The Neighbourhood Assembly Against Megaprojects has called protests for 28 March at Estadio Azteca, timed to coincide with the Mexico–Portugal friendly that Marks the stadium's reopening after months of renovation 1. The group cites three grievances: water scarcity around the stadium, police harassment of demonstrators, and privatisation linked to the renovation works. Organisers describe a newly built "Water Garden" near the venue as a tool to suppress protests over water access 2.
The reopening resolves one source of uncertainty — owner Emilio Azcárraga had said he was "not sure" renovation deadlines would be met , and round-the-clock construction continued through March. Azteca passed its final audio and video tests on 23 March, with 2,200 square metres of LED screens and 1,200 connectivity antennas confirmed operational 3. The stadium is the only venue to host three World Cup editions — 1970, 1986 and 2026 — and FIFA takes full possession in early May.
Mexico City's aquifer supplies roughly 70 per cent of the capital's water and has been over-extracted for decades, producing subsidence that reduces supply and damages infrastructure. Neighbourhoods around Azteca in the southern borough of Coyoacán have experienced intermittent water access for years. For residents, the stadium renovation consumed public resources and political attention while their access remained unreliable.
President Sheinbaum's Plan Kukulkan deployed up to 100,000 security forces across Mexico City, Guadalajara and Monterrey, with anti-drone systems and explosives-detection dogs. The apparatus was designed around the cartel threat exposed by the violence that followed El Mencho's killing on 22 February . Whether authorities apply the same posture to water-rights demonstrators on 28 March will establish how civilian protest is managed at Mexican tournament venues through July.
