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Argentina wants to get rid of parents who do not pay their children's pensions. So he kicked them out of the football stadiums
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To enjoy a soccer match in an Argentine stadium it will no longer be enough to have a ticket. From now on, fans must meet another extra requirement, equally or even more important: being up to date with their children's pensions. In an attempt to hit where it hurts most, the football heart of the nation that gave birth to Maradona, Messi or Di Estéfano, the authorities have activated a system that vetoes access to the fields to parents who ignore the costs of feeding their children.
The Gogovernment has 13,000 people in its sights, defaulters for whom the World Cup in the USA has also just become complicated.
"They don't enter the fields anymore." The phrase is from Alejandra Monteoliva, Minister of National Security, who recently announced, via X, the decision to close the stadium doors to those who are not up to date with their pensions.
"Delinquent food debtors no longer enter the fields. Starting today, together with the Government of the City of Buenos Aires, we incorporate the debtors into the Safe Tribune program. And they will no longer be able to go in to watch a soccer game," explains Monteoliva before underlining the basic idea: "He who does not comply with his children, outside the fields."
Is it something new? Yes. And no. 'Safe Tribunes' is not a new program. It has been applied in Argentina for years and its objective is to reinforce access control to sporting events, although until now the focus has been mainly on violent fans, accused, convicted or with arrest warrants. It is basically dedicated to checking the documentation of those who go to the camps to check their history or even if they are carrying drugs or knives.
For some time now, some jurisdictions in the country, such as Buenos Aires, also decided to ban sporting events for those who do not comply with the alimony of their minor children. As a reference, the Buenos Aires authorities assure that since March 2025, 173 controls have been carried out that have allowed the identification of 150 "defaulting food debtors", fans who were prevented from accessing stadiums or concerts. "So far in 2026 alone, 84 have already been carried out with 75 offenders."
What's new then? That Argentina has decided to go one step further, combining and reinforcing both initiatives: 'Safe Grandstands' and restrictions on access to stadiums for parents with debts. To this end, the Ministry of National Security and the Government of the Autonomous City of Buenos Años have signed an agreement that “marks a qualitative leap” in field controls throughout the country.
The key is in the exchange of information, which will allow thousands of new names to be included in the 'Safe Tribune' red list. To be more exact, there are 13,000 people, "delinquent payers" registered in Buenos Aires and 13 other provinces spread across the country, such as Chaco, Entre Ríos, Formosa, Tierra de Fuego, Santa Cruz or Tucumán. From now on all of them will have a difficult time when they want to watch games in the stadiums, at least as long as they do not catch up with the food pensions they owe.
"Consequences". Alejandra Monteoliva has not been the only one to insist on the advantages of the system. The head of Government of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, Jorge Macri, has done something similar, also through
Where it hurts the most. In his message, dated May 26, Macri left out another fundamental idea: access controls with the registry of debtors in hand will not only be carried out in the country's stadiums; The idea is that they will also be applied during the World Cup. Milei's team has sent a list to the US with more than 30,000 Argentine fans who have restricted access to the World Cup stadiums, which will start in a week in Mexico. And among them are included, Monteoliva confirms, the 13,000 delinquent parents.
It is not just another announcement or a declaration of intent. The new restrictions in Argentine stadiums have already been made official in the Official Gazette and the Executive has also published a resolution (444/2026) announcing the sending to the US Embassy of information on people with restrictions to access sporting events. The measure is adopted based on the cooperation agreements signed between both Governments and its list would include "food debtors." Some sources assure that the veto will be extended to Canada and Mexico, the other hosts of the FIFA Cup.
Is the problem that serious? In case the 13,000 registered in the system do not provide a clue, in 2024 Unicef provided another even more emphatic one: that year it published a report in which it warned that 56% of mothers living in Argentina do not receive the alimony quota when the father does not reside in the home, a percentage that rises to 68% if we include mothers who do not receive it regularly. Restrictions on access to the fields will only apply when there is a judicial or administrative resolution that demonstrates non-payment and the affected person appears in the official registry of defaulters.
Images | Jimmy Baikovicius (Flickr) and Wikipedia