Groping of Mexico’s president puts violence against women in spotlight
· The Straits TimesMEXICO CITY - Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said on Nov 5 she filed a complaint against a man who groped her and tried to kiss her
as she walked between meetings in the capital city, a day after a video of the incident went viral.
“If this happens to the president, where does that leave all the young women in our country,” said Ms Sheinbaum, Mexico’s first female president. “No man has the right to abuse women’s personal space.”
Video of the incident quickly ricocheted across the internet before being taken down by some accounts, underscoring for many in Mexico the insecurity women face in a country steeped in machismo and gender-based violence.
It has also raised questions about Ms Sheinbaum’s security detail.
Like her predecessor, Mr Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, Ms Sheinbaum travels with minimal security and makes herself widely available to the public, including wading into crowds of people.
She said on Nov 5 that she did not plan to change that practice, saying “we have to be close to the people.”
The incident happened on Nov 4 in the capital’s historic centre as Ms Sheinbaum was greeting members of the public while making the short walk from Mexico’s national palace to the Ministry of Education.
The video shows a middle-aged man putting his arm around Ms Sheinbaum, touching her chest and attempting to kiss her.
She moves his hands away before a member of her staff steps between them.
The president’s security detail did not appear to be near her at that moment.
Ms Sheinbaum said the man appeared to be drunk.
Re-victimisation
She also blasted Mexican newspaper Reforma for publishing images of the man groping her, saying she considered it a “re-victimisation” and that it crossed an ethical line.
“The use of the image is also a crime,” Ms Sheinbaum said, pointing to legislation against digital violence. “I am waiting for an apology from the newspaper.”
The federal government’s Women’s Ministry, created under Ms Sheinbaum, issued a statement on Nov 4 encouraging women to report violence against them, but asking media outlets “not to reproduce content that violates the integrity of women.”
Still, feminist activists have sharply criticised Ms Sheinbaum in the past for not doing enough to address violence against women.
Among other things, they point to lacklustre prosecutions and investigations of femicides - the killing of a woman because of her gender.
In 2024, Mexico recorded 821 femicides, according to government data. There have been 501 femicides recorded through September 2025, and many advocates say the numbers are likely far underestimated.
Ms Ana Yeli Perez of the National Citizen Observatory on Femicide said the groping of Ms Sheinbaum puts the issue of violence against women on the national agenda again.
“It’s reprehensible, it must be denounced, it must be named, because it’s an act of violence, but it’s also a significant event and symbolic of what women experience every day,” she said.
Ms Sheinbaum said sexual harassment should be a “criminal offence, punishable by law,” adding that she has asked Mexico’s Women’s Ministry to conduct a review of the legal codes in each state.
Sexual harassment is a crime in about half of Mexican states, as well as the capital Mexico City.
Local media identified the man who assaulted Ms Sheinbaum as Mr Uriel Rivera and a state security filing showed he was arrested at 9pm on Nov 4. REUTERS