household products, supposedly disguised as a social support program in Tlalpan and Xochimilco.

According to the complaint, those involved acquired items such as water tanks, cisterns, solar heaters, washing machines, mattresses, laptops and screens through a civil association. They would then have resold them at higher prices to the inhabitants of those districts.

Morena spokesperson Paulo García stated that the mechanism included a triangulation of resources where the civil association paid commissions for each product delivered. In addition, legislators would have made profits between the purchase price and the resale price.

The Morenistas pointed out that the products carried names, photographs and partisan colors, which could constitute personalized promotion of public servants, prohibited by Article 134 of the Constitution outside of electoral campaigns.

The complainants announced that they will file complaints with the Electoral Institute of Mexico City so that the facts can be investigated.

For their part, PAN legislators denied the irregularities. They assured that these are operations between individuals through a foundation that sells products at low cost, without public resources.

The case has opened a debate about transparency and oversight of social programs in the capital’s mayors.

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World Cup in Mexico: alert for increase in domestic violence

UN Women warns that attacks in homes increase up to 38% during the tournament.

Impact on homes

National and international organizations have raised alarms about an increase in different types of violence related to the Soccer World Cup in Mexico.

According to UN Women in Mexico, attacks within the home can increase between 26% and 38%, depending on whether the favorite team wins or loses. This tendency is aggravated when there is alcohol consumption, according to the same source.

The institutions warn that these episodes fall mainly on women, girls, boys and adolescents. The alert seeks to raise awareness and prevent damage during the development of the mega-event.

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