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2026 FIFA World Cup
29MAR

Teachers and the missing take the Zocalo

3 min read
14:01UTC

On kickoff morning, Mexico's dissident teachers' union and families of the country's disappeared occupied the central square that was meant to be the official FIFA fan zone.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Mexico's teachers and the families of its disappeared turned the official fan zone into a protest on opening morning.

CNTE, Mexico's dissident teachers' union, erected a tent encampment on the Zocalo, Mexico City's central square and the planned official FIFA fan zone, on opening morning, 11 June. The union, formally the Coordinadora Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educacion and independent of the official SNTE, demanded restored pensions under the 2007 ISSSTE programme and higher wages. 1

Alongside the teachers, families of Mexico's more than 130,000 disappeared hung flyers of missing relatives across the site, turning the fan zone into a protest against the spectacle itself. President Claudia Sheinbaum confirmed 18 alternative free-viewing venues and said only, "Let's see how things develop with the teachers," stopping short of any commitment to clear the square. Nineteen social movements had planned demonstrations during the opening week.

The protest sits inside a heavy security frame. Roughly 100,000 military, police and National Guard personnel are deployed across the three Mexican host cities under Plan Kukulkan, the state's response to a threat picture that US authorities themselves rate as severe: the Department of Homeland Security called the tournament threat level extremely high and FEMA deployed $1.47bn, including $221m for counter-drone systems . On opening day, the host's domestic dissent and its security apparatus arrive in the same frame as the football.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

On the morning the World Cup started, teachers from a union called CNTE set up a tent camp in Mexico City's main square, the Zocalo, exactly where the official FIFA fan zone was supposed to be. CNTE, Mexico's dissident teachers' union, occupied the Zocalo because the World Cup brought global cameras. They want the government to restore defined-benefit pensions stripped by a 2007 reform, and they knew that international visibility was their only remaining lever. Alongside them, families of Mexico's more than 130,000 missing and disappeared people hung photos and flyers of their relatives. Over 130,000 people in Mexico have disappeared, mostly in connection with organised crime and drug-related violence, with little accountability. Mexico's president, Claudia Sheinbaum, offered to set up 18 alternative places for fans to watch matches, but did not order the protesters to leave. She faces a difficult choice: remove the protesters and generate worse international headlines, or let them stay and effectively cede the symbolic centre of the capital.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Two structural causes, independent but reinforcing.

The pension dispute traces to the 2007 ISSSTE reform, which applies to roughly 250,000 teachers hired since that year. Teachers' union CNTE has never had a direct negotiating channel with the presidency; their demands go through the Education Ministry (SEP), which has never had the budget authority to restore defined-benefit pensions. The structural deadlock is 19 years old.

The disappeared persons dimension traces to the 2014 Ayotzinapa disappearance of 43 student teachers; a CNTE-affiliated group; and the subsequent expansion of official disappeared-persons tracking to 130,000+ entries. Families using the World Cup platform to hang flyers reflects the same logic CNTE uses: international visibility at a critical moment is their only remaining leverage instrument, because domestic institutional channels have produced nothing.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If CNTE's occupation persists past the round-of-16 stage, FIFA will face pressure from broadcast partners over ongoing replacement of its flagship Mexico City fan-zone content with protest imagery.

  • Precedent

    Sheinbaum's tolerance model; alternative venues rather than enforcement; may establish a template other host nations adopt in 2030 and 2034 when political dissent at fan zones arises.

First Reported In

Update #18 · 0 Days to Go: the football finally starts

ESPN· 11 Jun 2026
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Teachers and the missing take the Zocalo
The host nation's signature public-viewing site became a protest space hours before the opener, putting Mexico's pension dispute and its more than 130,000 disappeared into the tournament's opening picture.
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