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This article by Rafael García originally appeared in the March 5, 2026 edition of El Sol de México.

AFOREs (retirement fund administrators) are private companies who manage pensions as individual accounts, extremely restrictive and profitable for finance capital: they were introduced in 1997 and based on the privatized pensions introduced in Chile by the fascist Pinochet. Recent figures reveal 51% of AFORE funds are used to buy Mexican state debt, which means that Mexican citizens are paying significant commissions for a private pension system where finance capital invests over half of their money in sovereign bonds. Many unions and workers organizations have called for the return of a public pension system, with the CNTE suggesting they would voluntarily move all of their pensions Mexico’s public bank and allow the funds to be used for social purposes and to build public infrastructure.

The Secretary General of Section 9 of the National Coordinator of Education Workers (CNTE), Pedro Hernández, assured that the 72-hour national strike, which will begin this March 18, will be an opportunity for the Government of Mexico to resolve their demands and avoid a national strike during the inauguration of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which will take place on June 11 in the capital.

He explained that the main demands are the repeal of the 2007 ISSSTE Law and certain points of the 2019 Education Reform. A national strike by these teachers is planned for March 18-20, beginning with a march from the Angel of Independence to the Zócalo in Mexico City, and concluding with a “courtesy visit” to the embassies of the countries that have attacked Iran, Venezuela, Cuba, and Palestine.

Pedro Hernández added that a national strike could be staged in Mexico City’s Zócalo during the World Cup opening ceremony if these demands are not met. “We understand that the World Cup is a window to the world, where everyone will be watching what happens. We hope to have a response by the opening ceremony, because if not, we will have to resort to a national strike,” said Hernández.

He warned that, in order to prevent this from happening, there would have to be a “clear” path from the federal government for the repeal of the 2007 ISSSTE Law.

Pedro Hernández, Secretary General of Section 9 of the CNTE

The Pension Situation

The CNTE member recalled that before this law, which came into effect on April 1, 2007, education workers, as well as those who contributed to the ISSSTE, had a solidarity-based retirement model, which meant that it was the State’s responsibility to provide retirement benefits to the workers.

In contrast, with this new law, workers “self-pension” through individual accounts managed by AFORES, distributed among nine private and one public financial institutions, so retirement depends on what those who worked saved during their years of service.

On May 26, 2025, the president of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum, stated that repealing this law is not possible because there are not enough resources.

In this regard, Pedro Hernández stated that there are 8.1 trillion pesos in workers’ savings held in these individual accounts, and that Banco Azteca holds 25% of these funds, which allows financial institutions like Banamex and Banorte to reap extraordinary profits. “We believe that a dignified pension system for all workers can be reinstated.”

2019 Education Reform Complaints

Likewise, the Secretary General of Section 9 of the CNTE explained that they are also seeking to eliminate some points of the Educational Reform approved in 2019, such as the implementation of the Unit of the System for the Career of Teachers (USICAMM), a new admission and promotion system for teachers.

This is based on the claim that it does not recognize the permanence, seniority, and participation of teachers in obtaining appointments.

Pedro Hernández added that they are also demanding a salary increase and greater participation of teachers in the country’s educational decisions.

**Who Owns the AFORES?**There are 10 AFORES, that as of 2025 manage more than 7.18 trillion pesos (401 Billion USD). The AFORES system, modeled on Chilean fascist dictator Pinochet’s privatization of pensions, have been criticized by international pension industry observers for lacking sufficient oversight. The Mexican government has cited the complexity of the system as a reason not to de-privatize it, which begs the question, if the pensions are too complex to return to the public, how can they be meaningfully overseen and regulated?

AFORES accounts are mandatory for every worker: they cannot withdraw from the system or manage the fund themselves or collectively with their union, such as with the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, which manages over $188 billion USD).

1. AFORE Coppel – Coppel Group
2. AFORE Azteca – Grupo Salinas, owned by Ricardo Salinas Pliego, an ultra-right wing billionaire who is fighting in the courts to not pay the 35.450 billion pesos ($1.8 billion USD) in taxes he owes to the Mexican government.
3. Citibanamex Afore – Citigroup —in the process of being sold (USA)
4. Afore XXI-Banorte – Banorte
5. SURA – SURA Group (Colombia)
6. Profuturo – BAL Group (owners of the high-end department store El Palacio de Hierro)
7. Principal – Principal Financial Group (USA)
8. Invercap – Private investment fund
9. PensionISSSTE – The only public pension, limited to state workers
10. Inbursa – owned by Carlos Slim, one of the richest businessmen in the world, who advocates ending the public pension system and abolishing the retirement age in Mexico.

The post CNTE National Strike is Opportunity to Avoid World Cup Strike appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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This article by Clara Zepeda originally appeared in the March 5, 2026 edition of La Jornada, Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper.

Mexico City. Investment in facilities, machinery and equipment in Mexico, which produces goods and services, contracted by 6.6 percent annually in 2025, affected by the decline in public construction and private machinery and equipment, according to data from the National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI).

With seasonally adjusted figures, to make periods more comparable due to calendar effects, the Monthly Indicator of Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF), which represents the value of durable goods acquired by production units for use during the production process, averaged 103.5 points at the close of 2025, representing its first decline in four years, after the 17.8 percent drop in 2020.

The lag persisted in machinery and equipment, both domestic (with a 10.1 percent annual contraction last year) and imported (with a 7.6 percent annual decline). Construction also experienced a decline, registering a 4.6 percent drop in 2025 compared to 2024, with investment in non-residential construction (which is heavily linked to public works) plummeting 14.7 percent annually in 2025. However, the overall decline in construction was offset by a surge in residential construction, which grew by 8.1 percent annually last year.

In original figures, without any statistical processing, between January and December 2025, gross fixed investment registered a drop of 6.7 percent annually, with almost all of its categories contracting.

Affected mainly by the collapse of public construction, which contracted 28.9 percent annually in 2025; and of private investment in machinery and equipment, which fell 10.5 percent in 2025 compared to 2024.

The National Institute of Statistics and Geography (Inegi) reported that non-residential construction grew 8.2 percent year-on-year last year. However, the performance of machinery and equipment remained weak, with a 9 percent year-on-year decline: investment in domestically produced equipment fell 10.2 percent, affected by the decline in transportation equipment (13.2 percent), and investment in imported equipment fell 8.2 percent, with a 13.7 percent contraction in transportation equipment.

The post INEGI: Gross Fixed Investment Contracted 6.6%, Driven by Decline in Public Spending appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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Over a day and a half after his abduction and custodial torture, Booker Ngesa Omole, general secretary of Communist Party Marxist-Kenya (CPM-K), was presented in court on February 26, with a crudely bandaged, injured arm.

​Denying bail on a technicality, the Mavoko Law Court in Machakos town adjourned, scheduling the next hearing for March 9. In the meantime, Omole has been transferred to Kitengela Remand Prison, notorious for its overcrowded, unsanitary conditions.​

Despite a “broken arm,” the court has denied him “urgent medical care,” CPM-K said in a statement, protesting: “This is not justice. This is political persecution.”​

“We are revolutionaries. We will obviously defend ourselves if attacked”
The police have charged him with assault on their officers. Omole maintains, however, that he was not aware that the men in civilian clothes, grabbing him on the night of February 24 without identifying themselves, were police.​

“We are revolutionaries. We will obviously defend ourselves if attacked,” remarked CPM-K’s chairperson, Mwaivu Kaluka. In the altercation that followed, the police injured Omole’s arm, slit his fingers with knives, and damaged his jaw and teeth, said the CPM-K.​

“The police also claim that he drew a weapon on them,” said the Nairobi-based journalist and Sovereign Media editor, Ahmed Kaballo, who has read the chargesheet. “In Kenyan law, you are allowed to use a firearm in self-defense if you are being kidnapped,” which was Omole’s impression given the absence of police uniforms or identification, Kaballo noted.​

A survivor of an assassination attempt last year, Omole legally carries a registered firearm. It was in his car at the time when he was stopped by unidentified men on his way back home from Isiolo, where he was travelling as part of a media project to understand and document the working conditions and wages in the county, Kaluka told Peoples Dispatch. Brutalizing Omole and bundling him up into his car they impounded, the police drove him to his residence in Nairobi, where he was headed anyway, he added.​

Overthrowing a government with 2,500 dollars?
On allegedly finding cash equivalent to about USD 2,500 in his apartment, “they started beating him, and accusing him of trying to overthrow the government, which is ridiculous because no government can be overthrown with 2,500 dollars,” added Kaballo.​

From his apartment, he was driven to the industrial outskirts of Nairobi to the Mlolongo town’s police station, which CPM-K described as a notorious site of extrajudicial killings. He was not allowed to meet his lawyer until the next day, when Omole spoke through his lawyer’s phone to Sovereign Media.​

He said the police “tortured me… to extract information” about the party and its activities. “Even now, I am being held in an isolated cell… no water, no food, my comrades have not been allowed to see me,” he added, stressing his need for “some medical attention and at least some food.”​

During the torture, Kaballo told Peoples Dispatch, police accused Omole of being “the head of a narco trafficking gang”, asking why else would he “protest outside the US embassy on behalf of a drug dealer,” referring to Venezuela’s president, Nicholas Maduro. ​

The US, which fabricated a story about Maduro heading a non-existent drug cartel in the lead up to his illegal abduction on January 3, quietly let the accusation slip, excluding it from the charges it levelled against him in a district court of New York, which had no jurisdiction.​

Nevertheless, the Kenyan police used this US fabrication about a South American President to torture a communist leader in an East African country. “Linking Booker to a ‘drug cartel’ is pure political theater,” CPM-K retorted. “His only link to Venezuela is solidarity with Nicolás Maduro. Internationalism is not narcotics. Anti-imperialism is not a crime. When the state lacks evidence, it manufactures lies.”​

“We have seen this script before”​
Such accusations only “expose the desperation of a comprador state acting as an enforcer for US imperialism on African soil. That a Kenyan citizen can be persecuted for exercising the sovereign right to protest at a foreign embassy, demanding the release of a democratically elected head of state kidnapped by the United States, tells us everything about who truly governs in Nairobi and in whose interest,” said Pan Africanism Today in a solidarity statement.

​“We have seen this script before. Wherever the organized people dare to challenge imperialism and its local agents, the response is the same: criminalization, fabrication, and brute force. The persecution of Comrade Booker is not an isolated incident – it is part of a continental and global pattern of repression against those who refuse to kneel.”

​The police, however, did not mention narco trafficking or his supposed plot to overthrow the government with 2,500 dollars in the chargesheet. The charge wouldn’t stick in the court. They instead charged him with possession of narcotics, claiming to have found marijuana in his car.​

This was an essential charge for the police to make any case, because the other charges of assaulting police officers and the drawing of his firearm pertained to what unfolded in the course of his arrest, explained Kaballo.​

“But the police had to explain why they went to arrest him in the first place. So they said, they went to attend a noise complaint on an Airbnb” residence where Omole was staying in Isiolo. “Plainclothed police officers wouldn’t go for a noise complaint,” Kaballo remarked.​

From the CIA’s playbook​
Nonetheless, the police maintain they did, whereupon Omole allegedly assaulted them and drew a weapon. After subduing him, they claimed to have found marijuana. Charging him with narcotics is straight out of the CIA playbook, which has been “using the pretext of drugs in Colombia and Venezuela to silence leftist voices,” the CPM-K maintains.​

While his lawyer was informed of the assault charge when he managed to pay a visit to Omole at the Mlolongo police station on February 25, the charge of cannabis possession was revealed only after the police provided the chargesheet on presenting him in court on the afternoon of February 26.​

Kaballo, who was at the court since morning, said he “saw many accused being brought into the courtroom. They were all escorted by one or two police officers. But when Omole was brought in around 2 in the afternoon, he was surrounded by six or seven police officers. Two others were blocking the door. So I couldn’t go in. None of the party members” could get in either, he added. The police took all measures to ensure that Omole could not see any expression of solidarity by his comrades. ​

The bandaging on his hand was “amateur”, Kaballo recalled. “It did not look like it was done by a medical professional.” Injuries notwithstanding, the judge denied him bail “on the technicality that the court needs the pre-bail hearing document, which makes no sense because it is a document the police have to provide.”​

The court adjourned till March 9, sending Omole to Kitengela Remand Prison in the meantime. “The father of the cameraman who was with me at the court died in that prison, awaiting trial,” Kaballo said, pointing to its overcrowded, unsanitary conditions.​

“Our comrade’s health continues to deteriorate, and he has not received medical attention.”​
“The Kenyan state is known for its willingness to commit acts of brutality, and we have no doubt that it is willing to let Comrade Omale die in custody from his injuries. The international community must act now to prevent another state murder disguised as “detention”,” the Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) said in a solidarity statement.​

“Our comrade’s health continues to deteriorate, and he has not received medical attention,” the CPM-K raised an alarm.

​Nonetheless, “Booker is … courageous,” said the Friends of Socialist China, describing him as an “inspirational and principled leader of the Kenyan working class … a prominent fighter in the ranks of the international communist and anti-imperialist movements … This strikes fear into the hearts of the puppet regime in Nairobi and its masters in London and Washington. Their attack on Comrade Booker is a sign of weakness, not strength.”

A cross-continental solidarity​
Solidarity statements for Omole continue to arrive from across the world, including from Sudan, in the midst of the world’s worst humanitarian crisis and famine caused by a war. “Denouncing the repeated unlawful abductions and other forms of flagrant violations of the rights of Comrade Booker and other members of his party,” the Sudanese Communist Party (SCP) also declared its solidarity.

​The International Peoples’ Assembly (IPA), comprised of 200-odd organizations across the world – including trade unions, peasants’ organizations, and left parties – declared: the “peoples’ movements of the world stand with Kenya, condemning the abduction, torture, and politically motivated prosecution of Booker Ngesa Omole”.

BAP Condemns Kidnapping and Torture of Kenyan Revolutionary Leader

“The struggle for dignity, land, bread, and sovereignty cannot be crushed by batons, prison walls, or fabricated charges. When the state negates justice and serves imperial interests, it exposes itself as a puppet of forces that fear the organized power of the people.”

“History teaches us that repression is the last refuge of a fearful ruling elite,” added the Tanzania Socialist Forum. “Threats, intimidation, arbitrary detention, and torture cannot silence the spinning wheel of revolutionary change.”

(People’s Dispatch) by Pavan Kulkarni


From Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond via This RSS Feed.

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“Iran, unlike the United States, has prepared itself for a long war,” Larijani stated in a post on the social media platform X on Monday.

Echoing historical precedents, Larijani added, “As in the past 300 years, Iran did not start this war, our brave armed forces have not engaged in a single offensive operation, acting solely in self-defense.”

The Security Council chief pledged that Iran would “fiercely defend itself and its six-thousand-year-old civilization regardless of the costs,” promising that the enemies would “regret their miscalculation.”

The Wisdom Behind Martyr Ali Khamenei’s Refusal of Nuclear Weapons

The remarks follow a fresh round of aerial aggression launched by the US and Israel on Saturday, marking a new escalation just eight months after previous unprovoked attacks on the Islamic Republic.

Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei was assassinated in the first salvo of the terrorist attacks, even as Tehran was engaged in diplomatic talks with Washington over its nuclear program.

Iran swiftly initiated retaliation, launching coordinated barrages of missiles and drones targeting Israeli-occupied territories and US military bases across the region.

(PressTV)


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This editorial by La Jornada*‘s editorial board originally appeared in the March 3, 2026 edition of Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper. The views expressed in this article are the authors*’* own and do not necessarily reflect those ofMexico Solidarity Mediaor theMexico Solidarity Project.*

In the first three days of the israeli-American offensive against Iran, lies traveled faster than missiles. In fact, the aggression is based on nearly a century of Western falsehoods against the Persian nation, which began when it attempted to throw off the British colonial yoke. Currently, Iran is one of the countries most demonized by the propaganda of Washington and its allies, which criticizes the “authoritarian excesses” of the theocratic regime but deliberately omits the Western role in the rise and consolidation of the ayatollahs’ rule.

Politicians, media outlets, academics, and the quasi-business groups that call themselves representatives of “civil society” claim to want a secular, democratic, modernizing, and moderate regime for Iranians, but they conveniently forget to mention that Iran had already given itself a government with all those characteristics: that of Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh (1951–1953). When Mosaddegh attempted to nationalize the Anglo-Persian Oil Company (predecessor of today’s British Petroleum), the British Empire reacted with a script that the United States would repeat time and again when it assumed the reins of global imperialism: it accused Mosaddegh of being a “communist,” sabotaged the country’s economy, prevented it from trading its own oil, and finally, with Washington’s help, deposed Mosaddegh and installed a puppet government headed by an invented monarch, Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Reza plunged Iran into a perpetual bloodbath perpetrated by assassins trained by the CIA and Mossad. The Shah’s political police, Savak, tortured and murdered all politicians and supporters of democracy, in addition to squandering oil wealth on a life of luxury and excess, shamelessly flaunted before an impoverished population.

The elimination of all modernizing leadership explains why, when Iran finally erupted against oppression, the only institution capable of channeling and coordinating popular anger was the hierarchy of Shiism, the majority branch of Islam in the country. After the 1979 revolution, the West encouraged Saddam Hussein to invade his neighbor, even though by then the Iraqi President’s despotic nature and the massacres he perpetrated against his own population were already well known. Hussein received media coverage, intelligence support, and unlimited weaponry, including chemical weapons supplied by [West] Germany, during the eight years of his failed attempt to destroy his neighbor. By the end of the war, one million Iranians had died and more than two million were wounded, many with devastating injuries from inhaling mustard and sarin gases.

This brief summary does not account for all the suffering caused by the West to the Iranian people, but it is enough to show the hypocrisy of Donald Trump, Benjamin Netanyahu, Emmanuel Macron, Keir Starmer and Friedrich Merz, as well as virtually all of the media, in justifying their aggressions against Iran in the name of “self-defense”.

The US government itself has debunked this blatant manipulation: initially, the White House claimed it carried out a “preemptive strike” in response to an “imminent threat” from Tehran, but later Secretary of State Marco Rubio admitted that the “imminent threat was that we knew if Iran were attacked (by israel)—and we believed they were going to be attacked—then they would come after us immediately, and we weren’t going to sit back and wait to be hit before we responded.” In other words, Tel Aviv had already decided to attack, and Washington didn’t lead the offensive operation but rather followed suit, as The New York Times argues. If this is the case, Trump allowed his complicity with Zionism to drag him into a war from which he now sees no way out, as evidenced by his extending the conflict from “two or three days” to “four or five weeks” and an indefinite “it will take time.” The fire at the US embassy in Riyadh and the riots in Bahrain starkly illustrate the speed with which the tycoon is losing control over his latest military adventure.

The post US Bombs & US Lies appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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Every day, President Claudia Sheinbaum gives a morning presidential press conference and Mexico Solidarity Media posts English language summaries, translated by Mexico Solidarity’s Pedro Gellert. Previous press conference summaries are available here.

Sheinbaum Presents “Decalogue for Democracy” and Sends Electoral Reform Bill to Congress

President Claudia Sheinbaum announced that she has sent the constitutional electoral reform bill to Congress. The reform seeks to ensure fairer elections, reduce costs, and strengthen democracy.

Key measures include changes to proportional representation —with elimination of proportional representation seats in the Senate—, a 25% cut in financing provided to the National Electoral Institute (INE), state electoral bodies (OPLES), and political parties, strengthened monitoring between the INE and the Financial Intelligence Unit (UIF), regulation of AI-generated campaign content, overseas voting, district vote counts on election day, greater participatory democracy, and adoption of the principle of no-reelection.

Wellbeing Housing Advances in Colima

Governor Indira Vizcaíno led the ceremony in which homes were delivered in the state as part of the policy promoted by the President to guarantee decent housing for the people.

The state goal increased to 19,000 homes through the Infonavit government housing agency, within a potential of 32,540 “housing actions” (which include home improvements and expansions), plus regularization of 1,000 plots of land. The program includes a 11.4 billion peso (US$650 million) investment and will benefit 68,000 Colima residents.

Energy Products: Mechanisms to Protect Family Economies

Given the potential impact from the Middle East conflict on gas and oil prices, the President explained that the government has mechanisms to avoid price hikes affecting families and to maintain energy stability.

Progress in Fiscal Justice: Companies Begin Paying Debts

Sheinbaum reported that TV Azteca settled its tax debt a month ago, while Grupo Elektra -which also belongs to Grupo Salinas- made its first monthly payment of 32 billion pesos (US$1.82 billion).

Payments will be approximately 1.2 billion pesos (US$68.37 million) monthly for nearly 18 months. The President explained that the debt restructuring proceedings underway do not suspend the company’s fiscal obligations.

Government Launches Largest Highway Plan to Connect Country

The Ministry of Communications and Transportation (SCT) reported that the highway program includes a 113.361 billion-peso (US$6,46 billion) investment and work along 2,485 km of highways nationwide. Banobras presented the government’s largest road infrastructure plan, modernizing and building over 1,450 km in 11 states with a more than 150 billion peso (US$8.55 billion) investment.

Lie Detector

  • It is not true that the Electoral Reform allows censoring social media or removing content.
  • It is not true that the Reform opens the door to illicit party financing.
  • It is not true that eliminating proportional representation seats is a move to eliminate the opposition.
  • It is not true that the Government intends to take control of electoral bodies.
  • It is not true that Mexico will not be hosting the 2026 World Cup.
  • It is not true that a hacker accessed millions of Tax Administration System records.
  • It is not true that 300,000 OXXO convenience stores were burned in the aftermath of the killing of drug kingpin “El Mencho”.

The post People’s Mañanera March 4 appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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The president of Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), Héctor Obregón, published a statement on social media this Tuesday announcing that Venezuela is strengthening its energy presence with new supply contracts to the US market.

It also specified that the state-owned company “has signed supply contracts with companies that market oil and derivatives destined for the United States market, thus maintaining its historic commercial relationship to guarantee supply.”

Likewise, the statement specifies that “Venezuela reiterates its commitment to the stability of the international energy market and affirms itself as a reliable supplier, contributing to the balance necessary to guarantee global energy security.”

It also reiterates “the need for a sanctions-free hydrocarbon industry to boost national production and strengthen international trade.”

Regarding the Myth About Venezuela Selling Oil to ‘Israel’

The following is an unofficial translation of the statement:

Venezuela strengthens its energy presence with new supply contracts to the US market

PDVSA has signed supply contracts with companies that market oil and derivatives destined for the United States market, thus maintaining its historic commercial relationship to guarantee supply.

Venezuela reiterates its commitment to the stability of the international energy market and affirms itself as a reliable supplier, contributing to the balance necessary to guarantee global energy security.

The Venezuelan nation reiterates the need for a hydrocarbon industry free of sanctions, to boost national production and strengthen international trade.

Caracas, March 3, 2026.

(Últimas Noticias)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/JB/SH


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This article by Jared Laureles and Alexia Villaseñor originally appeared in the March 4, 2026 of La Jornada, Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper.

Mexico City. Members of the Chapingo Autonomous University Workers’ Union (STUACH) are protesting outside the Secretariat of Agriculture and Rural Development (SADER) in Mexico City, demanding its intervention to address their demands for improved working conditions.

Jorge Ibarra Sánchez, general secretary of the administrative workers’ union, pointed out that one of their main demands is that the university authorities regularize five salary levels in their pay scale, since they are currently below the general minimum wage.

This situation causes “a discrepancy”, because while this year the minimum wage increased by 315 pesos per day, at the Autonomous University of Chapingo (UACh) a custodian earns 254 pesos per day, he indicated.

In an interview with La Jornada, the union leader asked SADER (Secretariat of Agriculture and Rural Development) to provide budgetary support for the university institution, in order to guarantee the full payment of the year-end bonus for 2025, which is intended to compensate for the loss of purchasing power and December expenses.

Octavio Altamirano, Secretary of Organization of STUACH, accused the Rectorate of the UACh – which has its headquarters in Texcoco, State of Mexico – of claiming that there are no resources and only intends to grant them 10 million pesos, which Altamirano rejected since the institution did not have a budget cut and must give them the 28 million pesos as happened every year for 1,900 unionized workers.

“The university authorities argue that they don’t have the budget to grant us this measure; we believe that as long as there are no budget cuts, this isn’t a valid argument. They only want to give us 10 million pesos, and this was authorized by the Treasury.”

In front of the SADER building, where some 20 trucks carrying unionized administrative staff had arrived, the leader of STUACH proposed that the agency intervene to prevent the strike scheduled for March 20.

“They tell us that the end-of-year bonus will not be granted until there is a University Council meeting and the budget is checked, but we are getting bogged down,” he stressed.

Also, as part of the contract review, the workers are requesting the application and implementation of the 2 percent increase in benefits; this includes the institution defining and providing “certainty” on which items of the collective agreement the increase will impact.

A commission from STUACH and university authorities entered Sader, where a negotiation table will be set up shortly.

The post Chapingo University Workers Demand Mexico’s Agricultural Secretariat Intervene to Guarantee Wages appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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The president of the National Assembly, deputy Jorge Rodríguez, reported that Parliament will approve laws to accompany the country’s economic reformulation process.

In this regard, he recalled that the Organic Hydrocarbons Law was reformed on January 29, “which was very useful and progressive in 2006 and 2007. But, currently, it has been detrimental to an activity as fundamental as development of new oil wells,” he stressed.

This Monday, March 2, from the Federal Legislative Palace, in an interview with journalist Luis Olavarrieta, the deputy detailed some of the bills that the National Assembly will address in 2026.

He pointed out that the Legislative Branch is committed to stabilizing the country, with a profound reform of the economic legal framework and institutional strengthening, through political consensus.

He announced that, in that vein, the discussion of the Organic Law Project for the Acceleration and Optimization of Administrative Procedures and Processes of the Public Administration will continue soon.

He also outlined the need to work on a Mining Bill, given that it is a productive sector that requires renewal to promote the sustainable exploitation of gold, diamonds and rare earths by large international companies.

Rodríguez did not rule out that once the laws considered priorities in the Basic Legislative Plan 2026 have been discussed, elements of the Law against Hatred, for Peaceful Coexistence and Tolerance will be reviewed to adapt it to the new political moment of recognition and reconciliation.

He insisted that the economic sphere is a priority for all Venezuelans, and therefore reiterated his commitment to accompany the acting president, Delcy Rodríguez, in the transformation of energy resources into improvements for workers’ salaries and overcoming the after-effects of the economic war.

“We don’t want to keep saying that we have the world’s largest oil reserves; we want to convert that oil, which is underground, into schools, hospitals, and income for people,” he said.

Respectful relationships
The parliamentarian highlighted the global value of Venezuelan oil and argued that the country’s economic benefits would accelerate even further if the sanctions imposed by the United States were lifted entirely.

He also noted that after the complex events of January 3, the current stage of relations between Venezuela and the United States is marked by mutual respect and by restoration of the historic energy cooperation between both countries.

In the early hours of Saturday, January 3, 2026, US troops bombed populated areas of Caracas, Miranda, La Guaira, and Aragua, killing more than 100 people. The US invaders also kidnapped the constitutional president, Nicolás Maduro, and his wife, Cilia Flores, a member of the National Assembly. In the attack, they used an unprecedented sonic weapon, which Donald Trump dubbed “The Discombobulator” on January 24.

He added that as part of the new climate of trust, past cases where there was no consensus with the private sector may be reviewed in order to provide legal certainty to national and foreign capital interested in participating in the country’s economic revitalization.

Social peace and institutional strengthening
The congressman also considered the implementation of the Amnesty Law for Democratic Coexistence, unanimously approved, a gesture of institutional strengthening. He highlighted that to date, 5,628 people have received full freedom as part of a state-sanctioned pardon process aimed at reconciliation.

He noted that Parliament is currently in the process of appointing the new Attorney General and the Ombudsman, after receiving the resignations of Tarek William Saab and Alfredo Ruiz, with the purpose of advancing the intensive review of the judicial system, derived from the amnesty procedures.

At the same time, he clarified that the kidnapping of President Nicolás Maduro constitutes a forced absence, and the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court of Justice (TSJ) ruled that the interim presidency should remain in the hands of Delcy Rodríguez, which rules out the urgency of elections.

He stated that institutional strengthening—which encompasses the Executive, Legislative, Judicial, Citizen and Electoral branches—is a necessary preliminary step before any electoral event.

“We’re Playing the Caribbean Game”: Franco Vielma on Venezuela’s Hydrocarbons Law and Strategic Resistance

With a view to building a country based on consensus, the head of Parliament called for abandoning strategies of political persecution and stressed that the limit of dialogue will be with those sectors that promote foreign interventions or invasions.

The deputy argued that all political actors who respect the Constitution have guarantees of permanence in political and social life, without fear of being annulled or persecuted.

Betting on Venezuela
Rodríguez explained that for the first time in 12 years, the migration curve has reversed, and more Venezuelans plan to return to the country than those who wish to leave, motivated by expectations of economic recovery and the climate of citizen peace.

He urged Venezuelans and the various political sectors to believe in Venezuela and in the work of the public authorities, because the country needs to prioritize national interests over international diatribes.

“It is time to think first, second, and third about Venezuela. Our relationship must look primarily toward our neighbors and our natural market on the continent,” Rodríguez concluded.

(Diario VEA)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/JB/SH


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The fishing and aquaculture sector has registered a 23% growth in the first months of the year, compared to 2025, a figure that reflects the effectiveness of the economic policies applied to Venezuela’s agri-food sector. This was highlighted by Acting President Delcy Rodríguez during an inspection of the Pacific Seafood Fish Processing Plant in Cumaná, Sucre state.

In her speech, the acting president indicated that during the year 2025 “there was an approximate growth of 6% in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP)” of these sectors.

“I’ve been talking with the president of the Central Bank of Venezuela, who gave me good news for the end of 2025, a positive close for Venezuela’s economic growth,” she said. “This year, 2026, we have extraordinary GDP growth projections to guarantee food for our people and food sovereignty. May this national productive drive put food on the tables of Venezuelans and, at the same time, may these products become ambassadors carrying Venezuela’s name to other parts of the world,” she emphasized.

During her tour of the plant, Rodríguez observed the production cycle of items such as tahalí, corvina, and carite, which are supplied by local artisanal producers. She also inspected the vacuum packaging lines and frozen storage systems intended for both the domestic market and export to North America and Asia.

Acting President Delcy Rodríguez: Communal Economy Guarantees Prices 20% Lower, Breaking Economic Blockade

“This is the mechanism, the virtuous formula we have discussed for Venezuela: to strengthen all productive engines and ensure they have an export component so that Venezuela receives foreign currency; it is a way to defeat the economic blockade,” she pointed out.

Sardine season
The acting President announced that, as part of the celebration of Fisherman’s Day, the 2026 sardine season will begin on March 15.

Rodríguez instructed the Minister of Fisheries and Aquaculture, Juan Carlos Loyo, to organize all logistics-related matters, while touring the Pacific Seafood Fish Processing Plant, located in the state of Sucre.

(Diario VEA)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/JB/SH


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By Ben Norton –  Feb 28, 2026

The US and Israel are waging a war of aggression against Iran. Non-existent “nuclear weapons” are the absurd fig leaf. Trump and Netanyahu admitted they want regime change, to put a puppet in Tehran.

The United States and Israel are waging a war of aggression against Iran. This is not about nuclear weapons; it’s about imperialism.

Trump published a video on social media early on the morning of February 28, announcing, “The United States military began major combat operations in Iran”.

As the US and Israel brutally bombed Tehran, Donald Trump admitted that they want regime change.

Trump ordered members of Iran’s military to “lay down your weapons”, or “face certain death”.

The US president then called on Iranian opposition supporters to “take over your government”, claiming, “It will be yours to take. This will be probably your only chance for generations”.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed the war would overthrow the government in Tehran, to “cast off the yoke of tyranny and bring freedom and peace-loving values to Iran”. (Meanwhile, Netanyahu faces an ongoing arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court, due to the genocidal crimes against humanity he committed against the Palestinian people in Gaza, with steadfast US support.)

Iran immediately retaliated, launching strikes in self-defense against multiple US military bases in Qatar, Bahran, Kuwait, and the UAE. The Pentagon’s largest base in the region, Al-Udeid in Qatar, was hit.

https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/INTERACTIVE-US-Military-presence-in-the-Middle-East-June-2025-1749733457.png?quality=80

The absurd narrative that Washington and Tel Aviv are promoting is that they had to carry out “preemptive” attacks (which are illegal under international law), because Tehran supposedly seeks nuclear weapons.

This is nonsense. Iran signed the nuclear deal, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), in 2015, in which it agreed not to pursue nuclear weapons in return for the US and European countries lifting their illegal unilateral sanctions.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) admitted that Iran was abiding by the nuclear deal. Nevertheless, Trump unilaterally tore it up in 2018, during his first term as US president, in flagrant violation of international law (given that the JCPOA had been endorsed by UN Security Council Resolution 2231, which even the US had voted for, under Obama).

Iran Strikes US Destroyer in Indian Ocean With Ballistic Missiles

Iran’s current president, Masoud Pezeshkian, is ironically a reformist who sought to negotiate another deal with the same US aggressors who sabotaged the previous one just a few years before.

When Trump entered office for his second term, in 2025, he oversaw several rounds of bad-faith “negotiations” with Iran. Then, during those talks, the US and Israel suddenly bombed Iran in June 2025. The Wall Street Journal admitted: “In Twist, U.S. Diplomacy Served as Cover for Israeli Surprise Attack”.

The same thing happened in February 2026. The Trump administration participated in fake “negotiations” with Iran.

On February 27, Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi, who moderated the talks, said they had made “substantial progress”, and a “peace deal is within our reach”.

Mere hours later, Trump and Netanyahu launched a massive bombing campaign in Iran.

The reality is that the US and Israel do not want peace.

The goal of this war of aggression is clear: Washington seeks to topple Iran’s independent government and finally overturn the Iranian Revolution of 1979, which removed one of the pillars of the US empire’s “twin pillars” strategy in West Asia.

The US empire, and more specifically the large US corporations that it represents, want to control the plentiful resources not only in Iran, but in the entire region, which is home to the world’s top producers of oil and natural gas, as well as critical minerals and other important commodities.

Washington also hopes to cut off China’s access to its top energy providers.

Wesley Clark, a former top US general and NATO commander, revealed more than two decades ago that, following the attacks of September 11, 2001, imperial strategists at the Pentagon made plans to overthrow the governments of seven countries in West Asia and North Africa.

On the US empire’s target list was Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Iran.

Washington succeeded in destabilizing governments in six of those seven. Iran is the last one standing.

With its war, the United States hopes to install in Tehran a puppet, like the son of the former shah, the murderous monarch who came to power following a CIA-orchestrated coup in 1953 against Iran’s democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh.

A Fox News correspondent reported that the CIA-linked US state media outlet VOA Persian is broadcasting propaganda in Iran in support of the so-called “exiled crown prince”, Reza Pahlavi, who has spent much of his life living in the US, and whose dictatorial father terrorized Iran, with staunch US backing, until the 1979 revolution.

Top US officials have been secretly meeting with the so-called “exiled crown prince”, the former Israeli intelligence officer Barak Ravid reported in January. On Twitter, Reza Pahlavi heaped praise on Trump, claimed “the Islamic Republic is collapsing”, and called for the Iranian people to help put him in power.

US imperial strategists believe the Iranian government is weak at this moment, and they are going for the jugular.

In doing so, the billionaire supposed “populist” Trump is fulfilling the dreams of the most ardent neoconservative hawks — even as he calls himself a “peace president”.

(Geopolitical Economy Report)


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By Pavan Kulkarni  –  Mar 3, 2026

From condemning the violation of Iranian sovereignty to condemning Iran for its retaliatory strikes, the full spectrum of messaging is on offer in the statements by African governments, while the left has unequivocally condemned “imperialist”, “Zionist” aggression.

Concerned that the “military strikes carried out by the United States in coordination with Israeli forces against [Iran] … marks a serious intensification of hostilities in the Middle East,” the African Union (AU) called for “urgent de-escalation.”

Further escalation, it warned, would have “serious implications for energy markets, food security, and economic resilience – particularly in Africa, where conflict and economic pressures remain acute.”

In an apparent retort to the US and Israeli framing of its war on Iran as “preemptive”, South Africa’s president, Cyril Ramaphosa, said, “Article 51 of the UN Charter provides for self-defense only when a state has been subjected to an armed invasion. Anticipatory self-defense is not permitted under international law, and self-defense cannot be based on assumption or anticipation.”

However, he was not explicit in naming the US and Israel as aggressors. Algeria’s foreign ministry condemned the war on Iran as a “flagrant violation of the sovereignty of a member state of the United Nations.”

Most others, however, have only issued generic calls for restraint and dialogue, with warnings about the disastrous consequences of this intensifying war, without naming the aggressors.

Nigeria’s foreign ministry, for example, has called “on all parties to exercise maximum restraint and refrain from actions that could intensify hostilities, and prioritize dialogue over confrontation.”

**“Reject the international positions that equate the aggressor with the victim”**Unequivocally holding “the Imperialist, Zionist aggressor forces fully responsible for this escalation,” the Sudanese Communist Party (SCP) rejected the “international positions that equate the aggressor with the victim under general slogans such as de-escalation, without clearly naming the aggression and its source.”

​“Such false neutrality entrenches a policy of impunity and weakens the international legal order,” it said, adding, “Resistance to aggression and domination is a legitimate right of peoples, and both a national and international duty.”

Israel Views Sudan Conflict Through the Lens of Red Sea Strategy

​Sudan’s warring parties united in condemnation of IranIronically, both the power centers in civil war-torn Sudan, far from equating the aggressor and victim, have flipped these categories on their heads, condemning Iran as the aggressor.

​“The Government of Sudan condemns in the strongest and clearest terms the blatant and illegal Iranian aggression against the State of Qatar, the Kingdom of Bahrain, the State of Kuwait, and the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan,” read a statement by its Foreign Ministry.

​This de facto government, backed by the Saudis in the ongoing war, is in control of Sudan’s northern and eastern regions. Mention of the UAE, which has also received its fair share of hits from Iran, is conspicuously absent in its statement because the UAE is the main backer of its enemy, the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which controls the western region and is expanding into central Sudan.

Mohamed Dagalo, chief of the RSF, whose mass atrocities in Darfur may amount to genocide, leads the so-called Sudan Founding Alliance, which has condemned Iran’s retaliatory strikes on Gulf monarchies hosting US assets as “regional and international terrorism”.

Just as Saudi Arabia and the UAE are unified behind the US antagonism to Iran’s sovereignty despite their own mutual rivalries, so are their proxies in Sudan, who have unleashed the world’s humanitarian crisis on its people.

​Its northern neighbor, Egypt, once an anti-imperialist bulwark on the continent, is headed by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, US President Donald Trump’s “favorite dictator”, who made a series of phone calls to all the heads of all the targeted Gulf states. He reiterated to them that Egypt regarded the security of these regimes as an “integral part of Arab national security.”

​Many other African governments have also taken a cue from the European Union (EU), which declared Iran’s response as “inexcusable”.

**“Unprovoked attacks … by the Epstein leadership of the United States of America and the Zionist settler regime”**In a similar vein, “Kenya strongly condemns the strikes on the UAE, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Oman, Kuwait, Jordan, and Bahrain in the evolving conflict in the Middle East,” said its president, Willian Ruto, who is often condemned domestically as a US lackey.

​His regime seems to have so thoroughly internalized US propaganda that last week, its police, while torturing the general secretary of the Communist Party Marxist – Kenya (CPM-K), Booker Omole, accused him of being the head of a drug cartel. They allegedly insisted that there could not be any other reason for him to protest outside Kenya’s US embassy in solidarity with Venezuela’s abducted president, Nicolás Maduro.

​Nonetheless, the CPM-K has “unequivocally” condemned what it described as “unprovoked attacks … by the Epstein leadership of the United States of America and the Zionist settler regime of Israel against the Islamic Republic of Iran.”

​Iran, it added, “has continued to stand as a beacon of fighting American Imperialism and Israeli Zionism in the region and its leadership on the resistance axis has proved that a people united can never be defeated.”

**“History repeats itself: the first time as tragedy, the second as farce”**​”Once again, history repeats itself: the first time as tragedy, the second as farce. The imperialist powers, led by Washington and Tel Aviv, are attempting to redraw the map of West Asia to serve their hegemonic interests,” added the Communist Party of Swaziland (CPS), on the frontline of the Southern African country’s anti-monarchist, pro-democracy struggle.

“This is not a conflict about nuclear weapons or regional stability, as the propaganda machines of the West would have us believe. It is a conflict about control, resources, and the suppression of any nation that dares to chart an independent path free from the dictates of Washington and London.”

(Peoples Dispatch)


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This article by Vanessa Rivas originally appeared in the February 25, 2026 edition of El Sol de México.

Farmers from various regions of the country are preparing a national mobilization on March 20th to protest the crisis facing Mexican agriculture and what they consider a lack of substantive action by the Federal Government. One of the planned actions is to demonstrate on the railway tracks, uncoupling train cars containing staple grains, given that Mexican farmers are currently not even receiving enough to cover the cost of production for these crops.

The announcement was made by Eraclio Yako Rodríguez Gómez, leader of the National Front for the Rescue of the Mexican Countryside, who explained that the protest is still in the organizational phase, but will have a presence in several states of the Republic.

Mobilization in Several States & at Strategic Points

In an interview with El Heraldo de Chihuahua, the peasant leader commented that the mobilization will not have a single gathering point, but will be replicated in various states. In the case of Chihuahua, strategic points are being considered, such as the Pan-American Highway near the tollbooth in Sacramento or in Ahumada, although these locations are still tentative, as is the railway line near Jiménez.

Yako Rodríguez Gómez explained that the actions are yet to be defined, because on one hand, there is a position that proposes avoiding road blockades so as not to affect the public, considering the social support they have received in previous mobilizations.

However, more targeted measures are also being considered, such as preventing the transit of imported grains, both by rail and freight transport, with the aim of directly putting pressure on sectors that compete with national production.

Among the proposals put forward, the possibility of intervening in freight trains to uncouple wagons carrying grain, allowing the transit of the rest of the goods, as well as the selective stopping of trailers that move these products, stands out.

Economic policy prioritizes industrial sectors, such as the US-dominated automotive industry, over food production, which has led to a growing dependence on foreign countries.

The leader stressed that these actions seek to avoid a widespread impact on the population, concentrating pressure on what they consider the core of the problem: the importation of grains and the displacement of national production.

Regarding the progress made, Yako Rodríguez Gómez acknowledged that there has been some progress, particularly in the purchase of corn and beans by government programs, as well as in the payment of outstanding debts from 2020 in states such as Sinaloa, Sonora, Guanajuato and Michoacán.

However, he stated that these advances are insufficient in the face of the structural problems facing the sector, especially regarding the lack of an agricultural model that guarantees certainty for producers.

Eraclio Yako Rodríguez Gómez is a former Morena deputy & was previously President of the Commission for Rural Development and Conservation, Agriculture and Food Self-Sufficiency of the Chamber of Deputies

The peasant leader insisted on the need to build a new model of national agriculture that reduces dependence on international markets, particularly the Chicago Board of Trade, which influences grain prices in Mexico.

He also denounced the fact that the food market is concentrated in the hands of a small number of transnational corporations, which limits the country’s ability to strengthen its food sovereignty. Internationally, it has been observed that these same companies have a presence in 70 countries.

In that regard, he pointed out that there is a close relationship between large corporations and some officials of the Federal Government, which has hindered the implementation of fundamental changes in national agricultural policy.

As part of the movement’s strategy, a forum is planned for March 19 at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), where national and international representatives will participate to discuss alternatives to the current model. In addition, a second international meeting is being organized in Chicago in May, with the participation of agricultural organizations from the Americas and Europe, within the framework of the review of trade agreements.

Among the main demands of the producers is the removal of grains from the North American trade agreement, considering that the current conditions put Mexican farmers at a disadvantage compared to their international competitors.

Yako Rodríguez Gómez criticized the fact that economic policy prioritizes industrial sectors, such as the automotive industry, over food production, which has led to a growing dependence on foreign countries.

He also questioned the conditions under which key institutions for the agricultural sector operate, pointing to budgetary limitations that affect their functioning, from a lack of offices to deficiencies in basic services, as in the case of the Agrarian Attorney’s Office and the National Agrarian Registry, entities that were not allocated sufficient budget, even though farmers require these services.

The leader warned that, unless these problems are addressed, the abandonment of producers and the decline in national grain production will continue.

Finally, he stressed that the mobilization on March 20 is part of a broader strategy of pressure and organization, with the goal of fundamentally transforming the country’s agricultural model.

The movement, he said, is not only seeking immediate solutions, but a structural change that will guarantee food sovereignty and better conditions for those who work in the Mexican countryside.

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This article by Erik López originally appeared in the March 3, 2026 edition of La Silla Rota.

The 100-day countdown to the start of the 2026 World Cup has begun, and crews of workers are busy replacing pavement, sidewalks, pruning trees, and building pedestrian crossings in the neighborhoods surrounding Azteca Stadium.

In neighborhoods such as San Lorenzo Huipulco, Pueblo de Santa Úrsula Coapa, Santa Úrsula, IMAN, among others, the works are going full steam ahead so that the tournament can be inaugurated on June 11 and the first of the five matches that will have the Azteca as the stage can be played.

While the teams are making progress on the works, residents told La Silla Rota that the works to improve the environment of the area have caused problems.

María Esther Méndez said that she and her family have been suffering from respiratory problems since the excavations and the movement of heavy machinery around Azteca Stadium began.

The woman, a resident of the Indigenous town of Santa Úrsula Coapa, recounts that throat irritation, persistent cough, and infections became constant since the remodeling and resurfacing work began in the area.

During a tour of neighborhoods like Santa Úrsula and Huipulco, it was observed that cars, businesses, and homes are covered in a layer of dust. Although there are no official figures, doctors in the area estimate that up to 70% of their patients suffer from some ailment related to constant exposure to particulate matter and the fumes emitted by heavy machinery working on the streets surrounding the stadium.

Dust Spread Over Houses & Businesses

One hundred meters from the Azteca Stadium, Thelma Díaz is cleaning the dust covering her plants, furniture, and water tank for the second time this week. She lives on San Álvaro Street, from whose rooftop she can see the building that will host the opening ceremony of the World Cup in 100 days. Below, on the street, the machinery never stops.

During the interview, Thelma coughs several times. She says that for months she has felt a constant irritation in her throat, a dryness that causes her to clear her throat and that doesn’t go away.

Since then, dust enters through doors and windows, even when they remain closed.

“There are two asthmatics in my house, and they’re using more salbutamol because of the dust. We wear face masks almost all day. Even though I’m not asthmatic, I’ve been waking up with wheezing ever since they said it was asthma.”

In her living room, Thelma runs the palm of her hand over a plant leaf and then over the water tank. She shows it to La Silla Rota. With a single swipe, her hand is covered in dark dust. “And I cleaned it a week ago,” she says.

In addition to respiratory symptoms, one of her children has developed skin allergies, something she says had never happened before.

“My son has never had skin allergies before. I feel like this is related to it; it’s never happened to him before. We’re worried.”

“I have a cold all the time.”

The symptoms Thelma describes are repeated almost house by house. Fernando Sánchez, who walks every day along Circuito Estadio Azteca to go down to Calzada de Tlalpan and take public transportation, says that for several months he has had watery eyes, a cough, and irritation with a constant runny nose.

“Personally, I didn’t have any problems with asthma or anything like that, but unfortunately, for the last few months, my nose has started running a lot and my eyes start watering. I feel like I have a stuffy nose all the time,” he says in an interview, his voice congested.

Fernando points out that the tar smoke and the gases emitted by heavy machinery aggravate his discomfort.

Fernando and other residents of the town of Santa Úrsula Coapa have sought treatment for these respiratory problems at clinics in the neighborhood. One of these clinics is located on Las Flores Street, where Dr. Daniela has been seeing patients for several years.

In an interview with La Silla Rota, the professional states that in recent months consultations for respiratory problems have increased significantly.

“Since January, I think 50% of my sales have been for respiratory issues. The best-selling items are cough syrups, antihistamines, and bronchodilators. And I have a patient I’m treating who’s even going to have surgery. That’s how bad the dust is because she’s been undergoing treatment,” she says.

Daniela explains that the dust began to be noticeable last year, but it was in January that she saw a spike in cases. “Even when I’m inside with the door closed, the dust smells and gets in,” she says.

Businesses Affected & Demands on Authorities

Rubén Ramírez, a traditional authority of the Indigenous community of Santa Úrsula Coapa, says he has held talks with Mexico City authorities to explain the impacts.

He points out that the removal of tepetate, a fine and volatile material characteristic of the area, and the constant passage of heavy machinery have generated large amounts of dust that are dispersed through the streets of the town.

Rubén has asked the authorities for measures to reduce dust and emissions, regulate construction hours, and establish mitigation actions to protect the population.

25 Days Until the Opening Match

In October 2025, the Mexico City government reported that the rehabilitation works in the vicinity of the Azteca Stadium included the intervention of more than 16,000 square meters, with asphalt pavement rehabilitation, sidewalks, walkways and new lighting, in addition to the construction of complementary infrastructure in the Huipulco area.

It is precisely these works that residents of Santa Úrsula and surrounding neighborhoods point to as the origin of the dust that, they claim, has caused respiratory problems.

During the program’s launch, Mayor Clara Brugada stated that the works would guarantee basic rights for the surrounding population, such as access to water, drainage, quality public services, and improved mobility. It was also indicated that the projects would be completed before the first international matches leading up to the 2026 World Cup.

With 25 days to go before the opening match between the Mexican and Portuguese national teams, scheduled for March 28, work continues on various fronts around the stadium.

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This article by Arturo Huerta González originally appeared in the March 3, 2026 issue of La Jornada de Oriente, the Puebla edition of La Jornada*, Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper. The views expressed in this article are the authors*’* own and do not necessarily reflect those ofMexico Solidarity Mediaor theMexico Solidarity Project.*

In the first three days of the conflict, the international price of oil has increased by only 7%. However, given that missiles are already being launched at oil wells in some Middle Eastern countries supporting the US and Israel, along with the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, the price of oil will continue to rise. This is occurring within the context of a global economic slowdown, which will impact global price increases and interest rates, as well as increase the vulnerability of capital and currency markets and affect capital flows. The rise in interest rates will affect the finances of both the public and private sectors of economies, given their high levels of indebtedness, restricting their spending and investment capacity and further slowing global economic activity.

In the case of Mexico, the rise in oil prices initially benefits the country, as in 2025 it exported 658,000 barrels of oil per day and imported 338,000 barrels of gasoline per day. Oil revenues will increase in public finances and for PEMEX, but raising the interest rate would have a negative impact due to the inflationary effect caused by the increase in imported gasoline prices.

The longer the conflict in the Middle East lasts, the higher the expected rise in oil prices will be, along with the economic and geopolitical uncertainty that will impact capital and currency markets. This will limit the spending and investment capacity of economies, leading to a slowdown in the global economy and trade. This will contract the country’s exports and reduce capital inflows, jeopardizing external sector financing and exchange rate stability, and further hindering economic activity, as there are no endogenous conditions to counteract this situation.

The central bank in Mexico will raise the interest rate to prevent capital flight and strong pressure on the exchange rate, and the Ministry of Finance will maintain budget cuts for the same purpose. All of this will accentuate the pressures on public and private finances, causing a further drop in consumption and investment and increasing insolvency problems, which will destabilize the banking sector.

To address the looming vulnerability and instability, the government must rethink its economic policy to strengthen the national productive sector, advance import substitution to reduce the foreign trade deficit, and curb capital inflows , thereby becoming less susceptible to the vagaries of international events. Failure to do so will perpetuate the current downward trend and leave the economy subservient to the decisions of international capital, resulting in a loss of sovereignty over national economic policy.

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This article by Manuel Cosme originally appeared in the March 2, 2026 edition of El Sol de México.

Vaccination to prevent measles in Mexico City will continue intensively and herd immunity is expected to be achieved by the end of this month, said Nadine Gasman, the local Secretary of Health.

In a press conference, the official reported that during Shakira ‘s concert, three vaccination stations were set up where 1,916 people received their dose.

The head of the Health Secretariat reminded everyone that the goal for Mexico City is to vaccinate 2.04 million people against the disease in order to achieve herd immunity; once that goal is reached, the administration will continue the campaign to encourage people to go to the 150 vaccination centers to get vaccinated.

To date, health personnel have administered 1,614,915 doses; since the campaign reinforcement began on February 8, 693,829 doses have been administered, and 17,291 were administered on Sunday.

The Secretary of Health commented that there are 418 confirmed cases, 64 of which are people who live in the State of Mexico, and announced that after the weekend there was a registration of six more sick people.

She stated that two cases of deaths possibly related to measles are still under investigation; one is that of a three-year-old girl, who arrived at the hospital on February 22 of this year with clinical death and when the medical history was taken with the parents it was determined that it was a death with epidemiological relevance.

The second case, registered on January 28, 2025, is a two-month-old baby who arrived sick with pneumonia and died, but experts are also reviewing the matter for epidemiological reasons.

The official presented a table to show that the highest incidence of measles is in the Cuauhtémoc borough, followed by Cuajimalpa and Gustavo A. Madero.

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This article by Alfredo Valadez Rodríguez originally appeared in the March 4, 2026 edition of La Jornada, Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper.

Zacatecas, Zacatecas. Hundreds of bean farmers protested, for the umpteenth time – as they have been doing throughout the state since last December – this time in the municipality of Cañitas de Felipe Pescador, to demand that the government of David Monreal Ávila open the collection centers so that their harvests, which they “picked up” in October 2025, can be stored in the SEGALMEX warehouses.

Fernando Galván, spokesperson for the farmers, lamented the irregular operation of warehouses throughout the state, and denounced the delay of the Morena administration in receiving the legume, a situation that causes it to lose technical characteristics such as moisture, which will affect the price, or even the rejection of the harvests.

He pointed out that this situation had never occurred in modern times, “the opening and operation of the official collection centers to acquire beans at a base price of 27 pesos per kilogram failed due to bureaucratic problems between SEGALMEX, the Federal Secretariat of Agriculture and the state government of David Monreal, which the authorities have not clarified.”

Dozens of farmers blocked Federal Highway 45 in Zacatecas yesterday due to the lack of collection centers for their bean harvest. Photo: Alfredo Valadez

He added that because of this, “government ineptitude allowed organized crime groups to set up their own informal – but mandatory – collection system, with armed men in the bean-growing area of ​​Zacatecas and its borders with Durango, where farmers were prevented from taking their harvests to other states on their own and were forced to sell to coyotes, at a ridiculously low price of between 7 and 8 pesos per kilo.

Desperate due to the crisis and coerced, some producers sold, but many more have kept their harvest stored in their homes since October; however, they continue with road blockades in different parts of Zacatecas, to demand that the state government open the official warehouses.

Now it turns out that most of the 52 collection centers are full; because, the producers explain, large volumes of beans were acquired illegally from the same middlemen who scammed other farmers with very low prices, and thus obtained millions in profits.

“We demand that the government open the warehouses in the communities of Las Boquillas and Río de Medina, where there is still space. We ask that they increase the volume collected in this agricultural cycle, because thousands of farmers were left out due to the corruption of the government itself,” Galván denounced.

The largest bean production in the state is concentrated in Sombrerete, Río Grande, Nieves, Miguel Auza, Juan Aldama, Sain Alto, Fresnillo and Cañitas de Felipe Pescador; in 2025, thanks to the excellent rainy season, production reached 400 thousand tons, and it is estimated that there are 80 thousand farmers and their families who are dedicated to the planting of beans and corn.

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This article originally appeared in the March 3, 2026 edition of El Universal.

Mexico’s tax is exceedingly advantageous for the wealthy, with no wealth or inheritance taxes, low property taxes, a flat 10% tax on stock market gains (not transactions) and numerous exemptions, the majority of tax burden is on Mexico’s working class in the form of income and the VAT. A recent Oxfam report reveals that Mexico’s ultra-wealthy billionaires contribute only 21 cents for every 100 pesos and in the area of investing, only 8 cents per every 100 pesos invested domestically.

Deputy José Luis Sánchez González ( PT ) proposed reforming the Income Tax Law to establish a tax on net worth (real estate, cars, boats, airplanes, stocks, bank deposits, investments, rights, securities, works of art and jewelry) that exceeds 100 million pesos ($5.6m USD).

This will be charged at the end of each corresponding fiscal year to individuals residing in Mexico and abroad with a permanent establishment in the country.

Altagracia Gomez. Many of the great fortunes of Mexico’s ultra-wealthy was built on the privatization of Mexico’s substantial public enterprises, beginning in the 1980s.

The initiative of the PT legislator proposes to charge an annual rate of 1.5% to people with assets of 100 million to 500 million pesos ($5.6 million to $28.47 million USD); 2.5% to those with assets of 500 million to one billion pesos ($28.47 million to $56.95 million USD); and 3.5% to those with assets of more than one billion pesos ($56.95 million USD)

The project establishes that the funds raised will be allocated entirely to the creation of a Social Justice Fund, for the reduction of poverty and the care of vulnerable groups through social programs.

“The proceeds from this contribution will be allocated entirely to the creation of the Social Justice Fund, ensuring that its distribution serves to reduce poverty and support vulnerable groups; protect the environment; guarantee early childhood, basic, upper secondary, and higher education; develop science and technology; and ensure access to decent housing and just cities.”

“The revenue from a tax on large fortunes would serve as support for the population in situations of economic vulnerability, implementing social and development programs, in order to guarantee rights such as education, health or housing,” the document states.

The proposed reform states that in the event of non-payment of taxes, fines equivalent to double the unpaid contribution will be applied, “and the applicable criminal liability under the terms of the Federal Tax Code.

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In episode 98 of Soberanía, hosts José Luis Granados Ceja and Kurt Hackbarth analyze the widening global conflict following the U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran and its implications for Mexico and Latin America.

The episode leads with the U.S. attack on Iran, examining how the widespread destruction done in Gaza is being applied to Tehran while the international community stands by. The hosts connect the dots to Latin America, warning client states that U.S. “protection” evaporates when interests shift—a lesson from the Gulf region now playing out in real time.

Next, they break down Morena’s electoral reform, explaining how it would actually reduce the ruling party’s power by eliminating backdoor seats for political opportunists aka “chapulines” and give more voice to voters, including migrants abroad. The reform has sparked rare pushback from coalition partners, revealing the tension between principle and political patronage.

Finally, a rare good news story: Mexico’s Supreme Court traveled to Indigenous territory for the first time to grant self-governance rights to a Chiapas community, breathing life into constitutional reforms decades in the making. It’s a small victory for autonomy in a world increasingly defined by war.


The post Iran’s Existential Fight: Lessons for Latin America – Soberanía 98 appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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By Manolo de los Santos  –  Mar 3, 2026

Just as the false claims of betrayal on January 3 are now easily disproved, so too are the claims of betrayal in the two months since.

The early morning hours of January 3, 2026, marked an inflection point in Venezuela and Latin America’s centuries-long struggle for self-determination and independence.

Operation Absolute Resolve, ordered by the Trump administration, constituted the most brutal and direct military assault on a sovereign state in the region in recent memory. In a shocking operation that left hundreds dead, President Nicolás Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores were illegally kidnapped from Venezuelan soil and transported to the United States, where they now face fabricated charges in a New York federal detention facility.

In the two months since this act of war, a torrent of speculation has emerged from so-called experts and pundits across the political spectrum. This has followed three main lines:

  1. The operation’s success indicated treason at the highest levels of the Bolivarian Revolution.
  2. Acting President Delcy Rodríguez and the remaining leadership have abandoned the Bolivarian project and socialist transformation, surrendering the country, its economy and its resources to US imperialism.
  3. In foreign relations, the Venezuelan leadership has abandoned its historic anti-imperialism.

Taken together, these claims amount to a proclamation that regime change has succeeded in Venezuela.

They are each false, reflecting an amateurish and superficial approach to politics, reactive “hot takes” rather than real analysis or investigation, which provides a left-wing echo of Trump’s own presentation. To understand Caracas’s current trajectory requires a sober appraisal of what took place on January 3, a close look at the facts of Venezuela’s financial and commercial situation, and an honest assessment of the international correlation of forces in which Venezuela operates. It requires understanding what has changed in this new situation. To sort through the complicated reality of the present, certain examples in the history of socialist states can serve as a guide.

A close look at the facts will prove that what we are witnessing is not surrender but a tactical retreat in the face of overwhelming force for which there are clear analogies in revolutionary history.

The main claims that supposedly reveal “betrayal” are examined and refuted below, but before beginning, an important theoretical distinction must be drawn between government and state power. Government offices and ministries set and execute a range of policies, issue declarations, and so on, and temporarily change hands from “left” to “right.” The permanent institutions of state power (the military, the courts, and the police) represent the real power in any society. Almost all the leftist governments of the region have been elected to hold office in recent years, but they did not hold state power. Presiding over policy but with the same capitalist state in place (especially in the military), there is a clear limit to how much these governments can actually contest the capitalist order and transform social reality. The Bolivarian project likewise emerged as an electoral movement, with Chavez initially just holding government office, but with an important difference. Decades of US-funded coup attempts, internal struggles, and other crises have step by step led to the replacement of the forces loyal to the old order in the judiciary, police, and military with forces formed by and loyal to the Bolivarian Revolution. The United Socialist Party maintains its mission to advance working-class power and build socialism. The struggle may proceed in zig-zags, advances and retreats, based on the correlation of forces, but at every stage, the party works to preserve its gains and minimize its losses.

This is important because Venezuela’s concessions are primarily being made at the level of government, not at the state and party level.

Claim #1: The success of the US operation on January 3 indicated treason at the highest levels of the Bolivarian Revolution.

The so-called “evidence”

  • No US service members died in the operation that abducted Nicolas Maduro and Cilia Flores.
  • More than 150 US aircraft penetrated Venezuelan airspace without being shot down by the country’s advanced air defenses obtained from Russia.
  • The “peaceful” extraction of Maduro and Flores could have only occurred due to “collaboration” from Maduro’s inner circle. There was no immediate military counter-escalation by the Venezuelans.

The reality: Resistance in the face of overwhelming military superiorityMuch more is now known about the events of January 3 than was initially clear. Contrary to the narrative imposed by Western media and repeated mindlessly by some on the left, there was resistance. Testimony from survivors and statements from President Trump himself confirm that the presidential security detail, alongside Venezuelan military units and a contingent of Cuban internationalist fighters, engaged the attacking forces in a firefight. Thirty-two Cuban combatants fell alongside more than 50 Venezuelans in the security forces and presidential guard, who defended the president with their lives.

First, US electronic warfare systems totally disabled the country’s air defenses and communications infrastructure. According to Venezuela’s defense minister Vladimir Padrino López, the US used Venezuela as a “laboratory” for weapons technologies never used before. Padrino is well-known as the military leader who consistently exposed US efforts to corrupt and bribe the military to turn on Maduro and the Bolivarian Revolution, as well as prior US assassination attempts. He personified the country’s “military-civic union” that blocked years of regime change efforts under the banner of “always loyal, never traitors.”

An official Venezuelan account of January 3 still has not been released, given that the country remains militarily surrounded (more on that later). But unofficial reports from witnesses and survivors back up Padrino’s comments. They recount that with all their communications and air defenses knocked out and all electricity in the area blacked out, Venezuela military forces were hit with drones and some kind of sonic weapon that incapacitated soldiers. Instantaneously, they were subjected to rapid and overpowering firepower that resulted in a one-sided massacre, even as they shot back.

In Trump’s State of the Union, he honored the pilot of the first Chinook helicopter, which landed at the presidential compound, carrying the Elite Delta Force units that then conducted the ground operation and kidnapped the president. The helicopter took heavy fire, severely injuring the pilot. The US has also admitted there were additional US casualties, although no deaths.

In preparation for this operation, it has since been revealed that the raid was rehearsed on a full-scale, exact replica of Nicolás Maduro’s compound, built in Kentucky. For weeks, Delta Force commandos practiced “blowing through steel doors at ever-faster paces” and memorizing the layout of corridors and safe rooms. Because Maduro was known to rotate between locations, they launched the operation only after he was confirmed to be at that specific site. Specialized nighttime aviation was provided by a group known as the “Night Stalkers.

The violence did not simply end, though. In leaked communications that have since been confirmed by multiple sources, Delcy Rodríguez revealed that from the first moments of contact on January 3, the Trump administration issued an ultimatum. Rodríguez stated, “The threats started the moment they kidnapped the president. They gave Diosdado, Jorge, and me 15 minutes to respond, or they would kill us.” Any refusal to negotiate, she said, would result not just in kidnapping, but the decapitation and annihilation of the remaining leadership of the Venezuelan state. They also were told that the US military would continue to surround the country. Every statement and every decision they made would be scrutinized as either a sign of compliance or resistance, and their lives could be taken at any moment.

This was negotiation at gunpoint, literally, and it has not ended. The moment required a leadership capable of making a necessary retreat to save the revolution, without fracturing its internal unity.

The United States did not succeed on January 3 because of betrayal by the Venezuelan leadership. It succeeded because, after over 25 years of failed coup attempts, economic warfare, and destabilization campaigns, imperialism finally deployed its most potent weapon: direct military intervention backed by technological superiority that no independent country in the developing world can successfully counter at present.

Analysis: Overwhelming hybrid war attack could not overcome political realitiesThe United States achieved its objective of capturing Maduro, but it did not achieve its objective of overthrowing the government or state. The remaining leadership, Vice President Delcy Rodríguez, Minister of Interior Diosdado Cabello, Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino, National Assembly President Jorge Rodríguez, and the core of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) and the Bolivarian armed forces, moved immediately to stabilize institutions, maintain continuity of command.

The US did not plan a larger occupation due to anticipated resistance and the armed mobilization of millions of the Venezuelan people. President Maduro’s call to massively expand the Bolivarian Militias saw over eight million citizens arm themselves. Combined with Venezuela’s professional military, which has not fractured, this created a scenario where any ground invasion would degenerate into a protracted people’s war, with unacceptable political and material costs for the United States. There remains a strong base of support for Chavismo, which the Trump administration tacitly admitted when it said there must be “realism” acknowledging that the Venezuelan right wing lacks the support to lead the country.

The Trump administration instead executed a surgical strike of extraordinary precision, as a way to shift the balance of forces and gain leverage with the Venezuelan government, which it had to accept could not be overthrown. No amount of bragging from Trump and Rubio about “regime change” can overcome this basic fact.

But when Delcy Rodríguez, now acting president, agreed to enter into dialogue with the Trump administration after the attack, many on the left reacted with confusion and dismay. Yes, Maduro and the leadership had pledged a people’s war, and if necessary, a guerrilla struggle along the lines of Vietnam. But the fact is, the US commandos were gone; there was no occupation force to fight. That should be understood as a feature of the revolution’s enduring strength, not weakness.

So how could the Bolivarian Revolution sit at the table with the very forces that had just murdered its defenders and kidnapped its president? The answer lies in the material conditions of survival and a proper understanding of revolutionary strategy. The revolution’s organized social base and military unity represented a kind of deterrent for foreign occupation, but that deterrent cannot expel the enormous military forces still surrounding it, imposing a total naval blockade of its oil while pointing advanced weaponry at their heads. On January 3, the government recognized the military reality and made a tactical decision to retain the institutions of state power under their control, to buy time and live to fight another day.

This decision has clearly required some concessions to the Empire but this too, requires closer scrutiny. Just as the false claims of betrayal on January 3 are now easily disproven, so too are the claims of betrayal in the two months since.

Claim 2: Acting President Delcy Rodríguez and the remaining leadership have abandoned the Bolivarian project, surrendering the country, its economy and its resources to US imperialism.

The so-called “evidence”

  • Venezuela has effectively opened its vast oil reserves to foreign private exploitation and sale.
  • Venezuela has initiated a process of “reconciliation” with the right-wing opposition, including freeing 2,500 prisoners convicted of forms of treason and violence.
  • US officials have been greeted in Miraflores Palace with smiles and musical accompaniment, typically accorded to allies and friends.

The reality: a new correlation of forcesSince January 3, the correlation of forces has been fundamentally altered. The US Navy’s largest regional armada in history has remained positioned off Venezuela’s coast.

No one is coming to Venezuela’s assistance. Looking at the region, in fact, we find right-wing governments in Argentina, Paraguay, Ecuador, El Salvador, Peru, and Bolivia outright celebrating the attack. Progressive governments in Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico offered little more than rhetorical condemnation. The strategic support from Russia and China, while significant in preceding years, proved insufficient to deter imperial aggression and has also been primarily rhetorical. Each country has its own strategic military priorities. Direct intervention also poses the risk of a world war, and given their great distance, they would not have military forces in the region to sustain such a conflict.

The agreements taking shape between Caracas and Washington represent a bitter but necessary compromise. Under its terms, Venezuela has granted the United States significant control over its oil exports, returning to a licensing model similar to that previously operated by Chevron and other companies before the tightened blockade. After acquiring their licenses, foreign oil companies will no longer have to give a majority stake to the state as with previous joint ventures; taxes will be reduced, and they are free to sell their oil on the foreign market without selling to Venezuela’s state-owned company PDVSA. Instead, the US Energy Department has begun marketing Venezuelan crude with the assistance of commodity traders and banks, and Washington has claimed the authority to determine which companies may participate in rebuilding the country’s energy infrastructure. Under this arrangement, for the first time in decades and without any say in it, Venezuelan oil is reportedly even being shipped by foreign tankers to Israel—a country with which it has no relations whatsoever.

In exchange, Venezuela has gained access to revenue from its oil sales through two sovereign wealth funds overseas, effectively controlled by the US. These funds, while subject to US oversight, provide something the country has been denied for years under the sanctions regime: resources for investments in health, education, and infrastructure. The arrangement is exploitative and humiliating, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio has openly described it as the US “taking all the oil.” But it keeps the Venezuelan state alive.

Is this a negation of Venezuela’s sovereignty over its oil decision-making? To some extent, yes. But core features of the agreement do correspond to Venezuela’s long-term desire to rebuild its oil exports to the United States, and resemble what Maduro himself was reportedly offering in negotiations with the Trump administration. This included an offer to reopen to US oil exploration and ownership in exchange for the removal of sanctions. This also corresponds to the reporting of Brazilian journalist Breno Altman. Based on discussions with Maduro’s son, Nicolás Maduro Guerra, Altman reported: “[Maduro] is informed, and his message is always one of support for the Acting President, Delcy Rodríguez.”

The fact of the matter is that Venezuela’s oil infrastructure was built primarily to service the US market, and US refinery infrastructure in the US south was largely built to process Venezuela’s crude. From a purely economic standpoint, these countries remain natural trading partners despite ideological opposition. Even under Chávez, the US bought 60% of Venezuela’s oil exports for a great deal of his presidency, and this constituted the majority of the country’s revenue. Even the expropriation of Venezuela’s foreign-owned oil projects was adopted by Chávez not chiefly as a matter of principle but a reaction to the attempts at sabotage and the deterioration of relations with those companies who refused his terms and exited the country.

In essence, the US was already crushing the Venezuelan oil industry and to devastating effect. First the oil corporations blocked the sale of unique parts and technologies to maintain their abandoned infrastructure. Then came a decade of financial and commercial sanctions, the sequestering of its overseas accounts (some of which remains, ridiculously, in the hands of Juan Guaidó) and finally a literal oil blockade. The Venezuelan economy as a whole had been greatly impacted by this loss of revenue, with soaring inflation, a shortage of hard currency and the collapse of a range of other industries. This is the real source of Venezuela’s out-migration. By releasing billions of revenue into the Venezuelan economy, even under these unjust siege-like conditions, it will undoubtedly lead to an improvement of living conditions. Millions are expected to participate in Venezuela’s people’s consultation on March 8, voting to select 36,000 commune-led initiatives, ranging from public service renovations to economic ventures, for government funding

The agreement with the Trump administration has also led Venezuela to amnesty over 5,000 people and release thousands of prisoners. This includes approximately 800 individuals convicted of different crimes associated with overthrowing the government, including violent acts. Those convicted of murder and “grave violations of human rights” or “crimes against humanity” will not be released. This amnesty, denounced in some quarters as freeing “political prisoners,” is better understood as strategic decompression. It further removes a pretext for humanitarian intervention, isolates the most intransigent sectors of the far-right opposition, and demonstrates that the Bolivarian state retains the authority to define the approach to its own judicial processes. We can assume that the Venezuelan government also hopes this will lead to recognition from other governments in the region and the world. Since the 2024 election, the government has been unable to maintain normal political and commercial relations with most governments in the region outside Cuba, Nicaragua, and a few small Caribbean nations.

Negotiation under gunpoint: Brest-Litovsk in the CaribbeanHere the history of the Russian Revolution provides an indispensable lesson. In 1918, the young Soviet Republic faced the advancing German imperial army with a shattered military and no capacity for effective resistance. Vladimir Lenin, against the objections of the so-called “Left Communists” who demanded a “revolutionary war” to defend the whole territory, led the young revolutionary state to sign the humiliating Brest-Litovsk Treaty. That agreement ceded vast territories, including all of Ukraine, and forty percent of Russia’s industrial base to German imperialism. It was, by any measure, a massive defeat.

Lenin’s critics called this a betrayal of the revolution, and especially of all the workers, peasants, and oppressed nationalities in the ceded territories who had fought and sacrificed everything in 1917, only to be returned to capitalism in the Brest-Litovsk peace treaty.

Yet Lenin understood what his critics did not: the goal was not to die beautifully but to preserve the political instrument of revolution. As the late Comandante Hugo Chávez reflected after the failure of the 1992 rebellion, “We must retreat today to advance tomorrow.” The treaty provided the breathing space necessary to consolidate the Soviet state, build the Red Army, and ultimately defeat not only the German Empire but the combined forces of counterrevolution and foreign intervention. Those who denounced Lenin as a traitor in 1918 were proved wrong by history. The ceded territories all ended up back in the USSR a few years later.

Still, this was not the end of retreats and compromises. Dealing with conditions of famine caused primarily by the civil war, Lenin accepted humanitarian aid from US capitalist charities, established relations with the countries that had just invaded it, and re-established deep economic and commercial ties to German imperialism. Abandoning “war communism,” he guided the state towards the mass reintroduction of capitalist property relations and invited foreign companies. This laid the groundwork, for instance, for the Soviet state to sign agreements with Ford Motor Company (led by fascist sympathizer Henry Ford) to set up shop.

What the government, through Delcy Rodríguez, executes today should be seen in this light. Seated across from US Energy Secretary Chris Wright, receiving CIA Director John Ratcliffe in Miraflores, these are not acts of capitulation but of survival under conditions of extreme duress. Whether she smiles or exchanges the same ceremonial welcome afforded to other state visits is irrelevant. The goal is to give up what can be temporarily sacrificed, oil control, market access, even 800 people convicted of violent crimes, to preserve what cannot be replaced: the revolutionary state, the party, and the lives of its leading cadres who have played an indispensable role in cohering the Bolivarian project as a whole. With that foundation preserved, a retreat now can become a step forward later.

Claim #3: In foreign relations, the Venezuelan leadership has abandoned its historic anti-imperialism.

The so-called “evidence”

  • When US-Israeli forces attacked Iran on February 28, 2026, the Venezuelan Foreign Ministry issued a carefully worded statement that, while condemning the aggression, also condemned the “undue” reprisals carried out by Iran against the Gulf states hosting US bases. The statement was later deleted.
  • Delcy Rodríguez posted a statement that expressed “solidarity” with Qatar after a phone call with its Emir, a close US ally. No statements of solidarity were issued with Iran.

The reality: Venezuela remains under the gun and wants to preserve its Qatari relationshipThis criticism forgets that the Qatar relationship has played a particularly important role for Venezuela in recent years. Qatar has actually hosted Venezuela’s sovereign wealth funds and therefore controls Venezuela’s access to its own oil revenue there. Qatar was also the mediator and host of the last rounds of US-Venezuela negotiations. Venezuela had publicly thanked Qatar in particular for its role in securing the release of political prisoner Alex Saab from US prisons.

More than anything, this criticism forgets that Venezuela remains under the direct threat of US annihilation. Every word and statement remains under the tightest scrutiny, with the highest stakes. CIA Director Ratcliffe has personally warned Venezuelan officials that any deals will be off the table if it serves as a “safe haven” for US adversaries. In such a situation, diplomacy is not a profession of genuine faith but an instrument for preserving sovereign existence.

The formal close relations between Caracas and Tehran remain intact, but to proclaim solidarity with Iran against the US in this massive war would not only cut off a Qatari relationship that has become quite consequential; it would provide Washington with a pretext for a second and far more devastating series of strikes.

**Who is Delcy Rodriguez really?**Much of the “betrayal” narrative has focused on the personage of Acting President Delcy Rodríguez. This lacks any real evidence, appears totally false, and is a classic tactic in US military strategy and psychological operations.

The Rodríguez family’s revolutionary credentials are etched in struggle and blood. The father of Delcy and her brother Jorge (the president of the National Assembly) was Jorge Antonio Rodríguez, a leader of the Socialist League, a Marxist-Leninist organization, which received training in Cuba. He was tortured and murdered by the Punto Fijo regime in 1976, in close coordination with the CIA when Delcy was seven years old. Both Delcy and her brother Jorge emerged from this tradition of clandestine and mass struggle for socialism. President Maduro himself was a cadre of the same organization. After Delcy Rodríguez returned to Venezuela from studies abroad, she threw herself into the Chavista movement and government alongside her brother, both of whom became top advisors to Maduro and among his most trusted negotiators and representatives in the most sensitive internal and international matters. She declared that building the Bolivarian Revolution would be revenge for the murder of her father, a form of justice. To suggest betrayal among them or capitulation born of cowardice or opportunism ignores four decades of shared political formation and sacrifice.

In his first statement on January 3, Trump implied that Delcy Rodríguez had expressed a willingness to cooperate with the US and meet its demands. Some on the left believed him, interpreting this as a sign of capitulation. Her press conference that same day reaffirmed Venezuela’s sovereignty and their own demands to the US, including the release of President Maduro. The next day, after leading a meeting of the party and state leadership, during which the unity of the military was also reaffirmed, she published a message calling on the US government to work together with Venezuela towards peace and development, but on the framework of sovereignty and equality.

This statement echoed every statement made by Maduro in the past and throughout the years of tensions with the US. Maduro himself consistently called for diplomacy and direct high-level negotiation to avoid an all-out war, and had already offered to negotiate comprehensive economic agreements with the US for Venezuela’s oil and mineral resources. Any such deals would have undoubtedly been conditioned on dialing down and downplaying strategic alliances with named “US adversaries,” including Iran, Russia and China. We can presume each of these countries would understand this given that they have clearly made similar difficult tactical decisions in recent history in the service of self-preservation and national interests. Nonetheless Delcy Rodríguez has repeatedly affirmed that Venezuela will continue to develop relations with people all countries.

If the Venezuelan government under Delcy Rodríguez were to sign a similar deal to what Maduro offered, but now with Maduro kidnapped, it would not constitute treason. It does raise the question of course of why then Trump decided to kidnap Maduro at all, but this has more to do with maintaining his own “tough guy” reputation than a substantive policy difference. In the weeks before January 3, sections of the ruling-class media were especially taunting Trump as a “loser” if he came to a deal that left Maduro in power. He needed a trophy and wanted to come out looking like the strongman who could dictate terms to anyone. Trump is claiming victory, that “we’re in charge.” He’s doing so chiefly for domestic political purposes. But that does not make it so. Unable to carry out actual regime change, he is essentially using words to falsely declare “the regime is changed.”

For her part, Delcy Rodríguez has stated that the return of Maduro and Flores remain the central objective of negotiations with the US.

Two Months After Maduro’s Kidnapping: Venezuelans Flood Streets in Nationwide Show of Sovereignty

Neutralizing the right-wing and seeking normalized relationsOne unintended but significant consequence of this negotiation has been a massive political setback of the long-time US-backed opposition, which has been used to deprive Venezuela of normal international relations. María Corina Machado, who spent years calling for foreign military intervention and celebrating sanctions that devastated the Venezuelan people, has been rendered irrelevant since January 3. She has secured nothing from an administration that now deals directly with the government in Miraflores.

By establishing direct state-to-state relations based on the only commodity US imperialism truly values, oil, the Bolivarian leadership has outflanked the opposition. The United States, in its brutal pragmatism, has chosen to negotiate with the only force that actually controls territory and resources rather than with exile figures who command no real power. In their hasty retreat, Rubio and Trump went so far as to publicly discredit their handpicked opposition figure, thereby de facto recognizing the Bolivarian state as the sole governing entity. A full normalization of relations and recognition of the Venezuelan government is still a ways away, and may require even more tactical retreats and concessions, but if it takes place it will be regarded as a strategic victory for the Bolivarian project.

The task of international solidarityFor the left forces outside Venezuela, the current moment demands clarity about what solidarity means. It does not mean endorsing or defending each and every statement of the Venezuelan government, given the situation it is now operating under. But it also does not mean demanding that the Venezuelan leadership commit suicide in a gesture of revolutionary purity or honor. It does not mean echoing US propaganda about “splits” and “traitors” without evidence. It does not mean measuring every tactical decision against an abstract standard that no revolutionary project in history has ever met.

Solidarity means understanding that Delcy Rodríguez, sitting face-to-face with the representatives of an empire that has long targeted her own family, is engaged in the most difficult kind of revolutionary work: survival under conditions of maximum duress, with the future of 30 million people on the line. Her goal is to preserve a project that has transformed the Venezuelan state, restored Venezuela’s independence, instituted impressive social reforms, created a communal sector, and has held out against a sustained imperial economic, military, and political assault in a context of global isolation and an era of counter-revolution. To engage in revolutionary martyrdom in this context would achieve nothing but lead to the liquidation of the Venezuelan left and set back the Venezuelan revolution for generations.

The revolution has not ended. It has temporarily retreated, regrouped, and is fighting by other means. The breathing space purchased through these negotiations, however costly, provides the conditions for future advances.

Nicolás Maduro remains the legitimate president of Venezuela, even as he sits unjustly in jail cell, deprived of even the ability to pay his legal fees. The oil that flows north under this agreement is not tribute but ransom, paid to secure the lives of the Venezuelan people and the continuity of the socialist state. When the correlation of forces shifts, and it will shift, Venezuela will fight to reclaim what imperialism has temporarily extracted.

The point is not to die for the revolution, but to live and make the revolution.

(People’s Dispatch)


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The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) has announced striking a US destroyer in the Indian Ocean, hundreds of kilometers away from Iran’s borders.

IRGC made the announcement on Tuesday, March 3, stating that the warship had been hit using Ghadr-380 and Talaieh missiles.

The Ghadr missile is a medium-range ballistic missile (MRBM) with a range of up to 2,000 kilometers, designed for precision strikes and rapid deployment.

Talaeieh is a strategic cruise missile system capable of reaching targets up to 1,000 kilometers away. It is a smart missile that can change targets mid-mission, adding to its strategic capabilities.

The target lay more than 600 kilometers away from Iran’s borders during the strike, the IRGC announcement underscored.

The destroyer was refueling from a US tanker while it was hit, the statement added.

The strike, the Corps concluded, triggered “widespread fires” on board both the vessels.

Iran Launches 13th Wave of Strikes, Downs 21st Drone

The IRGC has launched Operation True Promise 4 in retaliation against renewed US-Zionist aggression that began targeting Iran on Saturday, February 28.

So far, IRGC has struck numerous sensitive and strategic targets deep inside the occupied Palestinian territories, besides staging counterattacks against several US interests throughout West Asia, including those located in Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait.

The United States Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier is among the targets that have been struck during the operation, which serves as a sequel to the IRGC’s previous successful and decisive counteroffensives against hostile forces.

The Corps has vowed to sustain Operation True Promise 4 until the “complete defeat” of the enemies.

(PressTV)


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Caracas (OrinocoTribune.com)—Hundreds of thousands across Venezuela flooded the streets on Tuesday in the “Great March for Peace, Freedom, and Sovereignty” to demand the release of First Lady Cilia Flores and President Nicolás Maduro. The mobilization marks exactly two months since their kidnapping on Jan. 3 by US imperialism, a day when US military forces carried out multiple bombings that killed more than 100 people and wounded dozens more.

In Caracas, the march covered more than two kilometers, beginning at Alí Primera Park in Catia and proceeding along the emblematic Sucre Avenue. The massive crowd moved with determination through western Caracas, culminating in a popular assembly in Bolívar Square in Block 7 of the 23 de Enero parish.

The mobilization also served as a resounding endorsement of the administration of Acting President Delcy Rodríguez. “Venezuela is a peaceful nation; our acting president maintains the sovereignty of this homeland of Bolívar,” stated one of the protesters. During the march, Nahum Fernández, head of the Caracas government, noted that the people are marching for an agenda of peace and stability. “We are a fully sovereign country, and we must continue to maintain that sovereignty. Today, from Zulia to Caracas, we have seen a great demonstration of support,” Fernández said.

International and regional solidarity
The demonstration saw participation from internationalist activists, including members of the Progressive International and the International Brigade of Argentina. One Argentinian activist emphasized that the youth solidarity brigade has witnessed the dignity of the Venezuelan people, who continue to “resist with joy” while never ceasing to demand the release of the first lady and the president.

Similar mass mobilizations took place in Petare, east of Caracas, and across states including Monagas, Cojedes, Mérida, Delta Amacuro, and Táchira. Demonstrations were also reported internationally; in Brussels, Belgium, protesters marched in support of Flores and Maduro, who remain kidnapped by the Donald Trump regime. Another protest was scheduled in New York City, where the presidential couple is being held.

Hegemony and the path forward
At the conclusion of the activity in Caracas, Nicolás Maduro Guerra, son of the president and member of the PSUV National Directorate, addressed the crowd. He stated that the primary duty of the movement is to “guarantee the hegemony of the Chavista project at any cost and make it irreversible.”

“After the events of Jan. 3, the country changed; it was the first time a nuclear power bombed us. It changed for better or for worse, but it is our responsibility to ensure it is for the better,” Maduro Guerra added. He emphasized that preserving the lives of Cilia and Nicolás following the attack and kidnapping by US imperialism was the first victory.

Acting President of Venezuela Discusses March 8 Popular Consultation With PSUV

He reiterated that Acting President Delcy Rodríguez is a fundamental part of “President Maduro’s team,” describing her as a loyal woman who continues to lead despite the personal tragedy of her father’s murder at the hands of the same political forces she must now engage in dialogue with. Maduro Guerra urged the people to “remain calm to preserve leadership” and to ensure the homeland is not lost.

Honoring the martyrs
The day also served to commemorate the martyrs who fell on Jan. 3 while defending the nation. Following the attacks carried out by the US regime across several Venezuelan cities, more than 100 people were killed. These victims included more than 20 defenseless civilians, 32 Cuban soldiers, and 47 Venezuelan soldiers.

Special for Orinoco Tribune by staff

OT/JRE/SH


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By Alejandra Garcia – Feb 26, 2026

In the heart of Caracas, San Agustin transformed from one of the city’s most dangerous parishes into a cultural epicenter that breathes music, history, and resistance. A Cuban flag alongside the Venezuelan flag welcomes those who arrive in the neighborhood, announcing that here culture and memory intertwine with every drumbeat and every mural.

Along its bustling streets, a discreet bar draws attention: El Rincon de Pichon. More than a place to listen to salsa, it is a refuge of history and tradition, a space where the walls tell the story of the neighborhood and of those who have made it vibrate with Caribbean and urban rhythms. Murals and photographs pay tribute to the members of the Grupo Folklorico y Experimental Madera, which since 1977 transformed the music and cultural identity of San Agustin.

To speak of San Agustin is to speak of Afro-descendancy, resistance, and culture. For more than three decades, this parish began to gain recognition as the cultural heart of Caracas, although its reputation as a dangerous and violent neighborhood kept the more cautious away. Nevertheless, its syncretism and its salsa spirit attracted those seeking the most authentic celebrations of Venezuelan Black identity.

Many residents of San Agustin come from Barlovento, Miranda State, a land of drums and blazing sun, bringing with them life projects rooted in their heritage, rhythms, and ways of loving, dancing, and cultivating. It was there, in the late 1970s, that Madera emerged. Their music blended Afro-Venezuelan rhythms with experimental elements and strong social and political content. Their lyrics served as tools against oppression, discrimination, and the invisibility of Black identity, seeking emancipation and equality.

Professor Irama La Rosa, director of the Southern Feminist School Argelia Laya, recalls how Madera’s poetry and critical messages spread across the national landscape, resonating alongside the songs of Ali Primera, one of Venezuela’s most important singer-songwriters. “Madera never had the support of major record labels; nevertheless, they always enjoyed enormous acceptance and affection within the underground veins of popular culture,” La Rosa recounted.

Afro-Venezuelan Consciousness, Transformation, Development and Tourism in Caracas’ own San Agustin

Thus, when Madera’s powerful voice was suddenly silenced as the boat carrying several of its members sank in the Orinoco River, the pain of this loss was undeniably profound. The tragedy of August 15, 1980 represented a loss of cultural heritage and was crucial in positioning the Parish of San Agustin as a Cultural Parish for an entire country and for all of Latin America and the Caribbean.

In his mourning song “Tin Marin,” Ali Primera immortalized the feeling of an entire nation and the idea that the memory and struggle of peoples never fade: “They only got wet and are standing on the shore…”

It is no coincidence that a Cuban flag appears on one of the walls of San Agustin, or that references to the island can be found in every corner of the bar El Rincon de Pichon. Two years before the tragic incident, in 1978, a member of the group traveled to Cuba to study Bata drums: Jesus “Chu” Quintero. He brought back from Cuba the measurements and forms of the bata drums, which were later crafted by artisans in Venezuela for the group’s use.

San Agustin and Madera are synonymous with cultural identity and a deep connection to Cuban music. Today, it is a neighborhood that celebrates its history with color, joy, and music. Every mural, every song, is a reminder of the resistance, creativity, and hope of a people who do not forget their roots or their struggle.

To remember Madera from San Agustin is to honor suffering peoples; it is to intertwine the histories of Cuba and Venezuela through art and music of resistance. As the group sings: “History will thank your machete and your dignity / under the yoke you will never be / if you fight for bread, work, and land.” In San Agustin, history remains alive, and it keeps dancing.

Alejandra Garcia is the lead correspondent for Resumen Latinoamericano – English in Latin America, she is also an evening news anchor for Telesur.

(Resumen Latinoamericano – English)


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Iran’s IRGC launches the 13th wave of Operation “True Promise 4,” targeting the US base at Camp Arifjan in Kuwait, striking US-linked sites in Bahrain.

Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) announced on Monday the launch of the 13th wave of attacks under Operation “True Promise 4”, targeting enemy positions using its one-way attack drones.

In a statement, the IRGC said the attack struck the United States Marine Corps base at Camp Arifjan. The operation comes as part of Iran’s response to the ongoing US-Israeli aggression against the country and the targeting of the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, martyr Sayyed Ali Khamenei.

Strikes reported in Bahrain, Hormuz Strait
The IRGC further stated that remaining facilities linked to the US naval fleet in Bahrain were targeted by six one-way attack drones and destroyed. It also reported that the fuel tanker Athens Nova remains ablaze in the Strait of Hormuz after being struck by two drones.

‘Israel’ Launches Aggression Against Iran ‘In Coordination With US’

IRGC downs 21st Hermes drone in Bushehr
Separately, the IRGC’s public relations office announced that air defenses of its naval forces, the IRGC-N, in Bushehr shot down the 21st Hermes-type drone over the southern Iranian city.

On Sunday, the Iranian Army said it had intercepted 10 advanced drones, most of them of the Hermes type, through the integrated air defense network across various regions of the country. It added that the total number of downed drones since the start of the aggression had reached 22 as of Sunday. Iranian air defenses also downed US-operated MQ-9 drones and an IAI Eitan (Heron TP) drone.

(Al Mayadeen)


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Mexico’s Culture Secretariat commented on the occupation of its headquarters yesterday, by workers of the National Union of Cultural Workers (SINAC) who have worked illegally for over two years with wages below Mexico’s national minimum wage and are demanding an immediate 13% increase. The Culture Secretariat, headed by Claudia Curiel de Icaza, said in a statement released on its Twitter/X account that it had attempted to establish a dialogue with the leadership of the National Union of Culture Workers (SINAC) since March 1st, without receiving a response and urged the union to prioritize dialogue, warning that the office closure affect administrative processes, programs and suppliers.

Today, SINAC released its response, saying “the Coalition of Trade Unions of the Secretariat of Culture we do not abandon the dialogue. What we have faced is the lack of real solutions. For months we have been presented with administrative measures that, in fact, have not resolved the wage abolition that today affects 100% of the staff under section B. The proposed proposals have not corrected the loss of purchasing power nor guaranteed full compliance with the constitutional minimum wage.”

“The current situation is not the product of union mobilization; it is the consequence of the omission and lack of budget foresight of the administration itself. The responsibility to ensure that no worker earns below minimum wage rests on the authority, not on those we demand to enforce the law.”

“It is worrying that the solution is now intended to be subjected to a broader process or to statements by the President of the Republic. The Secretariat of Culture forms part of the Federal Government and has direct assignments and responsibility over its workforce. You can’t transfer or dilute that responsibility.”

“We reiterate that we have always privileged institutional dialogue. However, the dialogue must translate into concrete results and clear time frames. The working base can’t wait indefinitely while their pay continues to be below the legal minimum.”

“The Coalition of Trade Unions maintains its readiness to build an immediate, viable and lawful exit. But that exit must be made promptly and with a formal commitment to compliance. Wage dignity is not a concession; it’s a constitutional right.”

The post “Dignified wages are not concessions: they are constitutional rights” – Striking Cultural Workers Respond to Mexico’s Cultural Secretariat appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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