Mexico invites Spain's king to World Cup opening match


FILE PHOTO: Spain's King Felipe VI attends the swearing-in ceremony of newly elected Portuguese president Antonio Jose Seguro at the parliament, in Lisbon, Portugal, March 9, 2026. REUTERS/Pedro Nunes/ File Photo

MEXICO CITY, March 19 (Reuters) - Mexico has invited Spain's ⁠King Felipe VI to attend the World Cup opening match, ‌Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said on Thursday, marking a thawing in relations after she did not invite him to her inauguration ceremony.

Mexico's government representative for the ​2026 FIFA World Cup Gabriela Cuevas sent ⁠invitations to all the countries ⁠with which Mexico has diplomatic relations, and among those invited was ⁠Felipe ‌VI, Sheinbaum told a daily press conference.

Sheinbaum did not invite Felipe VI to her 2024 inauguration after the ⁠monarch declined to apologize for colonial-era abuses.

In the 16th ​to 18th centuries, ‌Spain ruled one of the world's largest ever empires, ⁠spanning five continents, ​including much of Latin America, where it practiced forced labor, land expropriation and violence against Indigenous peoples.

Felipe VI unexpectedly acknowledged abuses in his ⁠country's colonial past on Monday.

The king's comments ​followed a speech by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Munich last month, in which Rubio criticized a decline of "great Western empires" ⁠and said Washington did not want allies "shackled by guilt and shame."

Sheinbaum said on Tuesday the latest comments were a conciliatory gesture on the king's part, but "it wasn't everything we would have wanted."

Mexico ​will play South Africa in the World ⁠Cup's opening match, which is scheduled for June 11 in Azteca ​Stadium - where Pele dazzled with Brazil in ‌1970 and Maradona's "hand of God" propelled ​Argentina to glory in 1986.

(Reporting by Raul Cortes and Aida Pelaez-Fernandez; Editing by Sarah Morland, Kylie Madry, Rod Nickel)

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