
Noroña and Alcalde lashed out at the UN over Teuchitlán: 'They're right-wing ideas.'
The national leader of Morena and the president of the Senate stated that the UN 'wants to destabilize the government.'
The Committee on Enforced Disappearances of the United Nations (CED-UN) will initiate a procedure to investigate enforced disappearances in Mexico. This has provoked an immediate and furious reaction from Morena leaders, who consider the measure a political interference with ideological bias.
Gerardo Fernández Noroña, president of the Senate, described the international investigation as a "political maneuver" aimed at discrediting the government of Claudia Sheinbaum.

During a broadcast on social media, Noroña lashed out at the United Nations system. He accused it of bias for its silence on international conflicts, while now "getting involved" in Mexico with accusations he called irresponsible and tendentious.
"They are trying to meddle in an irresponsible accusation. It's an effort by the right with the institutions it dominates worldwide, to create criminal links with President Sheinbaum's government. That's mean, that's vile"
the senator declared.
Luisa María Alcalde, national leader of Morena, also disqualified the actions of the international committee. She asserted that it is an ideological stance against progressive governments.
"They don't like governments close to the people," she stated, while denouncing that this is not the first time international organizations have acted in a "factional" manner, without supposed objective elements.

The reactions from the officialdom arise after the discovery of a property in Teuchitlán, Jalisco. There, search collectives found human remains, clothing, and personal belongings that could correspond to more than 200 missing persons.
The UN committee described the event as part of a systematic and widespread pattern of enforced disappearances in Mexico. This led to the issuance of urgent precautionary measures directed at the Mexican State.

Among the CED's demands is the safeguarding of the property known as Rancho Izaguirre, ensuring transparency in the analysis of the remains, and the active participation of the collectives.
The official narrative suggests that any external accusation is an attempt to undermine the new federal administration. It ignores that disappearances in Mexico exceed 100,000 people and remain one of the country's most severe humanitarian crises.
Meanwhile the government defends itself from accusations, the victims continue to seek answers.

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