Connect with us

International

In Latin America, World Cup stickers are a quadrennial craze

Photo: Miguel Schincariol / AFP

AFP | Rodrigo Almonacid with Latin American bureaus

Some spend crazy amounts, others line up at dawn or gather at informal swap meets — anything to satisfy a passion that combines love of soccer, this year’s World Cup in Qatar and the ever-popular pursuit of Panini soccer stickers.

Sold in 150 countries, the stickers seem to arouse a particular frenzy in Latin America because of the possibility that this might be the last World Cup for Argentinian football icon Lionel Messi, who is 35, or that a Latin American side might finally break Europe’s hold on the Cup. 

“Almost everything I earn, that anyone lends me, or that they owe me, I invest in the stickers,” Hilda Losada, who is Argentinian, told AFP.

The 68-year-old grandmother, who is working to complete her album of nearly 700 stickers — and her grandson’s as well — has been waiting in line since 5:00 am for the opening of a store in Buenos Aires.

Advertisement
20260224_estafa_mh_728x90
previous arrow
next arrow

The stickers have been in short supply for days in Argentina, with the government itself intervening to mediate between the Italian publisher and frustrated shopkeepers who want a bigger piece of the juicy trade. 

“This is one of the few places where you can find them now,” Losada said, standing in a long line of collectors.

Not everyone will leave happy, and some are vowing to turn to the black market, if need be, even if it costs twice the official price of about $1 for five stickers. 

Her family tells her she’s crazy, but Losada pays them no mind as she happily pursues her fascination. She has been collecting the cards every four years since she was “a little girl,” she insists, even if galloping inflation in Argentina — currently at 56 percent — does not make that easy.

“Argentina is nearly always in an economic crisis,” shrugged the shop owner, Leila Edul. “But now, with these stickers… money somehow appears out of nowhere.”

Advertisement
20260224_estafa_mh_728x90
previous arrow
next arrow

That is true despite the soaring price of a packet since the 2018 World Cup in Russia. In Brazil, the cost has doubled, from 37 US cents to 74 cents. 

‘We like to trade’

“My father bought me three packets,” said an exuberant Tiziano Orselli, 14, as the two inspected the offerings at a swap meet at Buenos Aires’s Rivadavia Park.

“When I saw ‘Argentina 19’ and realized it was Messi, I was too happy,” he said. I showed it to everybody and then I stuck it, there, in the album,” he said, his eyes still wide at the thought. 

Mauricio Valencia had set up a table on sawhorses and piled it high with stacks of stickers to trade or sell. He said he had done this previously in Colombia, because “in Latin America we like to trade (Panini) stickers.” 

“But it’s not the same here,” he added. “There is such fervor — it’s packed every weekend.” 

Advertisement
20260224_estafa_mh_728x90
previous arrow
next arrow

Raul Vallecillo, a Panini official in Chile, said Latin American sales have exceeded the expectations of the Italian manufacturer, which published its first album for the 1970 World Cup in Mexico.

Chile’s national team did not qualify for this year’s World Cup, which opens in Qatar in November, yet Panini sold in a single month the stock it had expected to last four months, he said. The same trend holds in Venezuela, Colombia and Peru, all of which also failed to qualify, he said.

Vallecillo said the infatuation with the cards is heightened by the likelihood that this will be the last appearance of aging superstars like Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo, as well as the hope the Argentine or Brazilian side will be able to break the European teams’ 20-year stranglehold on the championship. 

Street vendors

In Sao Paulo, collectors have been gathering outside the Football Museum.

Forty-year-old Leandro Fonseca is on the hunt for some special-edition stickers, including some with Neymar’s image, which have been selling on the internet for hundreds of dollars.

Advertisement
20260224_estafa_mh_728x90
previous arrow
next arrow

“I’m off to a late start on the ‘extras,’ but I hope to fill 20 albums, he said. “I fill several during every World Cup.”

He said he had spent around $1,800 so far to complete seven albums.

Across Latin America, the resale business is brisk. 

On a busy road in Montevideo, children come, carrying lists of sticker numbers, to try to buy those they’re missing.

The stickers of stars like Messi, Neymar and local favorite Luis Suarez sell for around 100 pesos ($2.40). Other lesser stars from the Uruguayan, Argentine or Brazilian sides go for 20 to 50 pesos, while still others go for just 10 pesos (though a star like France’s Kylian Mbappe brings in 50 pesos). 

Advertisement
20260224_estafa_mh_728x90
previous arrow
next arrow

Guillermo Orcile has been helping his seven-year-old son Salvador complete his album entirely through trades.

“It’s important that he understand how trading works, which makes these albums important,” he said.

“Because if it’s just about buying, then the spirit is lost.”

Advertisement
20260224_estafa_mh_728x90
previous arrow
next arrow
  • A child buys Panini World Cup football stickers at the Analia Franco shopping center in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on September 23, 2022. - Some have the goal of filling twenty, while many line up since dawn to get the few envelopes available. And others, purists, are satisfied only with sheets printed in Italy, birthplace of the World Cup album that drives Latin Americans crazy. Like every four years, the Panini album of the World Cup, which this time will be held in Qatar from November 20 to December 18, measures the temperature of a region that goes out of its way for football, and that is excited with the possibility for Lionel Messi or Neymar to break the European hegemony. (Photo by Miguel SCHINCARIOL / AFP)

Continue Reading
Advertisement
20260224_estafa_mh_300x250

International

Mexico and U.S. Launch New Bilateral Security Group to Combat Fentanyl and Organized Crime

The governments of Mexico and the United States officially launched the Bilateral Implementation Group (BIG) on Friday, a new initiative aimed at strengthening cooperation on security issues and enhancing joint efforts against transnational crime.

In a statement, U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Ronald Johnson announced that he and Deputy Foreign Minister Roberto Velasco addressed officials from both countries who will lead what he described as a “new phase of bilateral cooperation.” The initiative seeks to curb the flow of fentanyl and other illicit drugs, illegal firearms, and human trafficking across the shared border.

Earlier this week, Mexico’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs had confirmed that senior security officials from both nations would meet in Mexico City on June 12 to review and advance existing cooperation agreements.

Through social media, Ambassador Johnson explained that the new bilateral group is designed to improve coordination between the two governments by placing greater emphasis on implementation, accountability, and measurable results. The effort will also focus on combating transnational criminal organizations operating across North America.

“The participation of 15 U.S. government agencies, working alongside their Mexican counterparts, reflects the seriousness of this effort and our shared commitment to delivering measurable results,” Johnson said.

The ambassador also highlighted several achievements that he attributed to ongoing bilateral cooperation. According to Johnson, maritime drug trafficking into the United States has declined by more than 95 percent, while overdose deaths have fallen by 35 percent.

He further noted that Mexican authorities have seized more than 400 metric tons of illegal drugs and dismantled over 2,300 clandestine laboratories as part of their efforts to combat organized crime and narcotics production.

The launch of the Bilateral Implementation Group marks the latest step in the security partnership between Mexico and the United States, as both countries seek to address shared challenges related to drug trafficking, arms smuggling, human trafficking, and the activities of criminal networks operating across the region.

Continue Reading

International

‘El Chapo’ Guzmán again asks Mexican president to seek his return from U.S. prison

Convicted drug trafficker Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán has once again appealed to Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum to intervene on his behalf and seek his transfer from the United States to Mexico, where he hopes to serve the remainder of his prison sentence.

Guzmán, the former leader of the Sinaloa Cartel, is currently serving a sentence of more than 50 years in the United States after being convicted in 2019 on multiple charges, including drug trafficking and money laundering.

According to reports, the latest request was made in a letter dated June 2, one of several messages that Guzmán has reportedly sent to Sheinbaum in recent months in an effort to secure his repatriation. In the letter, he expresses hope that the Mexican government can support the efforts of his legal team.

Written in English and by hand, the letter asks that he be allowed to complete his sentence in Mexico, arguing that such a transfer would enable him to receive visits from family members more easily.

Guzmán is currently being held at the United States Penitentiary Administrative Maximum Facility in Florence, Colorado, commonly known as the “Alcatraz of the Rockies,” one of the most secure prisons in the United States.

As in previous communications, the former cartel leader complained about his prison conditions, stating that he remains in near-total isolation and has little to no contact with other inmates.

He also reiterated his long-standing claim that he did not receive a fair trial in the United States and argued that the Mexican government bears responsibility for much of the violence associated with organized crime in the country.

In the letter, Guzmán maintains that his actions were motivated by a desire to protect himself and his family amid the violence linked to criminal organizations in Mexico.

Mexican authorities have not publicly indicated whether they plan to respond to the request. Guzmán remains one of the most notorious figures in the history of international drug trafficking and is serving his sentence under some of the strictest security measures in the U.S. prison system.

Continue Reading

Central America

U.S. Authorities Accuse Guatemalan Nationals of Using False Information to Sponsor Migrant Minors

Senior officials from the U.S. Department of Justice and the Department of Homeland Security announced Thursday criminal charges against three Guatemalan citizens accused of using false information to sponsor migrant children who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border without a parent or guardian.

According to an indictment filed in Ohio, Maritza Cahuec Coc allegedly submitted at least 12 sponsorship applications, several of which were filed under aliases or contained materially false statements intended to secure custody of the minors.

Under U.S. procedures, unaccompanied migrant children apprehended at the southern border are placed in the custody of the Department of Health and Human Services, which is responsible for their care until they can be released to a qualified sponsor, such as a parent or relative living in the United States.

Prosecutors allege that Cahuec Coc, who reportedly entered the United States illegally in 2018, received payments between late 2020 and 2023 for helping bring 12 migrant minors into the country. Authorities claim she submitted fraudulent documents and misleading information to obtain approval for the sponsorship requests.

The case was announced during a joint press conference led by Acting Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche and Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin. However, officials provided limited details about the investigation and instead focused much of their remarks on criticizing immigration policies implemented under the previous administration.

Republican lawmakers and Trump administration officials have frequently pointed to the increase in unaccompanied migrant children arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border during President Joe Biden’s term, arguing that the government failed to adequately oversee their care and placement.

During Thursday’s briefing, A. Tysen Duva, Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, alleged that Cahuec Coc used the identities of other individuals and falsely claimed family relationships in order to obtain custody of the children.

“Maritza submitted sponsorship applications using other people’s identities and falsely represented that the minors were the children of close relatives in order to secure their release,” Duva said.

The case remains under investigation, and federal authorities have not yet disclosed additional information regarding the other two Guatemalan nationals charged in connection with the alleged scheme.

Continue Reading

Trending

Central News