Mexico opened the possibility Friday of receiving non-Mexican migrants deported by the United States after initially saying ...
Sheinbaum took time during her daily press conference to "debunk" a New York Times article on a Sinaloa Cartel fentanyl lab ...
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum on Friday said that her country may accept non-Mexican migrants deported from the United States, marking a shift from its earlier stance of urging President-elect ...
A New York Times report on fentanyl production in Mexico is "not very credible," President Sheinbaum said at her Monday press ...
"The photos are not credible, just for the fact of how harmful it is for the cook's own health to be producing the drugs as they show it," Sheinbaum said ...
The piece by the Times has since triggered a back-and-forth between the news outlet and Mexico's Claudia Sheinbaum around the veracity of the reporting ...
Mexico says it is investigating officials in a town where a sign was posted thanking a drug lord for holiday season gifts for ...
Initial signs from Claudia Sheinbaum's first months in office suggest a more aggressive approach to fighting the drug cartels, with the most substantial deployment in at least six years of military ...
A Mexican mayor is under investigation for possible criminal links after public thanks were offered to a notorious cartel ...
Mexico also has already set up shelters along its northern border with the US to receive deported Mexican migrants.
Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum holds a press conference a day after the U.S. elections, at the National Palace, in Mexico City, Nov. 6, 2024. File photo by Raquel Cunha/REUTERS ...
The Mexican government has posted two somewhat conflicting statements reacting to a trade dispute panel siding with the United States in a U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement on trade ruling on genetically ...