Seven men disappear in Matehuala while authorities remain silent

Seven electricians disappeared in Matehuala. Their families denounce the lack of official information and search files.

Official silence surrounds the disappearance of seven electricians

Social networks are, once again, the only speaker. Relatives of seven men from Cárdenas, San Luis Potosí, have had to turn to them to report the disappearance of their loved ones. According to the versions shared, the young people were working in electricity work in the municipality of Matehuala.

They maintained constant communication with home. Until Saturday morning, contact was cut. Absolute silence. A third person then alerted the families about a possible illegal deprivation of liberty. But it all stays there. There is no trace, there are no clues.

RelatedFGR captures seven men for extradition to the United States

The names that the State seems to forget

Faced with the information vacuum, only the names remain. These are the seven men whose whereabouts are unknown:

  • Ángel Daniel Pérez López
  • Miguel Ángel Pérez Olivo
  • Jaciel Zapata García
  • Omar Godoy Galván
  • Said Hernán Olvera
  • Celso López González
  • Macario Torres Castillo

While their families cry out for answers, the institutional response is a wall. Neither the Prosecutor’s Office nor the State Search Commission have issued official files to locate them. Nothing.

“The authorities have not issued any type of information,” is the crude summary of the situation.

Another case that adds to the list. Another piece of news that, I fear, will soon be buried by collective amnesia and the inaction of those who have the duty – and the resources – to act. The truth, this time, has to shout very loudly from the networks, because only echoes come from the institutions.

They demand location of two CFE workers in Hidalgo

Two CFE employees disappeared in Acaxochitlán; Family members protest lack of attention.

They demand actions for the disappearance of CFE employees

PACHUCA, Hgo.— Relatives and colleagues of two workers from the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) demand that the authorities locate them. Adolfo López Saldaña, 40, and Marco Antonio Sarmiento García, 60, were last seen on February 26 in the municipality of Acaxochitlán, Hidalgo.

They were going to carry out work in Huauchinango, Puebla. During the transfer all contact was lost. Given this, his relatives went to the representation of the Attorney General’s Office of the State of Hidalgo (PGJEH) in Tulancingo to report the alleged forced disappearance.

They initially filed the complaint with the Attorney General’s Office (FGR), but they claim that they did not receive timely attention, so they turned to the state authorities. After that, search cards were issued. The last registration of the van in which they were traveling was in Acaxochitlán. Later, the unit was found without license plates and without the CFE logos.

His whereabouts are unknown at this time. Yesterday, Saturday, relatives held a demonstration to demand immediate action.

The CFE issued a statement:

“We have a commitment to our workers: we will fully monitor this event, endorsing our responsibility with the integrity of those who make up and are the driving force of the Federal Electricity Commission.”

The company indicated that it collaborates with the authorities and maintains communication with the families. The investigation folder was registered with the number FED/HGO/TULB/00002547/2026 for the crime of forced disappearance. Central offices also requested information for follow-up.

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Housing for Wellbeing boosts GDP by 1%, says Sheinbaum

Sheinbaum announces that the housing program contributes 1% to the GDP and will benefit 30 million.

Housing for Wellbeing and its economic impact

From Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas, President Claudia Sheinbaum highlighted that the Housing for Wellbeing program contributes about 1 percent to the national Gross Domestic Product (GDP). This, thanks to the jobs it generates in construction and related sectors.

“There is nothing happier that can make the President and her entire team than to see the joy on their faces for receiving a home today,” said Sheinbaum during the delivery of 48 homes in the Infonavit Lacantún development.

In addition, 401 settlement certificates from Fovissste and 503 deeds from Insus were delivered. The president stated that the program will benefit nearly 30 million people during her six-year term.

“Thanks to the Housing for Wellbeing program, it is contributing close to 1 percent of GDP to the country’s economic growth. And if we consider that each home employs at least 4 people, a very important number of jobs are being generated,” he pointed out.

Investment in Chiapas

The Secretary of Agrarian, Territorial and Urban Development, Edna Elena Vega Rangel, explained that in Chiapas 42 billion pesos are allocated to build 70 thousand new homes in the six-year period. Of these, 50 percent are already hired.

The general director of Infonavit, Octavio Romero Oropeza, reported that at the national level there are 420 housing complexes in 31 states, with 475 thousand homes. Of them, 190 thousand are already under construction, and 3,600 have been delivered. In Chiapas, Infonavit contemplates 34 thousand homes with an investment of more than 20 billion pesos.

Governor Eduardo Ramírez Aguilar thanked the President for the homes delivered, while the beneficiary Miguel Ángel Ramírez Trujillo expressed his gratitude for the future it represents for his family.

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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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