2026 World Cup Key News Central News Agency (CNA Tlaxcala, Mexico, July 30, Comprehensive Foreign News) Two major cocaine seizures in Mexico in June, one in Tlaxcala state adjacent to the capital Mexico City, suggest that drug trafficking organizations may be moving larger quantities of drugs into the capital to meet the surge in demand driven by the FIFA World Cup, analysts say. Reuters reported that Mexican security forces announced they had seized slightly over 3 metric tons of cocaine on June 22 in the western state of Guerrero and the central state of Tlaxcala. Six security experts interviewed by Reuters pointed out that Tlaxcala, an inland state not typically known as a drug trafficking route, is now seeing large amounts of cocaine transported through it. Experts believe this is most likely related to the World Cup. Andres Sumano, a security expert at El Colegio de la Frontera Norte, a leading social science research institution in Mexico, stated that criminal groups might be stockpiling large quantities of drugs in warehouses around the capital in anticipation of a significant increase in drug demand in Mexico City during the World Cup. This, in turn, allowed police to seize such a massive amount of drugs in one go. Sumano added that this operational model by large drug cartels is similar to how regular businesses prepare inventory in advance for major events. Three drug dealers in Mexico City told Reuters that they have indeed observed a noticeable increase in demand as the World Cup approaches, an event expected to attract 5.5 million visitors. One dealer, who asked to remain anonymous, stated bluntly, "This is a business, and if the customers have demands, we have to find a way to satisfy them." He admitted that international events like the World Cup have always been good opportunities to boost "sales." In response, the Mexico City government and the presidential office did not respond to requests for comment, and the authorities' seizure reports did not