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This article by Silvia Chávez originally appeared in the March 24, 2026 edition of La Jornada, Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper.

Tultitlán, Mexico. Representatives of the Hulera Tornel company did not appear at the conciliation hearing scheduled by the Federal Center for Conciliation and Labour Registration of Mexico City for this Tuesday, reported union leader Gerardo Alberto Meneses Ávila, who said that 1,051 workers are maintaining the strike movement that began on February 23.

“The National Union of Workers of the Tornel Company attended the meeting, but the employers did not attend, although they were not obligated to attend, they should have been present because it is a matter of interest to their workers,” stated the union’s general secretary, Meneses Ávila, who said that he went to the Federal Center at ten in the morning accompanied by a lawyer.

He commented that the company was duly notified four days ago and the union representatives promptly attended the call from the labour authority with the objective of enforcing and protecting the labour rights of the 1,051 workers of the Tornel company; he stressed that in these times of transformation the working class expects actions with labour justice.

Representatives from the Hulera Tornel company failed to appear at the conciliation hearing scheduled by the Federal Center for Conciliation and Labour Registration in Mexico City for Tuesday, reported union leader Gerardo Alberto Meneses Ávila. Photo: Silvia Chávez González

Gerardo Alberto Meneses stated that the union filed a formal complaint at the Federal Center for Conciliation and Labour Registration in Mexico City, through which the union requests the intervention of President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo, the Secretary of Labour and Social Welfare, Marath Baruch Bolaños López, the Governor of the State of Mexico, Delfina Gómez Álvarez, and the Head of Government of Mexico City, Clara Brugada Molina.

He emphasized that the intervention of the aforementioned authorities is for a solution to the labour conflict, in which the employer is not complying with the legal framework in labour matters, affecting 1,051 workers and their families.

He stated that the resistance continues and that the path will be followed in the Labour Court, that the union went to a conciliation, but there was no response.

It is worth remembering that last Sunday, the union base, by majority vote, with 883 votes in favor and 113 against, endorsed the outbreak of the strike that began on February 23 in its four plants located in the municipalities of Azcapotzalco (two), Miguel Hidalgo (one), in Mexico City and in the municipality of Tultitlán (one), State of Mexico.

The post Hit & Run: Tornel Rubber Company Didn’t Attend Labour Conciliation Hearing appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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We’re now 13 months into the most recent outbreak of measles in Mexico, and the numbers remain alarming. In a recently published report, the Secretary of Health acknowledged a total of 33,892 probable cases in the country, 13,408 of which have been confirmed, along with 35 confirmed deaths.

Efforts to mitigate the current crisis will be temporary and superficial so long as the federal government does not seriously rethink and retool its health system to prioritize its most marginalized and most vulnerable populations.

Chihuahua, where the first cases emerged, leads in the number of deaths by a wide margin with 21. The next closest is Jalisco with 4, while Mexico City and Durango each have 2. But the data only tell part of the story.

The demographic profiles of the deceased and the uneven distribution of infection and vulnerability point to a systemic problem—not just an epidemiological one. Its roots go back decades and demonstrate deep and widespread social inequality, ones that the government seems unwilling, or at least too dysfunctional, to attend to.

The country will almost certainly succeed at keeping this epidemic from ballooning into a full-blown, COVID-style emergency (if only because measles is a known quantity, a vaccine for it already exists, and the campaign to stamp it out has already been underway).

Even so, all efforts to mitigate the current crisis will be temporary and superficial so long as the federal government (in tandem with the states) does not seriously rethink and retool its health system to prioritize its most marginalized and most vulnerable populations. And that, as many experts are saying, will take a degree of coordination heretofore unseen.

The Usual Victims in All-Too-Familiar Territory

The shortcomings of the existing healthcare system were brought into sharp relief in the earliest days of the outbreak, in Chihuahua. Members of the Mexican Mennonite community brought the infection back with them after attending an international Mennonite conference in Canada in 2024. They spread it on their passage through the US via Seminole, Texas, before finally returning to Chihuahua—which is home to the largest Mennonite communities in the country.

“In this community, they essentially decide to let the rest of the children get sick naturally, because they believe this will give them natural immunity,” says Leticia Ruiz, Director of Prevention and Disease Control in the Chihuahua State Health Department. According to Ruiz, the Mennonite community let the infection ride its course—not out of religious but rather personal conviction against vaccines and an erroneous confidence in “natural immunity”. (At least in the United States, the Mennonite Church has no central doctrine condoning or condemning vaccines, but defers to the individual.)

That said, Ruiz estimates that general vaccine coverage is “well below 50%” in the community. “It’s only when a child needs to be hospitalized that we realize these beliefs among families and within the community—that vaccination isn’t necessary and that natural immunity is part of nature.”

Though Ruiz and her team swiftly and effectively attended to the more densely concentrated affected zones (overcoming barriers to communicating with the primarily German-speaking Mennonites), the outbreak eventually escaped containment and quickly spread through the migrant day laborer population—starting with those workers in the employ of the Mennonites. “These [Mennonite] communities rely on hiring people from outside to work in the fields, and they get sick.”

The Mennonites’ insularity disintegrates at the site of labor transaction, as Jose Luis Gonzalez and Cassandra Garrison have observed: “[Their] interaction with the outside world is mostly restricted to their relationships with local people who work for them as laborers in the community or to trips into town to buy goods.” That means that, like essential workers in the United States, these farm workers and day laborers found themselves on the frontlines of the emergency, unprepared and un-cared for.

As the unvaccinated are at particular risk of contracting and suffering complications and death from measles, the disparity between the Indigenous and non-Indigenous population illustrates major policy flaws.

And, as Dr. Andrés Castañeda Prado, Federal Coordinator of the National Coordination of the National Public Security System (SNSP), emphasizes, this population is structurally positioned to bear the brunt of all kinds of social pressures, but specifically medically-related ones.

“They’re…people in vulnerable situations because they face issues of malnutrition, deprivation, of course, lack of social security, and years of neglect by the system.” Hailing overwhelmingly from the country’s south and southeast, these internal migrant workers go where the work is, often at the mercy of exploitative employers and hazardous conditions. “They have a higher risk of infection,” as they confront compounding risks: traveling in crammed trucks, on trains, and overcrowded work and living arrangements.

To reach the immediately affected workers, many of whom are Indigenous, Ruiz and her team deputized community leaders as coordinators who could facilitate the vaccination of “60,000 day laborers, 20,000… on the move.” And that was in the early days. Ruiz’s team ramped up vaccination to “almost 700,000 over those three critical months—that’s what triggered a significant drop” in infections. But physically reaching the most vulnerable, as well as targeting messaging to them, was no easy task, considering their transient behavior and the geographic remoteness of the population.

The Indigenous population in Mexico is often the first to suffer at the hands of state violence, and the last to receive any kind of social benefits that might justify the existence of big government, and medical attention is no different. Language and location barriers, lack of medical coverage and education, and stigma make it hard for medical workers to reach this group, as was seen notably with COVID vaccination distribution and uptake). To this day, the government isn’t doing nearly enough to bridge the gap.

And, as the unvaccinated are at particular risk of contracting and suffering complications and death from measles, the disparity between the Indigenous and non-Indigenous population illustrates major policy flaws in the federal and state governments response, ones that put the entire population at risk.

Slipping Through Ever-Widening Cracks: The Jalisco Case

If the outbreak’s path through Mennonite communities and migrant workers exposed socioeconomic vulnerabilities, its spread to Jalisco revealed another kind: political negligence.

Lemus and company can tout their state-of-the-art IMSS-Bienestar-insulated teaching hospital & Social Security alternative until they’re blue in the face, but it won’t do a bit of good if they don’t put them to use in a timely, efficient manner.

As the infection spread from state to state along commercial and migratory routes, it revealed in its wake the “inequality gaps [in]…vaccination, failed campaigns, [and] failed epidemiological surveillance,” in Jalisco, says Deputy Mariana Casillas Guerrero. For her, the measles resurgence in her state (which, as of late February, has reported 2,662 cases or 59% of all cases in the country) is not “just bad luck,” but a powder keg that’s been waiting to blow.

Insofar as Jalisco has become the new epicenter of the outbreak, Casillas Guerrero does not mince words: the ruling center-left Movimiento Ciudadano (MC), the current Governor Pablo Lemus Navarro, and its previous governor Enrique Alfaro (who resigned from the MC a week into his governorship) are all to blame, at least in part, for putting inter-party politics above the wellbeing of the jaliscienses.

“There is public evidence that the state executive, in this case Pablo Lemus, has refused to join the IMSS-Bienestar program, and Congress itself has also had to urge the governor to sign this agreement to guarantee medications and care for the entire population right now.”

Deputy Mariana Casillas Guerrero, Photo: @MarianaCasGe

Casillas Guerrero is referring to Governor Lemus’s renewed rejection (following in his predecessor’s footsteps) to participate in the federal agency Health Services of the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS-Bienestar) opened by former president Andrés Manuel López Obrador in 2022 in his attempt to extend universal medical access to those who don’t receive coverage through their employers or the state (like the day laborers working the Mennonite farms). Lemus points to a perceived lack of medication (hardly the case) and dignified working conditions for medical professionals (debateable) in the agency as his justification for keeping Jalisco’s system separate and not committing a “historic error.”

Casillas Guerrero doesn’t buy it. For her, Lemus’s resistance isn’t about policy—it’s politics. “Jalisco has been holding onto this administrative exemption as if it were a political banner—but more than political, it’s an electoral banner,” implying the MC party’s a priori resistance to Morena’s platform. (Incidentally, the MC party’s victories can in large be attributed to longstanding anti-AMLO sentiment in the region.)

Moreover, Lemus’s tough talk rings hollow considering that he and his state had plenty of lead-time before the outbreak to assemble a preventative program—and they failed to take advantage of it. “The Pan American Health Organization did warn us that there was a massive spike in cases in this specific region from 2025 to 2026, and it was a problem we’d been grappling with since late last year.” The National Committee for Epidemiological Surveillance sent out a warning in February of 2025 on the brewing crisis that should have sounded alarm bells, and yet they officials sat on their hands for months.

So Lemus and company can tout their state-of-the-art IMSS-Bienestar-insulated teaching hospital and Social Security alternative until they’re blue in the face, but it won’t do a bit of good if they don’t put them to use in a timely, efficient manner.

Centro Médico Nacional Siglo XXI, Mexico City Photo: Jay Watts

A Far Cry from How Things Used to Be, and a Long Way to Go

The truth is that, viewed in its historical context, IMSS-Bienestar—while by no means a perfect institution—still represents a huge leap forward for Mexico’s healthcare system, one accomplished in a very short period of time. “What we have done,” says Ulises Rangel Cruz, former deputy director of Strategic Information Coordination at IMSS-Bienestar, “is make the largest investment in medical infrastructure in the last 36 years.” He goes on to enumerate:

“IMSS-Bienestar reclaimed more than 100 hospitals that had been abandoned, since the PRI and the PAN paid for hospitals and left them as unfinished structures, half-built; they left 300 hospitals unfinished, and during the COVID pandemic, we reclaimed them. We equipped them, put them into operation, and continue to open new hospitals. We have granted permanent positions to more than 56,000 healthcare workers who previously had precarious contracts in the states. In other words: no administration had ever granted permanent positions to doctors. Today, they earn a salary three times higher than what they received when state governments were in charge. This is the first time the Mexican government has created a health services institution for people without social security. Previously, there was no federal institution of this kind.”

In the 80s, long before AMLO and Morena’s ascent to power and the rollout of the Fourth Transformation, the Mexican healthcare system was subject to a punishing regime of neoliberalism known as the “Washington Consensus”. The mandate’s enforcers carried out decentralization en masse of an already fragmented healthcare system, outsourcing the national project to 32 subnational, under-resourced, uncoordinated health systems whose level of care differed dramatically from state to state. The uninsured population who came to depend on the balkanized institution were hardly in a better place when it comes to access and quality of care than they were before.

Then in the 90s and early 2000s, the federal government doubled down on decentralization, footing the bill of the decades of fragmentation through technocratic and “market-oriented” reforms. Things like per capita financing to persuade and assuage state governors, and a benefits package (CAUSES) that prioritized medical intervention over prevention—eschewing the, arguably, most critical phase of healthcare.

AMLO, through the IMSS-Bienestar program, sought to reverse this process without having to rebuild the structures from scratch. The program offers states the option to voluntarily enter into agreements to transfer to the federal program the full responsibility for providing healthcare to the uninsured, including infrastructure, personnel, and financial resources. And for all the strides the IMSS-Bienestar has made in centralization, it is still guilty of privileging specialists and hospitals at the expense of preventative community care—creating internal medical care deserts that exist in the shadows of the national institution.

Centro Médico Nacional Siglo XXI, Mexico City Photo: Jay Watts

The Federal Fix That Isn’t (Yet)

That’s all to say that, as Castañeda Prado points out, the existence of the IMSS-Bienestar is not a panacea. That’s partly because, though it has played a major role in the fight against this outbreak of measles, it can’t act in isolation.

“The responsibility for setting public policy lies with the different units,” he says. “Vaccination policy is under the unit called CeNSIA [Centro Nacional para la Salud Integral de la Infancia y la Adolescencia] epidemiological surveillance policy is set by the General Directorate of Epidemiology; and the responsibility for public health lies with the state health services and the health jurisdiction, and the provision of medical care lies with the various providers.”

Really making good on universal medical coverage comes down to a question of sufficient vision—that envisages what community care looks like in practice—and the necessary will to implement and defend that vision.

So the healthcare landscape is still fragmented. But, as Castañeda Prado assures, efforts are being made within the SNSP to coordinate and connect the dots. “They’re called health coordination centers for wellbeing—that aims to bridge the gap between the community’s healthcare needs and healthcare providers.” He sees “incentives, a budget, and metrics” as being three planks in that bridge to assure adherence to local, state, and national objectives, and also that the resources, the hospitals, infrastructure, medications, are all put to good and efficient use.

But really making good on universal medical coverage, he says, comes down to a question of sufficient vision—that envisages what community care looks like in practice—and the necessary will to implement and defend that vision. And ultimately that mandate has to come from the top down, and translated and transmitted through on-the-ground community work. Castañeda Prado concedes that community health isn’t always a winning platform electorally: “it doesn’t win votes; it’s not visible.”

Invisible or not, it’s indispensable. And it “isn’t carried out by doctors and nurses at the clinic,” as Castañeda Prado reiterates. “It’s done in the community, with health promoters, social workers, and local governments. And there really isn’t a strategy or policy in place to support that.”

Of course, this stymied interplay gets at the perennial tension between big government central planning and local, grassroots implementation. The two are mutually co-dependent, but, as we see in the case of the country’s response to the measles, so often either in conflict or operating in siloes, to the detriment of the most marginalized. If this current crisis is to serve as a “wake up call for policy makers” as Casillas Guerrero says it ought to, it’s a call that will have to be heard as much at the top as at the bottom, and heeded in concert.

Seth Garben is a writer, poet, musician, filmmaker, playwright, and activist/organizer based in the US and Mexico City. He is a member of the Democratic Socialists of America and a core team lead with immigrant rights group Danbury Unites for Immigrants. He composes and performs music in Mexico City and internationally as Goldy Head.

The post Failing the Stress Test: What the Measles Resurgence in Mexico Reveals About a Fragmented Health System appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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Caracas (OrinocoTribune.com)— On Tuesday, Acting President Delcy Rodríguez announced that a Venezuelan diplomatic delegation will depart for Washington this week. The move aims to resume formal diplomatic ties, as previously announced on February 3, marking one month since the unprecedented US military strikes on Venezuela and the criminal abduction of President Nicolás Maduro.

“This week, a delegation of diplomats will be leaving for Washington to begin this new stage of relations and political diplomatic dialogue between our government,” Acting President Rodríguez said during a meeting at Miraflores Palace with investors and business associations. “So welcome, thank you again, and I hope you return very soon so we can move forward with more concrete projects.”

During the meeting, the Chavista leader reaffirmed Venezuela’s willingness to establish a direct communication channel to facilitate a transparent institutional cooperation agenda. She further reiterated the state’s commitment to rebuilding strong bilateral political and commercial relations with the US to move past the current restrictive framework of illegal US sanctions.

OFAC issues General License 53
Shortly after the announcement, the US Department of the Treasury, through its Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), issued General License 53. This license authorizes transactions linked to Venezuelan diplomatic missions, effectively permitting the operation of Venezuelan diplomatic representations in the US.

The first paragraph of the new OFAC license states: “All transactions prohibited by the Venezuela sanctions regulations, 31 CFR part 591 (the VSR), that are related to the provision of goods or services in the United States to official missions of the government of Venezuela to the United States or to permanent missions of the government of Venezuela to international organizations in the United States (collectively, the ‘missions’), and payment for such goods or services, are authorized…”

Working meeting and delegation members
On Tuesday night, Rodríguez held a televised working session with members of the diplomatic delegation traveling to the US. While specific details about the full delegation were not provided, the meeting included several high-ranking officials.

Accompanying Rodríguez were Foreign Minister Yván Gil, Finance Minister Anabel Pereira, Vice President for Economy and Finance Calixto Ortega, Deputy Foreign Minister for North America and Europe Oliver Blanco, and Chargé d’Affaires Félix Plasencia, who will lead the Venezuelan diplomatic delegation to the US.

The battle for stolen assets
Geopolitical analysts suggest that the resumption of diplomatic ties could represent a turning point in the struggle to recover more than US $30 billion in Venezuelan assets frozen or seized by US imperialism since 2019. For years, the illegal “interim government” construct led by Juan Guaidó served as a legal artifice for Washington to block the Venezuelan people from accessing their own resources, including the CITGO corporation and over US $5 billion in gold held in the Bank of England.

With the US recognition of the Rodríguez administration, the pretext for maintaining these seizures collapses. Recovering control over these resources, including frozen bank accounts and seized subsidiaries, is considered essential for Venezuela’s economic recovery and social well-being after years of financial strangulation and imperialist looting.

Legal security versus OFAC licenses
During the session, Rodríguez emphasized the importance of moving away from the model of temporary OFAC licenses, such as those granted to companies like Chevron, toward a system of permanent legal security. She noted that a framework without sanctions is necessary to provide real certainty for investments in the short, medium, and long term.

She informed business leaders that intermittent licenses make long-term project planning impossible. Furthermore, she reaffirmed Venezuela’s commitment to building a stable and transparent economic cooperation agenda that mutually benefits both peoples. Rodríguez also highlighted the immense mineral potential of the country, which possesses some of the largest reserves of gold, bauxite, and diamonds on the planet, offering strategic opportunities for alliances under the principle of respect for Venezuelan sovereignty.

New leadership for Return to the Homeland Plan
On Tuesday, in a separate development, the National Assembly of Venezuela authorized Deputy Mervin Maldonado to assume the presidency of the Return to the Homeland (Vuelta a la Patria) Plan.

The national program was managed until recently by Camilla Saab, the wife of Alex Saab. Following a cabinet reshuffle on January 17, Alex Saab was replaced as industry minister by Luis Villegas and, according to reports not yet confirmed by authorities, is currently under house arrest.

Minister Cabello Urges Venezuelans Not to Fall for Provocations and to Trust Delcy Rodríguez amid Workers’ Protests

The president of the National Assembly, Jorge Rodríguez, stated that Maldonado “will be able to assume his position as head of the Great Mission Return to the Homeland, for which we wish him the greatest success.” The program, created by President Nicolás Maduro, is designed to protect and assist Venezuelan migrants who face vulnerable situations abroad, including xenophobia, exploitation, and racist persecution resulting from the economic crisis induced by illegal US sanctions.

Special for Orinoco Tribune by staff

OT/JRE/SL


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By Caitlin Johnstone – Mar 20, 2026

In their eyes the wars are never wrong, they’re only ever executed incorrectly. US military interventionism can never fail, it can only be failed.

Trump’s former national security advisor John Bolton has a tweet that’s got me absolutely fuming right now.

“In 2018–2019, I made the case for regime change in Iran as often as I could. Voices in Trump’s orbit often cited Iran’s capacity to close the Strait of Hormuz as a reason against regime change. Trump has been fully aware this is a possibility, and yet did not prepare,” Bolton posted.

Can you believe this shit? Dude’s like “Hey, Trump should have known this war would be hard because people tried to warn him not to listen to me!”

Motherfucker THIS WAS YOUR WAR. You were THE “bomb Iran” guy! You made it your entire personality for DECADES. Over the years I’ve used your name God knows how many times whenever I needed an example of a Beltway swamp monster who’s got a throbbing hard-on for war with Iran. Now you’ve finally got it and it’s going exactly as badly as everyone said it would, and you’re like “Yeah well he should’ve known better, people tried to warn him about the Strait of Hormuz”? Fuck you.

Got his regime change war and is still mad about it. 🤡 https://t.co/iCbOcDOzcA

— Josiah Lippincott (@jlippincott_) March 18, 2026

These professional warmongers never, ever learn from their errors. Many years after the Iraq invasion turned out to be a disaster, John Bolton was still out there telling the media he believed it was a “resounding success,” conceding only “mistakes that were made subsequently” to the ousting of Saddam Hussein.

They never admit they were wrong. They never admit that their war was a bad idea. They only ever acknowledge that it didn’t happen in exactly the way they imagined it happening in their minds. They live in this fantasy world where all their war agendas would unfold beautifully so long as they could personally control every molecule of matter involved in how it happens, completely ignoring that this is impossible and any war is always going to have an unfathomable number of moving parts you can’t control.

Trump ‘Postponed’ Strikes on Iranian Power Plants After Warnings of Regionwide Retaliations

In their eyes the wars are never wrong, they’re only ever executed incorrectly. US military interventionism can never fail, it can only be failed.

Bolton doesn’t even seem to have any idea what Trump could have done differently to stop Iran from closing the Strait of Hormuz. I listened to an NPR interview the other day where he slammed Trump for not having “done the planning in advance” to prevent the Iranian blockade, but he never at any time outlined what Trump could have done to accomplish this. He just said there was “a huge hole in the planning” and that “they apparently didn’t take as seriously as they should have the potential to mine the Strait of Hormuz,” without ever saying what they could have done.

John Bolton jumping ship. JOHN BOLTON. https://t.co/z1LTJcJusJ

— Ali Ahmadi (@AliR_Ahmadi) March 14, 2026

He doesn’t know. He himself, Mister Iran War, had no plan for how to carry out this war without disastrous consequences for the US and its allies. He’s spent his entire blood-soaked career pushing for a war he never had any idea how to actually carry out.

These are the kinds of minds they have spearheading the US empire’s wars.

All the worst people are getting exactly what they want, and it turns out they don’t even want it, like Elon Musk tweeting “Whoever said ‘money can’t buy happiness’ really knew what they were talking about” last month. They’re getting everything they asked for and it’s making everyone miserable, and it’s not even making THEM happy.

The imperial status quo elevates the worst among us. The least wise. The least insightful. The least compassionate. The least deserving. The least qualified.

We need drastic revolutionary change, and we need it now.

(caitlinjohnstone.com)


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By Abdul Rahman – Mar 23, 2026

Rising energy prices and disruptions in global supply chains have shut down some industrial activities in Asian countries, like India, and forced governments to adopt emergency measures.

Iran warned it will completely shut down the Strait of Hormuz if its power plants are targeted in US-Israeli attacks. It also repeated that power plants in countries in the region that host US military bases will also be “legitimate” targets of its retaliation.

The statement was issued by Iran’s Khatam al-Anbiya central military headquarters on Sunday, March 22, following US President Donald Trump’s threat on Saturday about targeting Iran’s power plants if it fails to open the Strait of Hormuz in the next 48 hours.

Iran announced previously that the strait is open for all except for the allies of the US and Israel.

“We are determined to respond to any threat at the same level as it creates in terms of deterrence. If you hit electricity, we hit electricity,” Khatam al-Anbiya claimed.

Earlier, Trump had threatened that “if Iran doesn’t fully open, without threat, the Strait of Hormuz, within 48 hours from this exact point in time, the US will hit and obliterate their various power plants, starting with the biggest one first.”

However, in yet another social media post on Monday, Trump made a u-turn. He announced the postponement of the “strikes on Iranian power plants”, claiming his administration had a “very good and productive conversation” with Iran for the last two days which will continue in the coming days.

Iran has denied that it held any talks with the US. It claimed Trump’s statement was part of his efforts to lower global energy prices.

Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs also asked the countries trying to intervene to end the war to approach Israel and the US instead, as they were the ones who initiated the war.

The US and Israel have already bombed Iran’s South Pars gas field and Kharq Island, in an attempt to hurt the country’s energy production and exports. Kharq Island is the main outlet of Iranian energy exports.

Iran, in retaliation, has attacked Israel’s Haifa refinery and several energy production centers in Qatar, Bahrain, and the UAE.

On Monday, Iran also warned that if its civilian infrastructure is targeted by the US and Israel it will completely shut down the regional communication channels.

Over 1,500 Iranians have been killed, including its head of state Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and several other top political and military leaders and over 20,000 have been injured in the US-Israeli attacks since February 28.

Scores of US security forces, Israelis, and some residents of the Persian Gulf countries have also been killed and thousands injured in Iranian retaliations.

US, ‘Israel’ Attack Gas Facilities at Iran’s South Pars Field

Global energy crisis
The closing of the Strait of Hormuz and attacks and counter attacks on energy production units in the region have already had a grievous impact on global energy prices, with prices of crude crossing USD 100 per barrel.

Due to higher prices and disruptions in supplies to various countries, particularly in Asia, governments have been forced to restrict domestic consumption and implement various emergency measures.

The war and blockade of the strait has disrupted the supply chain of various raw materials and market access, leading to sections of economic activities being shut down in various countries, causing unemployment.

In several countries, those that are mostly dependent on imported energy and the export of goods to West Asia, such as Bangladesh, the war is expected to cause a severe economic crisis.

According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), a Paris-based intergovernmental organization, the war on Iran has already caused an unprecedented energy crisis.

The effects of the present crisis are more severe than the combined effect of oil shocks in 1973, 1979, and the gas crisis due to the Ukraine war in 2022, claimed Fatih Birol, head of the IEA on Monday.

International community calls for end of the war
Meanwhile, there is a renewed global push to end the war on Iran, with anti-war demonstrations in different parts of the globe.

Members of the Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU) held a protest at the US embassy in Manila on Monday, demanding the end of US warmongering in West Asia.

On Monday, China reiterated its calls for the end of the war and the start of negotiations to resolve any possible dispute.

If allowed to continue, the war will create a “vicious cycle” and may cause irreparable damage to the region claimed Lin Jian, spokesperson of the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Last week a Chinese envoy visited various countries in West Asia in an attempt to seek peace in the region.

(Peoples Dispatch)


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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.

Plan B: the debate is clear, privileges or the peopleClaudia Sheinbaum reaffirmed that the Electoral Reform Plan B is centered on eliminating privileges, particularly those election officials who earn more than the President, and redirecting these resources toward the well-being of the people. She emphasized that her responsibility is to present the bill, and it will be up to the Senate to discuss and vote on it, making it clear that the crux of the debate is political: who is in favor of privileges and who is in favor of the people.

The right-wing copies what it previously criticizedPresident Claudia Sheinbaum questioned the National Action Party (PAN) for announcing that it would select its candidates for the 2027 elections through opinion polls, noting the inconsistency of those who for years criticized that method when it was used by Morena. She noted that comparisons and memes about this contradiction are circulating on social media, emphasizing that the right-wing is now adopting a mechanism that Morena promoted to democratize the internal life of political parties.

Femicide: real punishment and zero impunityThe Mexican government is promoting a General Law against femicide with penalties of up to 70 years in prison, nine gender-based criteria, and 21 aggravating factors. The proposed legislation standardizes the crime and mandates that every violent death of a woman be investigated as a femicide based on a gender perspective.

In addition, it guarantees comprehensive reparations for victims and families — including justice, medical and psychological care, legal counsel, and support for minors — and makes it clear that there will never again be impunity. No case may be downplayed or classified as suicide.

Diesel: zero abuses, the people will not overpayThe President accused gas station owners of raising the price of diesel and premium gasoline despite receiving tax incentives, stating there is no justification for diesel to reach prices such as 29.50 pesos (US$1.66), given that Special Tax on Production and Services incentives are in place precisely to prevent such an impact on the economy. Sheinbaum announced that this week the Ministry of Energy and Pemex will meet with the sector to curb these abuses and prevent the costs from being passed on to the public.


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This article by Alma E. Muñoz and Emir Olivares originally appeared in the March 24, 2026 edition of La Jornada, Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper.

Mexico City. Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo reiterated her call for the United States to eliminate or reduce tariffs on automobiles, steel, and aluminum. She also stated that, like her administration, the U.S. government is advocating for stronger rules of origin.

“The United States has publicly stated its intention to strengthen rules of origin, as we have mentioned here, which means that if you are going to produce an auto part, most of your components must also be manufactured in Mexico, the United States, or Canada.”

President Sheinbaum said that lowering or eliminating tariffs “is part of the discussion that is happening right now… and there is progress, but we still don’t see it reflected in the facts.”

They still haven’t accepted?

“Yes, they accept it, but it’s not yet reflected in reality, even though it’s already a fact.”

In the document?

“Yes. There’s a provision in the declarations made by the United States that the component manufactured in the United States is deductible. Here, the automakers told us that they were having difficulty obtaining that deduction in the United States. And Secretary (Marcelo) Ebrard has requested this there, and in that respect, for example, there has been more progress.”

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On Monday, after condemning those who, from abroad, have incited workers of Venezuela to protest, the secretary general of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), Diosdado Cabello, called on the working class and the Venezuelan people in general not to fall into provocations and to trust in the capacities and work of the acting president Delcy Rodríguez.

“Venezuela has been subjected to the most perverse economic sanctions by the government of the United States, the European Union, and others who have believed they can sanction our country,” said Cabello. “However, those sanctions have had an effect on the homeland. Those who today go around, the widows and widowers of the Fourth Republic, speaking in the name of the workers, were the same ones who sold off workers’ social benefits. And they are there in the comfort of living abroad, calling to subvert order here in Venezuela.” Cabello spoke from Plaza Caracas, where he addressed, in downtown Caracas, a massive popular mobilization in support of the Bolivarian revolution and Venezuela’s socialist path.

He emphasized, before a sea of people, that “the working class is with the Bolivarian Revolution. They know it; so from outside, those who betrayed the working class come and send them, they send them to sacrifice once again. We invite them to come with us. Let’s demand that the sanctions against Venezuela cease, all united, and you will immediately see the results, not only in wages, but in the quality of life of Venezuelan men and women.”

Cabello’s message comes on the same day that right-wing sectors called for a mobilization to demand wage improvements. The activity of that sector is promoted by the National Trade Union Coalition. The route that the opposition planned to follow went from Parque Carabobo to Plaza Caracas.

The leader of the revolutionary socialist party, Diosdado Cabello specified that “some fall into the trap of those who want to deceive because they are the same ones who have always negotiated to leave workers out.”

In that context, he recalled that when on April 30, 2012, President Hugo Chávez enacted the Organic Labor Law of Workers (LOTTT), he settled a historic debt left by Fedecámaras, the CTV, and the governments of the Fourth Republic.

Later, Cabello stated: “Let us not fall into provocations of any kind; let us move forward; let us accompany our sister Delcy (Rodríguez), let us fully trust in the capacity, the work, and the consciousness of our comrade Delcy and the high political command that is with her.”

He added: “When Chavismo marches, it marches in peace, in calm. It is fundamental for the future to maintain revolutionary unity, of the parties of the Great Patriotic Pole, of the Bolivarian National Armed Force, and of the working class, of the men and women who do not rest day and night in any corner of the homeland. Let us maintain the unity of social movements.”

Cabello warned that the main task of the right wing today “is to try to divide us because they know that if they go to an election, we will win whatever elections come. They know that if they go to the streets, we will be in the streets. In any scenario, we must remain united like a rock.”

In response to these words, the public chanted the slogan: “They will not return.”

Lifting sanctions is key to promoting social well-beingGeneral secretary Cabello made it clear that “the struggles of the working class are the struggles of the Bolivarian Revolution. That is why we are in the streets… because we know and are very clear that once the sanctions against our country cease, this country will be in the same conditions as when Commander Hugo Chávez was here.”

In that context, he highlighted that they will continue promoting and strengthening housing construction, “a powerful health system, as we must have,” as well as that the nation will again have “the highest wage system in America. We will return to an education with everything.”

He recalled that what Venezuela has had to endure has been very difficult as a result of the blockade. In that sense, he provided as an example the events that transpired during the COVID-19 pandemic, when Venezuela could not initially import vaccines. Eventually, the Constitutional president, Nicolás Maduro, was able to facilitate the import of vaccines.

When mentioning both the Constitutional president and his wife, deputy to the National Assembly (AN), Cilia Flores, who since January 3 have been imprisoned in the United States after their abduction by US troops, Cabello sent the presidential couple a message of solidarity and revolutionary greeting.

“We know that sooner rather than later we will have them with us, in their same struggles, in the struggles for workers and for the humble people,” he stated while the crowd chanted in unison: “Solidarity and revolutionary greeting.”

After this greeting, Cabello resumed his speech: “We march together with the people demanding the end of sanctions.” In response, the people chanted: “The people, enraged, demand their rights!”

The main struggle is to move the country forwardIn his speech, Cabello asserted that the Venezuelan people have many struggles ahead, and one of the main ones is to move the country forward—to continue demonstrating that despite everything that imperialism and right-wing sectors have done, Venezuela remains standing.

Cabello noted that the nation has risen thanks to the efforts of Venezuelan workers, of students, peasants, fishermen, PDVSA workers, those in the electricity sector, teachers, professors, nurses, doctors—“who have set aside any personal situation to promote the future of the homeland and to provide our children a free, sovereign, and independent country.”

“Nothing will take us off our path; even if the march is slow, it is still a march,” he emphasized.

Cabello recalled that the infamous decree issued by former US President Barack Obama in March 2015, in which Obama alleged that Venezuela was an “unusual and extraordinary threat,” caused enormous harm to the people. That action by the US led to the more than 1,140 sanctions that have been imposed against Venezuela since.

Cabello recalled that despite the sanctions, “this people has resisted with heroism, with dignity, courage, and consciousness, and the people know that the path is the path of the Bolivarian Revolution; there is no other path.”

Unity above allFinally, Cabello reiterated the importance of the Venezuelan people remaining united, as the Liberator Simón Bolívar and the leader of the Bolivarian Revolution, Hugo Chávez, both emphasized.

In that sense, he recalled the call of “unity, struggle, battle, and victory” issued by President Chávez on December 8, 2012.

“He told us: unity, struggle, battle, and victory,” said Cabello. “Victories sometimes take time to arrive, but they always arrive for those who work for them with tenacity, with constancy, with clarity of purpose. Let us remain united and we will have victory assured.”

“Remember, brothers and sisters, that whatever happens—and I say this with full awareness—whatever happens, and under any circumstance, we will prevail; this people will always prevail,” he concluded.

The blockade against Venezuela continuesOn February 18, the US regime extended for an additional year the sanctions imposed on March 8, 2015, by then-president Barack Obama, through Executive Order 13692, which declared Venezuela a supposed “unusual and extraordinary threat.”

Since 2015, both Obama and the presidents who followed him—Donald Trump in his first (2017–2021) and second term (2025–), as well as Joe Biden (2021–2025)—have imposed more than a thousand sanctions.

On four occasions over the past two months, the acting president Delcy Rodríguez has requested that the Trump regime lift the blockade against Venezuela. The most recent call for sanctions relief was issued on Saturday, March 14, when she rejected a proposal by the president of Colombia, Gustavo Petro, regarding zero tariffs in all bilateral trade, due to the inequality that, she explained, is generated by US sanctions against Venezuela.

After explaining to President Petro why the zero-tariff initiative could not proceed, the acting president once again asked the occupant of the White House, Donald Trump, to completely lift the blockade that nation maintains against Venezuela.

“President Trump, it is the feeling of a people, but it is also the way in which Latin America, to which you have referred, can move forward together with balanced growth, where Venezuela also contributes to regional growth,” stated Delcy Rodríguez. “From here, Venezuela, in national unity, calls for the lifting of sanctions, for the blockade to cease, and for relations of cooperation, friendship, joint work, and shared work to prevail, in relations of equality and respect.”

With this appeal, it is the fourth time that the acting president has urged Trump, since late February, to lift sanctions against Venezuela. On February 26, 2026, 48 hours after Donald Trump referred to Venezuela as a “new partner and friend,” acting president Delcy Rodríguez addressed a message to the US president requesting that he end the blockade and sanctions against the nation. That was the first call.

A day later, on February 27, the acting president of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, again demanded an end to the economic blockade imposed by the US, noting that it has significantly affected the local economy due to restrictions on the hydrocarbon sector.

On March 2, Rodríguez once again requested that the US president lift the blockade and the illegal unilateral coercive measures (euphemistically referred to as “sanctions”) that the US maintains against Venezuela.

“We have told President Trump, who considers us his ‘friends,’ his ‘partners’—we have told him that we welcome and acknowledge that consideration, but … the blockade against Venezuela must end now, the sanctions against Venezuela must be lifted; the Venezuelan people deserve it,” she emphasized during a meeting on Monday, March 2, at the Félix Lalito Velásquez Sports Complex in Sucre.

Delcy Rodríguez was sworn in by the National Assembly as acting president on January 5 in accordance with the decision issued two days earlier by the Supreme Tribunal of Justice, which appointed her to fulfill that responsibility following the criminal abduction of the Constitutional head of state, Nicolás Maduro.

The US Keeps Openly Admitting It Deliberately Caused The Iran Protests

(Diario VEA) by Yuleidys Hernández Toledo

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/CB/SL


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The acting president of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, sent her condolences to the families of members of Colombia’s National Army following the crash of a Colombian Air Force plane shortly after taking off from the Puerto Leguízamo Airport in the department of Putumayo, Colombia.

“Venezuela expresses its sincere condolences to the families of the members of the National Army and of the crew of the Colombian Aerospace Force who died in this tragic accident,” stated the acting president. “In these moments of uncertainty and pain, our prayers go with the injured, offering wishes for their prompt and full recovery.”

The Lockheed Martin Hercules C-130 aircraft was carrying troops from Colombia’s Public Force on board.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro, through social media, indicated that “so far, there are 77 injured in the hospital, one dead, and 43 people whose condition is yet to be determined.” The cause of the Hercules plane crash is still unknown.

Later, the Colombian president specified that 83 soldiers survived the crash and that the inhabitants of Putumayo helped them, crossing the runway and assisting them, which he praised.

“It is the people of Putumayo who saved them from death—they went all the way to the airport runway and brought water and love to the young men,” wrote President Petro. “This is how a homeland is built. I thank the fathers and mothers who ran the distance to the crashed Hercules aircraft to save the children of other mothers and fathers; I thank the soldiers who were there and ran to save the lives of their comrades—this is a beautiful proof of love and solidarity. I kneel before you. Let us aim for the maximum, the lowest number of lives lost… life is the priority of society and the state.”

Below is an unofficial translation of the full text of the communiqué of the Venezuelan government:

The acting president of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez Gómez, on behalf of the Government and the Venezuelan people, expresses her deepest solidarity and sorrow to the people and Government of the Republic of Colombia following the unfortunate air accident that occurred this Monday, March 23, 2026, in Puerto Leguízamo, in the department of Putumayo.

Venezuela expresses its sincere condolences to the families of the members of the National Army and the crew of the Colombian Aerospace Force who died in this tragic accident. In these moments of uncertainty and pain, our prayers accompany the injured, offering wishes for their prompt and full recovery.

The Venezuelan people join the mourning that today engulfs the Colombian nation, reaffirming the value of life and the integrity of those who serve their homeland with honor.

Venezuela’s Delcy Rodríguez and Colombia’s Gustavo Petro to Meet Amid Shifting Regional Dynamics

(Últimas Noticias) by Aura Torrealba

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/CB/SL


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At the General Cemetery of the South in Caracas, the acting president of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, inaugurated a monument to the heroes who fell on January 3, 2026,

The monument, built with marble and granite pieces, immortalizes the bravery of the men and women who lost their lives in defense of the homeland.

Acting President Rodríguez also reported on the restoration of the tribute to the martyrs of El Caracazo of February 27, 1989, when thousands of Venezuelans were gunned down by the military during protests against the neoliberal austerity measures of President Carlos Andrés Pérez.

The acting president highlighted the short time required to restore the cemetery projects thanks to the joint and coordinated action between the national, regional, and local governments.

“I truly acknowledge that we are able to be delivering this work that in just 6 months underwent a major intervention,” stated Acting President Rodríguez.

Transparency website launchedLikewise, on Monday, the Ministry of Finance launched the Transparencia Soberana web portal to track, in real time, the assets entering the nation from oil sales and the disbursement of these funds.

In January, the acting president had stated that the Chavista government would keep the people informed on this matter in order to ensure transparency.

At that time, Rodríguez announced the creation of two strategic sovereign funds: one for Social Protection and another for National Infrastructure. Regarding the first, the official explained that its purpose is to channel revenue derived from hydrocarbon production directly toward improving wages and financing fundamental programs in health, food, education, and housing.

The web portal reports that the resources collected in the month of March were allocated to the Social Protection Fund and were fully disbursed to strengthen workers’ comprehensive minimum income.

With respect to the second fund, aimed at optimizing public services such as electricity, water, gas, and road infrastructure, the portal has not yet recorded financial movements to date.

Venezuela After January 3: A Nation Standing in the Storm

(LaIguana.tv)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/CB/SL


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This article by Ángel Villegas originally appeared in the March 24, 2026 edition of Rebelión.  The views expressed in this article are the authors’ own and do not necessarily reflect those ofMexico Solidarity Mediaor theMexico Solidarity Project*.*

Author’s note: Tehuacán is a key economic engine in the state of Puebla, in Mexico, standing out mainly in the poultry, textile (especially denim) and beverage sectors.

The history of the poultry industry in Tehuacán began in the mid-twentieth century; it evolved from being a craft activity, in which several families raised birds in the yards of their houses taking advantage of the dry, temperate climate and its location at an ideal altitude with optimal conditions to reduce respiratory diseases in birds compared to coastal areas.

Furthermore, Tehuacán is ideally located as a strategic midpoint between the Port of Veracruz, the entry point for grain, and Mexico City, the main market. Among the pioneering and most influential families who professionalized the sector are the García de la Cadena and Romero families, followed by the Patjane and Célis families, who were instrumental in developing the necessary infrastructure for this industrial branch.

Doña Maria Socorro Romero Sánchez

When talking about poultry farming in Tehuacán, it is necessary to mention Doña Socorro Romero Sánchez, known as La Señorita, a visionary woman who not only expanded the farms, but also integrated the process: incubation, feed manufacturing and distribution, until she turned the sector into a commercial giant that offers the national market eggs, broiler chickens, extending her investments to pig farming and the real estate and hotel sectors.

Today, the companies Socorro Romero Sánchez (SRS), El Calvario, and Productos Agropecuarios de Tehuacán (PATSA) have developed sanitation protocols, produce their own vaccines, established rail routes to bring sorghum and corn from the Bajío region and the United States, and have automated egg collection systems and ambient temperature control on their farms, among other advancements that have significantly boosted their productivity and generated substantial profits from jobs. Impressive, isn’t it?

Legend has it that the SRS company began in the 1950s with just 500 chickens, and it has been reported in the media that upon Doña Socorro’s death at the age of 93 in 2009, she left a fortune estimated at over $600 million, including farms, hotels, real estate, and cash—a considerable sum that has sparked a tremendous family feud over one of Mexico’s largest estates. One faction of the family accuses the Célis Romero family of forging the signature on the will, claiming that Doña Socorro Romero, shortly before her death, lacked the physical and mental capacity to express her wishes.

Today, Miguel Ángel Célis Romero, one of the named heirs, is in jail for alleged aggravated extortion against business partners and family members. Adding to the protracted legal battle are accusations of influence peddling, media manipulation, and document forgery. One faction of the family is fighting to have the will annulled in order to recover “what is rightfully theirs,” while the other is fighting to get out of prison and maintain control of the company. In families formed under bourgeois ideology, all emotional and blood ties are lost; they are worth absolutely nothing compared to cold economic interests, regardless of whether the loot is large or small.

January astro-turfed protest in Tehuacán for the release of Miguel Ángel Celis Romero, an SRS heir.

On January 26, 2026, hundreds of workers from that company took to the main streets of Tehuacán to march toward the House of Justice, the headquarters of the State Attorney General’s Office, to demand “a fair trial and the release” of their imprisoned boss. There are testimonies from the workers alleging that they were pressured and manipulated into defending interests not only unrelated to, but antagonistic to, their own, under the false pretense that “their jobs were in danger.”

On February 21st, a digital news outlet in Tehuacán broadcast live the protest of dozens of workers outside the SRS company demanding attention to their unjust dismissal. Would any worker be interested in being exploited by either side of the feuding family? In my opinion, whether they want to bleed you dry or throw you out on the street, both vampires are the same.

Now, which of the two sides of the family has the right to keep the fortune? I believe NEITHER! For over 100 years, the science of political economy has solved the mystery of how capital reproduces itself, and since then it has been known that it does so by extracting surplus value—that is, through unpaid surplus labor from the working class. Strictly speaking, where did the $600 million in dispute come from? The answer is clear, unequivocal, and compelling: from the exploitation of the labor of thousands of workers who have dedicated their lives to that company in exchange for meager wages, humiliation, union manipulation, and all kinds of pressure to work in the worst conditions, obeying without question under threat of pay cuts or being thrown out on the street. It is the working class that, essentially, made possible the miracle of transforming the first 500 chickens into more than $600 million.

The famous German playwright, Bertolt Brecht, was able to formulate it with great precision in his poem entitled Questions From a Worker Who Reads:

Who built Thebes of the 7 gates ?  
In the books you will read the names of kings.  
Did the kings haul up the lumps of rock ?  
  
And Babylon, many times demolished,  
Who raised it up so many times ?  
  
In what houses of gold glittering Lima did its builders live ?  
Where, the evening that the Great Wall of China was finished, did the masons go?  
  
Great Rome is full of triumphal arches.  
Who erected them ?  
  
Over whom did the Caesars triumph ?  
Had Byzantium, much praised in song, only palaces for its inhabitants ?  
  
Even in fabled Atlantis, the night that the ocean engulfed it,  
The drowning still cried out for their slaves.  
  
The young Alexander conquered India.  
Was he alone ?  
  
Caesar defeated the Gauls.  
Did he not even have a cook with him ?  
  
Philip of Spain wept when his armada went down.  
Was he the only one to weep ?  
  
Frederick the 2nd won the 7 Years War.  
Who else won it ?  
  
Every page a victory.  
Who cooked the feast for the victors ?  
  
Every 10 years a great man.  
Who paid the bill ?  
  
So many reports.  
  
So many questions.

Let me ask you one more question: who built the powerful economic empire that the poultry industry represents in Tehuacán? Was it solely the entrepreneurial intelligence of its founder? Obviously not. No one can create such a fortune on their own; they can only concentrate it, and in fact, that’s what happens in capitalism. In Mexico, we have men who amass great fortunes and are among the richest in the world. And every effort is made to make us believe that they are rich only because of their intelligence and business acumen. But that’s false. There’s a big difference between creating and accumulating wealth. Wealth is created by wage labor exploited by capital and is accumulated by the owner of the means of production. What’s fair is that this wealth shouldn’t be concentrated in a few hands, but rather distributed among all those who produce it.

The workers, not only those of the SRS company, must shake off the exploitation and the corrupt tutelage of the protection unions and not let themselves be manipulated; they must form their own independent organization to be in a position to march and demand, indeed, “the share that corresponds to them” of the social wealth that they themselves have produced.

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This column by Arturo Huerta González originally appeared in the March 24, 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*.*

On March 19, 2026, at the 89th Banking Convention, the Governor of the Bank of Mexico (Banxico) stated that, “despite the complex external environment [referring to the Middle East war], Mexico has a solid financial system and a foundation of stability that allows it to face risks and support economic growth,” reflecting an optimistic stance. However, neither high interest rates, exchange rate stability, high bank profits, nor prevailing budget cuts will prevent the rise in international gasoline, gas, and fertilizer prices from impacting the national economy. Mexico will see increased prices for all its imports, and lacking both the productive capacity and the economic policy management necessary to advance import substitution to confront these external shocks, the greater economic dynamism expected by attendees of the Banking Convention will not materialize. On the contrary, the recessionary and inflationary context will intensify, exacerbating current problems.

The President of the Mexican Banking Association, speaking at the event, stated that “in 2025, private banks as a whole earned profits of 300 billion pesos, representing approximately 1% of GDP.” It should be noted that these profits exceeded GDP growth that year by 0.8%. This implies that these profits were generated by high bank interest rates, which reduced the spending and investment capacity of the government, businesses, and heavily indebted households. Despite this, the president claimed that the banking sector drives economic activity. If this were true, economic growth would be significantly higher than the average annual growth rate of 0.8% recorded from 2018 to 2025.

The president of the bankers’ association said that “insecurity …is one of the main reasons why the economy isn’t growing at adequate levels.” He’s wrong in his diagnosis. If there is insecurity, it’s precisely because of the unemployment and poverty caused by the lack of growth and job creation the country is facing, and the banking sector bears a great deal of responsibility for this, due to the high interest rates and fees it charges on loans.

The banking sector is optimistic about growth in 2026 and that there will be positive results in the USMCA negotiations. They haven’t taken into account that the US wants to buy more from them and sell less to them in order to reduce its trade deficit with Mexico. They’re after oil, the electricity industry, and rare earth minerals, and Mexico, in its attempt to maintain the USMCA, will end up subservient to them, and we will lose out.

In response to the bankers’ leader’s concern that “many people live below the poverty line, ” he said that “for us, the most important mission is to work on financial inclusion.” He believes that this would reduce poverty. However, financial inclusion only benefits the banks and does not translate into greater job creation and higher wages to reduce poverty.

Bankers indicated they are ready to “increase credit as a proportion of GDP to 45 percent by 2030” and that they have “a very clear mission to boost the country’s economic growth.” It should be noted that this expansion of credit will not occur without growth conditions that guarantee loan repayment, and there are no prospects that, with current economic policies, the economy will grow enough to lead businesses to demand loans and banks to offer them. Given the low economic growth and the uncertainty surrounding the USMCA, as well as the consequences of the war in the Middle East, there are no investment decisions, nor is there any demand for or supply of credit.

At the event, the Finance Secretary stated that Mexico has a solid economic foundation despite international uncertainty and that the economy will grow between 1.8 and 2.8%, adding that “one of the pillars of the economy’s strength has been the responsible management of public finances, which allows the main international rating agencies to maintain the country’s investment grade debt rating.” It appears that public finances are being managed responsibly by rating agencies, which are agents of the international financial sector, while public finances are not being used responsibly to promote economic growth and employment.

Mexico lacks the productive conditions and economic policy management necessary to resume growth or to cope with the negative impacts resulting from the rise in international prices of gasoline, gas, fertilizers, and food; therefore, the economy will not grow as the government expects .

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This article by Gerardo Hernández originally appeared in the March 23, 2026 edition of El Economista.

The constitutional reform to reduce the working day left the door open for employers and workers to agree on 56-hour weeks, by adding the new limits on overtime and triple hours, said Fernando Yllanes Almanza, managing partner of Consulting at the firm Yllanes Ramos.

“Today we have the same definition, overtime can only be carried out in extraordinary circumstances and even then there is the capacity to have it structurally because we do not have a legal prohibition or the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare (STPS) does not sanction for it,” he pointed out.

During the Assembly of the Association of Human Resources of the Petroleum Industry (ARHIP), the labour lawyer explained that once the 40-hour work week is implemented, the workday may be longer as long as the new limits established are not exceeded and the corresponding payment is made.

This wouldn’t break with either the spirit of the reform or the position of the Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare (STPS), opined Fernando Yllanes Almanza. “It’s part of how the authorities will carry out inspections; they’re presenting it as an economic victory for workers. It should be part of our planning objectives to define when people will earn more money because it’s considered overtime. If we do it the other way around, and what we try to do is manipulate the system to pay less per overtime hour, then we’ll run into problems.”

The shortage of skilled labour and the operational costs of implementing the reform make this scenario possible: workdays exceeding 40 hours in a structured manner, provided it is agreed with the workers and the corresponding payment is made.

While it’s necessary to analyze each case individually, the other side of the coin is that the workers themselves are happy to have overtime to earn more money. “That has been the government’s rallying cry; the Secretary of Labour himself, when he announced (the reform), said, ‘People are going to be better off, they’re going to earn more. Before, they only earned 9 hours, now they’re going to earn 16.’ The Labour Ministry’s rallying cry is that people are going to earn more money,” he added.

The work schedule reform enacted this month amended the Constitution to establish a limit of 40 hours per week, with a gradual transition starting on January 1, 2027. Subsequently, two hours will be reduced annually on the first day of each year until the new weekly limit is reached, which will occur in 2030.

The amendments to the Magna Carta also include a new limit on overtime, which will increase from 9 to 12 hours allowed per week, and puts a cap on so-called ‘triple hours’, which cannot exceed 4 hours in the weekly count.

40-hour Workweek: Now a Roadmap for Preparation

Although changes to the Federal Labour Law (LFT) are still pending, the constitutional reform already offers a compass for companies to begin preparing for the transition.

“The secondary reform will no longer make changes to that, and that is the legal certainty we can use to start organizing operations and plans, because otherwise, if we wait for the legal reform, there are still challenges we have to overcome,” said Fernando Yllanes Almanza.

With the provisions already contained in the Constitution, the specialist pointed out, companies can begin now with their work plans for the implementation of the new legal limits.

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By Eva Karene Bartlett – Mar 21, 2026

The non-reaction to a reporter’s narrow escape from an Israeli missile strike underscores the selective outrage of Western media

On 19 March 2026, RT war correspondent Steve Sweeney and his cameraman Ali Rida Sbeity were injured by an Israeli targeted missile strike metres from where they stood in southern Lebanon. Sweeney was on camera reporting on recent Israeli airstrikes on southern Lebanese towns and infrastructure when he heard the unmistable sound of an incoming missile. Ducking and running, he escaped the missile impact just metres from where he and Sbeity stood.

The moment Israel targeted British journalist Steve Sweeney in southern Lebanon.pic.twitter.com/sbxhDAK5fI

— Lowkey (@Lowkey0nline) March 19, 2026

Sweeney was on camera reporting on recent Israeli attacks on southern Lebanese towns and infrastructure when he heard the sound of an incoming projectile. Ducking and running, he managed to escape the brunt of the impact.

According to the journalists, an Israeli aircraft fired a missile at their filming position near Al-Qasmiya Bridge, where Sweeney was reporting on, “the targeting of bridges and the forced displacement of one million people, an ethnic cleansing operation on a larger scale than the Nakba,” as he later stated.

The men were treated for shrapnel injuries. Sweeney said, adding “I’m amazed that we survived. We were incredibly lucky to come away with the injuries we did.”

❗️Israeli army ‘DELIBERATELY’ targets RT crew despite clearly marked press uniforms — injured Ali Rida reports from southern Lebanon https://t.co/5Elgars8i2 pic.twitter.com/zOqxULSxcu

— RT (@RT_com) March 19, 2026

Just a day prior, Sweeney had posted on X about the Israeli targeted airstrike on Lebanese journalist and Al-Manar TV presenter Mohammad Sherri and his wife. Both were killed. Sweeney reposted the news with the words, “Targeting journalists is a war crime.”

The next day, he himself was targeted.

This deliberate targeting of journalists wearing press vests is another Israeli war crime, in a long list of Israeli war crimes which include killing at least 261 Palestinian journalists in Gaza in the past two years alone, as well as previously killing Lebanese journalists and bombing Iranian media repeatedly.

The journalist death toll in Gaza strip reached 261 after journalist Amal Mohammed Al-Shamali was killed in an Israeli airstrike. The Government Media Office in Gaza condemned the systematic targeting of Palestinian journalists, holding Israel, the US, the UK, Germany, and France… pic.twitter.com/Dx5jjzQhIS

— Mats Nilsson (@mazzenilsson) March 11, 2026

Targeted assassinations of journalists by the Israeli army are not new. Back in 2008, Fadel Shana, a Reuters cameraman in Gaza, was killed by a flechette shell fired by an Israeli tank as he worked.

In January 2009, I was in media building and had just given an interview to RT on what I was seeing on the ground during the 3 week Israeli war on Gaza. The building came under Israeli attack while we were on the 10th floor, with 7 shells from Israeli tanks east of Gaza. Thankfully, no one was killed.

But in subsequent years, the Israeli army repeatedly bombed key media buildings in Gaza, ultimately destroying them along with most of the Gaza Strip during the ongoing Israeli genocide.

According to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), Israel was responsible for two-thirds of all press killings globally in both 2025 and 2024. CPJ notes that the Israeli army has committed more targeted killings of journalists than any other government’s military since the CPJ began documentation in 1992.

Israel Kills Al Manar TV Journalist During Violent Attacks in Central Beirut

Russian condemnation, British silence
RT Editor in Chief Margarita Simonyan posted on X about the targeted attack, clearly stating the journalists had been targeted by an Israeli strike and stating, “War journalists are not legitimate targets.”

Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova highlighted that in no way could the strike be considered accidental, particularly given, “the rocket did not hit an ‘important strategic military target’, but the location of the report.”

While Western media is always quick to highlight claims of legacy media journalists in danger, no matter how staged it appears to be, when it comes to journalists actually under attack the outrage is selective.

Although the attack on Sweeney and Sbeity was filmed on camera in broad daylight, with Israel virtually the only possible culprit, British media in particular have been disinterested. The BBC’s report ran with the headline, “Missile lands next to presenter during live report from Lebanon.”Barely noticeable in small print many lines later, the BBC mentions the“ongoing Israeli air strikes and ground operations in southern Lebanon.”

The BBC listing an experienced war correspondent as a “presenter” was also not accidental. The overall flippant tone of their report was to insinuate a minor incident had occurred, the missile’s origin unknown.

Who fired the missile that landed next to Steve, BBC?

The BBC demonstrating how to NOT REPORT HONESTLY on the targeted Israeli strike that nearly killed journalist Steve Sweeney and his cameraman Ali Rida Sbeity in southern Lebanon yesterday.

*Note that the BBC several lines… https://t.co/yLFlssrGQN pic.twitter.com/qt8p7vjgKT

— Eva Karene Bartlett (@EvaKBartlett) March 20, 2026

Other media followed suit, including The Independent, which didn’t even mention, not even in small print, Israeli bombings of Lebanon.

As for the British government, the reaction thus far has been nothing. Declassified UK posted on X that the Foreign Office’s response to British journalist Steve Sweeney being targeted by an Israeli airstrike in Lebanon was simply to reply to the government’s position made before Sweeney was targeted, a word salad blaming Iran and Lebanese Resistance, Hezbollah, and whitewashing the US-Israeli strikes which were the direct cause of Iranian retaliation.

It also claimed the government would, “continue our support for British nationals in the region.” Clearly, that support doesn’t extend to Sweeney.

Remarkably, later the same day that he was nearly killed, Sweeney was already back outside reporting, defiantly stating“If Israel thinks today’s strike will silence us and keep us out of the field they are very, very mistaken.”

To the CPJ’s credit, despite its failing elsewhere (like failing to report on the dozens of Russian journalists killed by the Ukrainian regime since 2014), it did issue a strong and clear condemnation of the attack on Sweeney and Sbeity, unequivocally naming Israel as the perpetrator.

It called for “an investigation into the apparent targeting” of the journalists, and emphasized they were injured, “when an Israeli air strike hit just feet away from where they were filming while wearing clearly marked press gear and with their equipment clearly visible in southern Lebanon.”

CPJ stated, “Striking reporters who are clearly marked as a press constitutes a violation of international law.” See, BBC and co? It’s not that hard.

Not only does Israel, empowered by Western silence and cooperation, bomb civilians and civilian infrastructure. It also targets journalists, whose job it is to document these atrocities. Refusal to call these attacks out for what they are is cowardly at best, complicit at worst.

Related Links:

‘Deliberate attack’: RT correspondent recounts surviving Israeli airstrike

A massacre within a massacre: Israel is exterminating Palestinians in northern Gaza and killing Palestinian journalists reporting on it

Reporters without shame: Top ‘media rights’ organization ignores rampant Israeli killings of Gaza journalists

Israel is deliberately obliterating media buildings in Gaza to cover up the war crimes that will follow

Ukraine’s murder of 30 Russian journalists met with Western indifference…or grotesque gloating

Ukraine bombed a Donetsk hotel full of journalists – here’s what it felt like to be inside at the time

This is tragic news. I knew this young man, he was an excellent journalist and a very kind, humble, intelligent person, and also helpful to me, sharing his knowledge & helping with translation. 😢 In October 2022, we shared a trip to Gorlovka and villages nearby, & also to a… pic.twitter.com/5nBBYRmQGo

— Eva Karene Bartlett (@EvaKBartlett) June 16, 2024

During Ukraine's bombings of central Donetsk a couple hours ago. At least five in first few minutes, ~10:20 am. Some time later, another maybe 4 explosions. Dead woman's body blurred to avoid Twitter censorship. pic.twitter.com/IfeItc6yLj

— Eva Karene Bartlett (@EvaKBartlett) August 4, 2022

(Substack)


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By Brian Berletic – Mar 20, 2026

The arrest of foreign mercenaries on the India–Myanmar border has once again drawn attention to the hidden mechanisms of external interference and the role of proxy structures in modern conflicts.

India’s national media reportedthe arrest by Indian security services of US mercenary Matthew VanDyke and six Ukrainians for illegally crossing the border into neighboring Myanmar to provide military training to armed groups fighting Myanmar’s central government.

Indian security services have also linked the suspects to *“importing huge consignments of drones from Europe to Myanmar via India”*for *“ethnic armed groups,”*matching the established pattern of US proxy war waged around the globe throughout the 21st century.

The military support provided by groups like VanDyke’s “Sons of Liberty”and other US-linked organizations like former US Special Forces operator David Eubank’s *“Free Burma Rangers,”*together with overt US government funding and support for political opposition groups the US seeks to install into power, have fueled decades of conflict inside Southeast Asia’s nation of Myanmar.

US-Backed Militants in Myanmar
VanDyke has gravitated toward US wars and proxy wars of aggression around the globe, including the US war on Libya in 2011, against Syria also in 2011, and in Ukraine from 2022 onward, according to Western sources like Newsweek.

The US’s dirty war in Myanmar is just one of many fronts on which the US is waging a proxy war on China itself

VanDyke’s recent operation in Myanmar involved not only training militants but also equipping them with *“huge consignments”*of drones, indicating a significant source of funding. Because the funding is not disclosed by VanDyke’s “non-profit security contracting firm,”  it is very likely— as with all other aspects of Myanmar’s opposition — that it is funded by the US government and simply laundered through fronts like VanDyke’s.

Other similarly US-backed operations training and equipping militants in Myanmar include David Eubank’s “Free Burma Rangers”(FBR). US diplomatic cables made available by WikiLeaks revealed Eubank regularly reports to US government representatives at the US consulate in neighboring Thailand (herehereherehere, and here).

While FBR poses as some sort of nongovernmental organization (NGO) that *“assists ethnic resistance groups”*with “humanitarian operations,”videosproduced by Free Burma Rangers themselves and those by the militant groups they help train and equip depict the organization providing military training (including weapons training), as well as FBR members themselves carrying weapons on patrol with local militants.

The political opposition these armed groups seek to install into power, the so-called “National Unity Government”(NUG), is itself a documented whole-cloth creation of the US government.

In its earlier days it was referred to as the “National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma”(NCGUB) and was literally based in the US, just outside of Washington, D.C., in Rockville, Maryland. A 2013 “The World” articlewould admit the US government’s National Endowment for Democracy (NED) was the “main supporter of the NCGUB.”

The NED’s websiteindicated an extensive list of politically invasive programs it was funding, interfering in virtually every aspect of Myanmar’s internal political affairs — everything from supposed *“human rights”*to media, the development of *“youth leaders,”*resource management, “political participation,” legal aid funds, election monitoring, labor, and information space.

The 2020 NED disclosure for Myanmar — stillreferred to by the NED by its British colonial nomenclature of “Burma”— focused extensively on targeting the specific ethnic groups among which the armed militants VanDyke, his Ukrainian counterparts, and other organizations like FBR have provided military support to.

The most recent iteration of the “NCGUB” is the NUG and is made up of mostlyUS government NED funding recipients.

For example, the NUG’s so-called *“Minister of Foreign Affairs,”*Zin Mar Aung, whose official NUG biography openly admits, “In 2012, she was awarded the International Women of Courageaward*by the United States Secretary of State,”*and that she was a “fellow in the Reagan-Fascell Democracy Fellow of the National Endowment for Democracy program.”

Her profile on the NED’s official websitealso noted sheт*“co-founded the Yangon School of Political Science, an NED-funded institution.”*

In other words, the US government has a long, documented history of both building up and attempting to maneuver into power the Myanmar political opposition throughout its various iterations up to and including the current “NUG,” which in turn openly presides over many of the armed groups fighting the central government.

While the US government doesn’t openly supply arms and other military support to the NUG’s militant wings, Americans and now Ukrainians fighting amid America’s multiple wars and proxy wars elsewhere, clearly serve as a vector through which the US government can do so covertly.

The violence these armed militants are carrying out also happens to specifically advance US geopolitical objectives in the region — not just in regard to undermining and attempting to topple Myanmar’s government, but in the encirclement, containment, and attempted toppling of China itself.

Washington’s Proxy War in Myanmar Continues Along China’s Borders

America’s Dirty War against Myanmar is a War Against China
Myanmar, which shares a border with both India and China, is a key partner of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). BRI infrastructure in Myanmar includes the Kyaukphyu deep-sea port in Myanmar’s Rakhine State along the Bay of Bengal and the Sino-Myanmar Oil and Gas Pipelines.

Together, these projects allow hydrocarbons imported from abroad to be off-loaded along Myanmar’s coasts and piped across the country toward China’s Yunnan province along the Myanmar-Chinese border, thus bypassing the Strait of Malacca.

Not only does the port and pipelines save up to 5-6 days versus transiting the Strait of Malacca toward China’s own shores, but it also hedges Chinese energy imports against the threat of a US-imposed maritime blockade either at the Strait of Malacca itself or anywhere beyond it in the Asia-Pacific, where tens of thousands of US forces are stationed specifically to encircle, contain, and, if possible, cut off China.

Beijing’s concerns are far from *“paranoia.”*They are a direct reaction to decades-spanning US policies describing the implementation of a global maritime oil blockade on China specifically at the Strait of Malacca. These policies have driven the deployment of the US military forces into the region to potentially impose it, as well as arms and force restructuring programsto better enable their ability to do so.

One such policy paperpublished by the US Naval War College Review in 2018 is literally titled *“A Maritime Oil Blockade Against China.”*It introduced the concept of a *“distant blockade”*designed to reduce the threat of Chinese anti-access area-denial (A2AD) systems by being imposed just beyond the range of most of China’s military capabilities, including “the Strait of Malacca and a handful of other passages that the US Navy could seal off effectively.”

The purpose of the *“distant blockade”*would be to impose crippling pressure on China to impede, arrest, or even reverse its economic development, in addition to other forms of military, technological, and economic pressure the US has already spent years applying.

The 2018 paper mentioned the Sino-Myanmar Pipeline by name, explaining, *“a distant blockade also would need to interdict the Myanmar – China oil pipeline,”*and that “the area could be declared an exclusion zone for the duration of a conflict, and if the Myanmar authorities failed to comply, the facility could be disabled via air strikes, aerial mining, or other kinetic action.”

While the 2018 paper proposed a maritime oil blockade as a measure applied during an active conflict, the US has since used the armed militants it has backed in war against Myanmar’s central government for decades to begin carrying out attacks-by-proxy on the pipelines instead.

This has resulted in years of attacks killing security personnel guarding the pipelines, damagingequipment used to operate them, and, at various periods of the ongoing conflict, US-backed militants taking over entire sectionsof the pipelines themselves, including just last year.

Taken together with the recent US invasion and seizure of Venezuela’s government, drone strikes the New York Times admitsare directed by the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) deep inside Russia at its energy production, as well as the ongoing US war on Iran — all three nations counting China as their largest energy export partner — the US dirty war in Myanmar is just one of many fronts the US is waging a proxy war on China itself.

Not only is a *“maritime oil blockade”*being imposed on China, it is being imposed on China worldwide — from Latin America to the Middle East and Eurasia — much further beyond China’s military reach than a closure at the Malacca Strait would have been.

Myanmar’s military, supplied and supported by both Russia and China, has failed to restore peace and stability across the country specifically because of the hundreds of millions of dollars (or more) the US has spent over decades propping up proxy political forces and covertly arming their militant wings.

The recent arrest of American and Ukrainian citizens providing these militants with additional training and modern combat drone technology is not just a war against Myanmar’s central government and the peace and stability of the nation and people of Myanmar, but also a war against China and the peace and stability of the entire Asia-Pacific region — even the world.

(New Eastern Outlook)


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Caracas (OrinocoTribune.com)— In the third week of March 2026, Venezuela received three additional groups of citizens under the “Return to the Homeland” (Vuelta a la Patria) program. These latest arrivals at the Simón Bolívar International Airport in Maiquetía, La Guaira, demonstrate a sustained effort by the Venezuelan state to provide a sovereign and dignified response to the ongoing mass deportation campaign by the US government.

The arrivals continue to follow the framework established by the 2025 agreement between Caracas and the US regime, which has seen a constant flow of repatriated nationals who are fleeing the systemic failures and racist persecution inherent in the US immigration system.

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A post shared by Ministerio Relaciones Interiores, Justicia y Paz (@minjusticia_ve)

Detailed flight data and statistics
In the week of March 16 alone, a total of 411 Venezuelans were repatriated on three separate flights, all conducted by GlobalX Airlines. Since the beginning of 2026, the program has processed 27 repatriation flights, bringing the year’s total number of deportees to 4,507.

When combined with the cumulative figures from the previous year, which saw 23,067 citizens return under the 2025 agreement, the program continues to serve as a critical humanitarian bridge. The specific data for this week’s flights are as follows:

• Flight 123: Arrived on Monday, March 16, from Miami, Florida, with 123 repatriated citizens. The group included five minors, 21 women, and 97 men.
• Flight 124: Arrived Wednesday, March 18, from Miami, Florida, carrying 142 individuals. The group consisted of 11 minors, 15 women, and 116 men.
• Flight 125: Arrived Friday, March 20, from the US, with 146 deportees. The manifest included six minors, 22 women, and 118 men.

A legacy of sovereign protection since 2018
While current data focuses on the 2025–2026 period, the Return to the Homeland program has been a cornerstone of Venezuelan social policy since its inception in 2018. Over the last eight years, hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans have been repatriated through this state-led initiative. Official figures indicate that over one million citizens have utilized the program to escape xenophobia, labor exploitation, and carceral detention that characterize the migrant experience in the US and countries aligned with Washington’s interests.

10th CELAC Summit in Bogotá Reaffirms Zone of Peace Amid US Dominated Block Discrepancies Over Cuba (+Venezuela, China, and Africa)

The Venezuelan migration patterns across the region are a direct consequence of the illegal US blockade and the multifaceted hybrid war aimed at destabilizing the Bolivarian Revolution. While the US regime initially incentivized migration to manufacture a “failed state” narrative, it has now pivoted toward criminalizing the very diaspora it helped create.

In response, the Venezuelan government ensures that every returning citizen is met with a comprehensive social care protocol. This protocol includes immediate medical attention, psychological counseling, and socioeconomic support to facilitate migrants’ reintegration into the country’s productive life. This sovereign shield remains an essential defense against the fallout of imperialist aggression, reaffirming the right of all Venezuelans to live and thrive in their own land.

Special for Orinoco Tribune by staff

OT/JRE/SF


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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.

New Water Law: An End to Private Profit and Hydraulic JusticeThe law eliminates the transfer of concessions and puts a halt to the black market, punishing abuses such as hoarding and the sale of water tankers with fines of up to 3.5 million pesos (US$200,000) and imprisonment. In addition, hydraulic justice is advancing: municipalities with direct concessions, water being prioritized for families, and support being provided to small-scale producers.

The plundering was exposed: concessionaires have accumulated debts of nearly 12 billion pesos (US$670 million), due to overexploitation, lack of meters, and non-payment, so they were called upon to regularize their status or lose their concessions.

Recall Election: Participatory Democracy Without PretensesPresident Claudia Sheinbaum reaffirmed that the recall referendum should take place in 2027 as a genuine mechanism for citizen participation. She insisted that the president must be able to discuss the process without this being confused with partisan political promotion, since informing the public is not campaigning. Sheinbaum argued that preventing this would be absurd and would limit the people’s right to make informed decisions.

Solidarity with Cuba: Aid, Oil, and Historic Rejection of the BlockadeMexico sent another ship with humanitarian aid to Cuba and maintains its firm stance against the economic blockade, which has been in place for over 64 years. In addition, the possibility of sending oil to Cuba is being considered to help address the energy crisis resulting from these restrictions. The commitment to national self-determination was reiterated, along with the call for the UN to join international relief efforts.

Sovereignty and energy self-sufficiency: results with environmental responsibilityMexico is making progress in reducing its dependence on natural gas and in building a model that combines environmental sustainability and national sovereignty, leaving the neoliberal framework behind. Today, the country produces and refines 80% of its oil, reducing imports to 20%, and plans to increase the production of natural gas, 75% of which is currently imported.

Security and justice: results and institutional strengtheningA plan will be presented to strengthen the Federal Attorney General’s Office (FGR) and its coordination with state prosecutors’ offices, with an emphasis on gathering intelligence and the effectiveness of the adversarial system. The reduction in violence was highlighted, with up to 50% fewer homicides in Mexico City during the current administration and a national decrease of nearly 45%, consolidating a strategy with results.


The post People’s Mañanera March 23 appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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On Saturday, Venezuelan Acting President Delcy Rodríguez announced the activation of a national electricity-saving plan and other preventive measures in response to the phenomenon of perpendicular solar rays over the country amid the dry season.

During a high-level meeting with the cabinet of services and public works, as well as CORPOELEC officials, Rodríguez warned that a 45-day period began that day, during which solar radiation will directly impact the Venezuelan territory. There will be a significant increase in temperatures and drought throughout the country.

The acting president issued an urgent call for national awareness to advance an energy-saving plan to mitigate the temperature increase. She explained that the Ministry of Electric Energy will publish a protocol inviting citizens to adjust the use of air conditioners to a temperature no lower than 21 degrees celcius and to disconnect non-essential high-consumption electrical equipment.

Rodríguez instructed Communications Minister Miguel Ángel Pérez Pirela to launch an information campaign to guide families and public agencies on the reasonable use of electricity during this period.

Technical surveillance and fire prevention
As part of the strategy, the Chavista leader ordered the use of thermal drones to monitor areas with the highest heat concentrations and prevent impacts on the transmission system.

Likewise, she requested the immediate collaboration of governors and mayors to intensify pica y poda (trimming) plans in anticipation of a possible increase in forest fires that typically impact power lines during this season.

Rodríguez emphasized that the national government is working as a team to protect infrastructure and ensure the continuity of the energy supply despite the demands imposed by current climate conditions.

Acting President of Venezuela at Military Ceremony: ‘Our Main Victory is Unity’

Impact of US sanctions on the electrical service
The acting president took the opportunity to denounce the US blockade and illegal sanctions for preventing the full recovery of this essential service for the population. She underscored that although the system has been recovering capacity through its own efforts, US sanctions limit the response to a demand that grows alongside the country’s economy.

She concluded by reiterating the need to end US financial aggression against Venezuela in order to consolidate the strategic energy stabilization projects that the people and the economy demand.

(Alba Ciudad)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/JRE/SF


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The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) has successfully executed the 75th wave of its ongoing retaliatory Operation True Promise 4, codenamed “O Fatima Al-Zahra (SA),” in honor of martyred Iranian commanders and as a firm response to continued Zionist and American aggression.

According to an official statement from the IRGC released on Sunday night, the latest phase was carried out in the name and memory of martyrs, including Brigadier General Ali Mohammad Naeini, the martyred spokesperson for the IRGC, and Hojatoleslam Esmaeel Khatib, the martyred Minister of Intelligence.

The operation precisely targeted new military deployments and hiding places of Israeli troops across various parts of the occupied Palestinian territories, based on accurate reconnaissance by the IRGC’s operational intelligence units.

The IRGC also struck Prince Sultan Air Base in Al-Kharj, Saudi Arabia, which is a key hub for US aggressors’ deployments and air operations directed against the Islamic Republic of Iran.  Advanced ballistic missiles were used in this operation.

The IRGC also issued a stern warning to Zionist and American terrorist forces, emphasizing that they remain fully under the constant surveillance of the Corps’s superior intelligence apparatus.

The IRGC stressed that attempts to conceal soldiers in civilian areas, such as the town of Arad, will offer no protection.

“Hiding them in towns will not save their lives due to the IRGC’s intelligence superiority,” the Corps declared, underscoring the precision and inevitability of future responses to any aggression.

IRGC Destroys 55 Enemy Targets in 70th Wave of Operation True Promise 4

Operation True Promise 4 continues as a sustained and decisive campaign by the Islamic Republic to defend its sovereignty, support the axis of resistance, and impose consequences on the occupying Israeli regime and its American backers for their repeated violations and crimes against the region and the Iranian nation.

The IRGC reiterated its commitment to maintaining overwhelming operational dominance, vowing that no hiding place or defensive measure will shield the aggressors from accountability.

The criminal US-Israeli aggression on Iran began on February 28 with airstrikes that assassinated senior Iranian officials and commanders.

The Iranian Armed Forces have responded by launching almost daily missile and drone operations targeting locations in the Israeli-occupied lands as well as US military bases and assets across the region.

They have conducted their retaliatory strikes based on the principle of “eye for an eye,” inflicting heavy losses on the enemies.

(PressTV)


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This article by Emir Olivares and Alonso Urrutia originally appeared in the March 23, 2026 edition of La Jornada, Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper.

Editor’s note: President Sheinbaum has not said she will resume fuel shipments to Cuba, while she has said she is seeking to resume these shipments, she has not given a date or timeline as to when those shipments would resume. Mexico has sent multiple ships of humanitarian aid to Cuba, which the US government does not consider to be a violation of its illegal fuel blockade. The last fuel shipment from Mexico to Cuba was in early January and as of today, March 23, there are no scheduled fuel shipments.

As in previous statements, today President Sheinbaum reiterated her position which is that Mexico seeks to resume fuel shipments in a way that will not negatively affect Mexico, such as on February 26th after the US Supreme Court struck down President Trump’s ability to unilaterally impose tariffs, including the executive order which would tariff any government that shipped fuel to Cuba.

The President is repeatedly questioned during her morning press conferences about resuming fuel shipments to Cuba as the domestic solidarity movement with Cuba’s demand is that Mexico resume oil shipments to Cuba. If fuel shipments to Cuba from Mexico resume, Mexico Solidarity Media will have a story up as soon as possible!

Mexico City. Mexico will always uphold the Cuban people’s right to self-determination, President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo asserted, addressing the potential risk of armed conflict between Cuba and the United States.

He stressed that any conflict should be resolved through diplomatic, multilateral means and dialogue, and not through the intervention of one country in another, an invasion or a violent action.

When questioned at Monday’s morning press conference about the risk of a US intervention on the island, the head of the Executive Branch emphasized:

“We will continue sending humanitarian aid and will always uphold the Cuban people’s right to self-determination. And in any conflict, we will always pursue multilateral avenues. No one country over another, no invasion, no violent solution. We uphold the Cuban people’s right to self-determination and to define their own government.”

The federal leader considered that, given the situation facing the Cuban people—due to the tightening of Washington’s measures against the Caribbean country, especially the blockade preventing it from obtaining fuel—the United Nations should send humanitarian aid.

She recalled that since the beginning of the 1960s, Mexico has spoken out against the economic, financial and commercial blockade imposed by the United States against Cuba.

“And we are against preventing fuel from arriving, with reprisals against other countries to prevent it from arriving, both humanitarian aid and trade agreements that any country can have with another.”

“That will always be our position regarding Cuba, and we have made that clear to the United States; and Cuba knows it. We are seeking to ensure that fuel can reach Mexico, without affecting Mexico, through humanitarian aid and even through trade agreements,” the President stated.

The President indicated that it is public knowledge that talks are taking place between Washington and Havana, and therefore insisted that a peaceful solution must be found to the differences.

“We are talking with the Cuban and US governments, seeking mechanisms to let them know that Mexico is always present to prevent any conflict.”

President Sheinbaum reported that another Mexican ship carrying humanitarian aid for the island’s population is departing today. “And we’re going to send all the necessary humanitarian aid. International brigades have also left from Mexico; we’ve been assisting them by ensuring their boats aren’t alone, as some are small, so they don’t encounter problems along the way.”

President Sheinbaum also called on Mexican businesspeople to analyze the mechanisms for making investments in Cuba, since the island’s government has just announced that it is opening its economy in various ways.

The post President Sheinbaum on Cuba: “No to invasion, no to a violent solution” appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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This article by Rocío González Alvarado originally appeared in the March 23, 2026 edition of La Jornada, Mexico’s premier left wing daily newspaper.

With more than 60 areas designated for community use, the Head of Government, Clara Brugada Molina, inaugurated the Mixiuhca Utopia, the first of 100 that she plans to build during her administration, based on an urban intervention model that seeks to bring recreational, cultural and welfare services closer to the population in less than 15 minutes.

After touring the facilities, Brugada stated that this space is the “birth of a new way of building cities,” based on social urbanism, community cohesion, and equal access to rights.

She noted that 100 Utopias will be developed in different parts of the capital, with the aim of guaranteeing the right to the city and reducing territorial inequalities. “Public space is not neutral; historical inequalities and neglect have accumulated there. The Utopias seek to reverse these conditions,” she stated.

The head of the local government highlighted that the model prioritizes care policies by offering infrastructure that reduces domestic burdens, particularly for women.

Built in the Magdalena Mixiuhca Sports City, Utopia unfolds over an area of ​​80,000 square meters and includes a semi-Olympic swimming pool, soccer, tennis and paddle courts, go-kart tracks, pump track and batting cages, among other training areas.

In addition, they highlight a Child Care and Development Center (CACDI), a community dining hall and laundry, a Day Center for Senior Citizens, and spaces for emotional health care.

In terms of healthcare, the complex includes general medical, dental, and gynecological clinics, a clinical laboratory, a mammography unit, and spaces for physical and sensory rehabilitation. It also features cultural spaces such as an auditorium with a capacity of over 400 people, open-air forums, art studios, and a community radio station.

In turn, the environmental component includes more than 48,000 square meters of green areas, pollinator gardens, and water and solar energy harvesting systems.

According to the Ministry of Public Works and Services, this complex will directly benefit 83,000 residents of at least 23 nearby neighborhoods, including Agrícola Oriental and Jardín Balbuena, and was designed to be accessible on foot in less than 15 minutes.

A second stage called City of Childhoods is planned, focused on interactive learning and educational recreation for girls, boys and adolescents.

The post CDMX’s Brugada Initiates First of 100 Utopias appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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This article by Bertha Becerra originally appeared in the March 22, 2026 edition of El Sol de México.

“Dignity is not negotiable. The collective bargaining agreement ( CBA ) must be respected.” This was stated by Arturo Zayún González, general secretary of the National Union of Employees and Workers of Nacional Monte de Piedad (SNTNMP), 172 days into the strike at Nacional Monte de Piedad.

“We’re going to reach six months. The Board’s objective is to end and terminate the CCT, regardless of the time it takes.”

In an interview with El Sol de México, González accused the board of trustees of not caring about time. “They have no capital invested in the institution. That’s why they don’t care about the time or the millions in losses at Nacional Monte de Piedad. We’ve been on strike for almost six months and they don’t care,” he emphasized.

He recalled that “in previous years they had an average annual surplus of 12 billion pesos.”

The union leader, who represents more than 1,500 workers, accused the conflict of being driven by self-interest. “Their main objective is to preserve the exorbitant salaries they have never been willing to make transparent. And their primary desire is to transform the institution into a business masquerading as altruistim,” he emphasized.

The strike, which began on October 1, 2025, is a response to a series of violations of the collective bargaining agreement and administrative decisions that have affected the labor structure.

“To those who today have the task of dismantling our collective bargaining agreement and weakening the union representation that belongs to all of us, I remind you that it seems the administration of the Board of Trustees of Nacional Monte de Piedad suffers from acute mythomania and selective amnesia, as they expect us to forget the systematic attacks that have marked recent years. We do not forget,” said the union leader.

He recalled that they have not forgotten the dismantling of the workforce. “We haven’t forgotten the arbitrary dismissal of the appraisers, the elimination of eight job categories that left nearly a thousand workers unemployed, nor the unjustified firing of twenty union representatives.”

He spoke of the arbitrary closure of 18 NMP branches “and the mass dismissal of colleagues who worked in them.”

Daily Humiliations

He pointed out that regarding human mistreatment, “we do not forget the daily humiliations, such as forcing workers to eat their meals in secret.”

They also denounced the obstruction of career advancement within the private assistance institution (IAP). “We report that they have gone more than 10 years without offering training courses and more than five years without posting job openings.”

The above prevents workers from accessing higher salaries than they are entitled to based on seniority and directly affects their averages for retirement, savings fund, Christmas bonus and vacations.

Regarding the economic punishment, the general secretary recalled that the most recent aggression “is the stagnation of three years without a salary increase for the working base, which is added to the suspension of salaries for more than a year to the members of the National Executive Committee (CEN).

He also pointed out that regarding real transparency in the Institution, “while workers are being punished, the administration should make transparent the scandalous increases of 2024.”

He reported that “officials who already received high salaries benefited from increases of up to 35 percent. They went from 800,000 pesos to 6 million pesos annually.”

He also alluded to the sale of assets and asked leader Zayún González: “To whom are the gold, diamonds, and precious stones being sold?”

In the case of high-end watches, he said that “it is unacceptable that the discounts stipulated in the 2024 Agreement are not applied to the public; but when these items are concentrated or acquired by officials, discounts appear that call into question the legality of the operation.”

He said ironically: “If the administration insists on suffering from Alzheimer’s in its duties and mythomania in its speeches, we are concerned that this ‘disease’ will spread to the more than 1,500 workers, which would drastically increase the costs of the medical service.”

Bertha Becerra has six decades experience as a reporter and counting, and covers news from the world of work and agriculture.

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This column by Hiroshi Takahashi originally appeared in the March 23, 2026 edition of El Sol de México.

The document, which until recently was confidential, states that on October 1, 1963, the CIA station in Mexico City intercepted a call from Lee Harvey Oswald to the Soviet Embassy. The document describes him as follows: he called “using his real name,” spoke in “broken Russian,” and asked if there was “anything new” about a message sent to Washington . The name, the embassy, ​​the date, and the voice were all present. Mexico was also involved. What makes this discovery newsworthy is not just Oswald. This information, the report says, came from a wiretapping center that the CIA operated jointly with the Office of the President of Mexico.

The document states: “The CIA did produce a very significant piece of information about Lee Oswald before he assassinated President Kennedy. On October 1, 1963, our station in Mexico City intercepted a phone call Lee Oswald made from somewhere in Mexico City to the Soviet Embassy, ​​using his own name. Speaking broken Russian and using his real name, Oswald spoke with the embassy guard, Obyedkov, who frequently answered the phone. Oswald said he had visited the embassy the previous Saturday, September 28, 1963, and had spoken with a consul whose name he had forgotten, and that the consul had promised to send a telegram to Washington for him. He wanted to know if there was ‘anything new.’ The guard said that if the consul was dark-skinned, it was Valeriy Vladimirovich Kostikov. The guard consulted with someone else and said the message had been sent, but no reply had yet been received. Then he hung up.”

Record released by the CIA for Project LIENVOY, revealing a wiretap of former President Lázaro Cárdenas. Some of the CIA’s most extensive surveillance schemes had actually been proposed and operated by the Mexican state itself.

The report continues: “This information was obtained from a wiretapping center we operated jointly with the Office of the President of Mexico. It was a highly secretive operation and was unknown to Mexican security and law enforcement officials, who had their own center. Our joint center produces large quantities of wiretaps, which are transcribed and reviewed by our small staff in Mexico City. By October 9, Oswald ’s October 1 phone call had been transcribed, and a summary had been cabled to Washington. The name Lee Oswald meant nothing special to our station in Mexico.”

The President of Mexico was Adolfo López Mateos (1958-1964).

A CIA document reveals that the partnership with the Mexican government in spying on the Cuban and Russian embassies continued until at least 1994.

“In its original report of October 9, Mexico had stated that it possessed a photograph of an apparent American entering the Soviet Embassy on October 1, 1963, the day Oswald called there. A highly sensitive operation in Mexico City provides us with photographs secretly taken of many, though not all, visitors to the Soviet Embassy, ​​using telephoto lenses. Accordingly, on October 24, 1963, we cabled the Department of the Navy requesting a photograph of Lee Oswald from his Marine Corps days for image comparison. We had not received that photograph as of November 22, 1963, but in any case, it turned out that the man photographed outside the Soviet Embassy was not Oswald . By chance, none of our various photographic observation points in Mexico City had obtained an identifiable image of Lee Oswald.”

The document is dated December 13, 1963. John M. Whitten (a senior CIA official specializing in clandestine operations. In 1963 he was head of the division in charge of Latin America within the Agency), sent it as an “original, unexpurgated” version of the report on Oswald ’s stay in Mexico, with summaries of the wiretaps.

More than six decades later, the document conjures a scene that does not fit within the rhetoric of sovereignty.

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This article by Arturo Rivero originally appeared at Lafuentelaboral on March 23, 2026 edition.

The Independent Union of Workers of Goodyear Mexico (SITGM) reported that the labor base approved a 5.8% increase directly to the tab with 420 votes in favor, 315 against and 17 nulls, as a result of the consultation conducted on March 20 and 21, 2026, with which the planned strike outbreak within the salary review process at the San Luis Potosí plant has no effect.

The voting was conducted by personal, free, direct and secret voting, according to the mechanisms established in the current labour legislation, which allowed the union majority to opt for acceptance of the economic proposal submitted by the company.

The union specified that, despite the signing of the wage agreement, the legal procedure before the Federal Labour Court for Collective Affairs remains in force, because the original petition file includes indications of alleged violations of the Contract Law and individual rights of workers.

Regarding the application of the increase, it was noted that the retroactive payment for the period from February 12 to date will be covered in the upcoming dates, while the update of the pay tab will be reflected in the payroll of weeks 13 or 14 of this year.

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This article by Karla Mora originally appeared in the March 22, 2026 edition of El Sol de México.

Residents and groups opposed to the World Cup in Mexico City announced that on March 28, during the reopening of the Estadio Azteca (Azteca Stadium) with the friendly match between Mexico and Portugal, they will hold demonstrations in the area.

Members of the Neighbourhood Assembly Against Megaconstructions are demanding an end to police and media harassment, stating that there is repression against their movement.

In a statement issued next to the Estadio Azteca, where they have been carrying out various activities for several months to express their disagreement with the World Cup, they pointed out that, despite the recently inaugurated works around the stadium, privatization and water scarcity continue in the area.

They asserted that the newly inaugurated Water Garden is “a bargaining chip” to prevent protests over water access in the area. Furthermore, they accused the Mexico City Water Management Secretariat of having promised, since its construction, to implement a joint project managed by the residents themselves.

They also point out that the agency did not provide technical details about the project, nor did it comment on the storage capacity. Similarly, there was no explanation as to why the rainwater harvesting infrastructure is located within the parking lot of Azteca Stadium, a private property.

“Within the meetings called by SEGIAGUA with the surrounding residents, they presented a series of properties that would serve to recharge the aquifer and that are even larger than the Rain Garden presented by the head of government,” the Neighbourhood Assembly indicated.

“One of these sites is the Teotongo property, where Clara Brugada once announced a theme park called ‘Coyoasauria’ to host the World Cup. All of the neighboyrhood proposals have been overshadowed bythe city authorities.”

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