Editor’s note: On Mexico’s rapid, breath-taking descent into total surveillance
Editor's Note The Mexico Brief. Editor's Note The Mexico Brief.
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Editor’s note: On Mexico’s rapid, breath-taking descent into total surveillance

by Andrew Law, founder and editor.

In 2014, Luisa Alcalde — now Morena’s party president — blasted then-President Peña Nieto’s telecom reform on Twitter: “Signal blocking, prior censorship, data retention, geolocation all in the hands of #Segob.” A decade later, her critique fits just as well with the sweeping intelligence and security laws passed last week by her own party under President Claudia Sheinbaum.

The new laws mandate a centralized national platform compiling every citizen’s and company’s personal data: telecom records, banking info, healthcare, education, vehicle registrations, court records. All of it. With no independent court oversight, no meaningful access restrictions, and the possibility of real-time geolocation.

At the same time, Congress pushed through reforms to the National Guard that, as we report this week, all but erase the line between military and civilian authority.

Ana Lilia Moreno of México Evalúa tells me the changes mark one of the most disruptive shifts in Mexican public life since…

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Morena reacts furiously to UN probe into  forced disappearances

Morena reacts furiously to UN probe into forced disappearances

 by Andrew Law.

“There is no forced disappearance in Mexico.”

 

That was the response from Mexico’s President, Claudia Sheinbaum, to news that the UN plans to investigate forced disappearances in the country. More than 124,000 people have disappeared in Mexico.

 

Sheinbaum’s claim was quickly supported by her Morena Party. Party members in the Senate passed a motion saying the government had no role in the crisis.

 

But last Friday, the UN Committee on Enforced Disappearances announced it would launch a formal investigation. Committee President Olivier de Frouville said the inquiry was based on three Articles of the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons. According to El Financiero, he made it clear that this “in no way prejudges the Mexican state.” Still, de Frouville added, “We have received information that… provides sufficient grounds to support the belief that enforced disappearances are practiced on a widespread or systemic basis.”

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