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    HomeCrimeMexico president says 'no risk' for 2026 World Cup fans

    Mexico president says ‘no risk’ for 2026 World Cup fans

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    MEXICO CITY, Feb 24 (Reuters) - Mexico President ‌Claudia Sheinbaum said on Tuesday there was "no risk" to fans coming to the ​country for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, after violence erupted following the capture and death of Mexico's most-wanted cartel leader, notably in Jalisco ⁠state.

    Sheinbaum said "all the guarantees" for safety were in place for the top international soccer tournament, which is expected to draw hordes of fans from around the world to matches in Mexico City, Monterrey and Jalisco's capital Guadalajara.

    She said ​during her daily morning press conference the situation was normalizing, with security forces working to safeguard the public, after loyalists of cartel ‌leader Nemesio Oseguera set up roadblocks and torched buses and stores across the country in retaliation for his slaying in a military raid on Sunday.

    FIFA President Gianni Infantino told reporters on Tuesday that he was feeling "very calm" about Mexico hosting this ⁠summer's tournament. "Everything is going to be spectacular," he said.

    A spokesperson for FIFA said the organization ⁠was closely monitoring the situation and was in close contact with the authorities.

    "We will continue to follow the actions and directions from the different government agencies, aimed at maintaining public safety and restoring normalcy, and we reiterate our close collaboration with federal, state, and local authorities," the spokesperson said.

    Jalisco Governor Pablo Lemus on Tuesday reaffirmed the state's participation ‌in the tournament and confirmed a series of upcoming events in the region.

    “There is absolutely no intention on ⁠FIFA's part to remove any venues from Mexico. The three venues remain completely ‌firm,” Lemus said.

    Mexico is set to host 13 of 104 World Cup ​matches. Four of these are set to be held in Guadalajara. It will also host some preliminary warm-up matches before the tournament opens on June 11.

    Local Mexican leagues postponed some matches that had been scheduled for Sunday, the ‌day cartel members coordinated a series of violent attacks across the country ​in the aftermath of an operation to capture ⁠Oseguera, known as "El Mencho".

    Sheinbaum has largely followed the political map of her predecessor Andres Manuel ‌Lopez Obrador, who prioritized alleviating poverty and other root causes of ⁠violence, adopting a slogan of "hugs not bullets." 

    Asked whether the killing of Oseguera marked a break from that policy, Sheinbaum said this would never be the case.

    "The detention of a suspected criminal with an arrest warrant can generate this ​type of circumstance, but we are ‌looking for peace, not war," she said.

    The arrests of other top cartel figures in Sinaloa state have in recent years ⁠also triggered cartel retaliation, including shootouts and vehicles set ​on fire.

    (Reporting by Sarah Morland and Raul Cortes in Mexico City and Rohith Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by ​Daina Beth Solomon, Mark Porter and Sonali Paul)

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