Mexico's Sheinbaum vows no protection for ex-Pemex chief after wife posts alleged abuse video


FILE PHOTO: Victor Rodriguez, appointed as Chief Executive of state-run oil producer Petroleos Mexicanos PEMEX, speaks next to Mexico's President-elect Claudia Sheinbaum during a press conference in Mexico City, Mexico August 26, 2024. REUTERS/Raquel Cunha/File Photo

MEXICO CITY, June 29 (Reuters) - Mexican President ⁠Claudia Sheinbaum vowed on Monday that she would not protect anyone after a video appeared to show the former ⁠head of state energy company Pemex, Victor Rodriguez, violently abusing his wife.

Posted to YouTube on Friday by a ‌woman identifying herself as Maria Felicia Jimenez, Rodriguez's wife, the video appears to have been recorded by a home surveillance system in a living room and has a time-stamp of March 15, 2026.

Rodriguez still held the top job at Pemex at the time. He announced his departure on May 14 in a joint video ​recorded with Sheinbaum, in which she thanked him for his service and said his ⁠resignation was in accordance with a timeline that ⁠he had set as a condition for taking the job.

Rodriguez could not be reached for comment. A statement posted on Friday on ⁠an ‌X account that appeared to belong to Rodriguezsaid that he had stepped back from any public role while an investigation into the incident proceedsand that he was open to cooperatingwith all relevant authorities.

"Let the law be applied, we will not protect ⁠anyone," Sheinbaum said during her regular morning press conference.

"There can be no violence ​against women," Sheinbaum said, adding that Rodriguez ‌would not take another role in her government.

In the five-minute video, viewed by Reuters, Rodriguez is seen grabbing a ⁠woman by the neck, ​pulling her by the hair, shoving her, and holding her down on a couch.

Rodriguez is topless for part of the footage. A young boy is also seen at the start before running out of the shot.

Reuters was not able to verify where or when the video was filmed. Reuters ⁠was able to confirm that the video shows Rodríguez and Jimenez.

"Breaking my silence ​meant losing my job, my money, having nowhere to live, and having my children taken from me, simply because of his closeness to the highest spheres of power — the presidency, governors, members of congress, secretaries of state," reads a statement accompanying the video on YouTube.

"This is ⁠a government led by women, so I am asking for help and for the necessary measures to be taken to protect me and my children who are minors," it said.

The Attorney General's office for the state of Morelos said on X on Friday that it had opened an investigation into suspected criminal acts stemming from a video "in which a violent act against a woman is observed."

Sheinbaum has ​repeatedly emphasized the need for substantive equality, a gender perspective, and the right to a ⁠life free from violence, declaring an "era of women" when she took office.

Rodriguez has been a close ally of Sheinbaum, with the two sharing ​both a personal and professional relationship dating back to their student days.

After leaving Pemex ‌in May, Rodriguez was appointed to lead the energy transition institute ​INEEL. However, the energy ministry said in a statement that his appointment was never formalized.

(Reporting by Stefanie Eschenbacher; Additional reporting by Ana Isabel Martinez, Raul Cortes and Aida Palaez-Fernandez and Pola Grzanka; Editing by Stephen Eisenhammer and Bill Berkrot)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Others Also Read