Belinda Files a Complaint Against Lupillo Rivera and Forces a Conversation About Women’s Rights in Media

Belinda Files a Complaint Against Lupillo Rivera and Forces a Conversation About Women’s Rights in Media
Credit: Belinda Huawei Nova 8 /Aida delgado

Belinda has filed a legal complaint against singer Lupillo Rivera for digital and media violence. The case was confirmed by her legal representatives at the firm Maceo, Torres & Asociados, who stated that the complaint was submitted on October 2 to the Attorney General’s Office of Mexico City after the artist considered her dignity and private life to have been violated. The statement explained that the complaint concerns “the probable commission of crimes of digital and media violence as defined in the General Law on Women’s Access to a Life Free of Violence.”

Legal Protections and Public Boundaries

The Attorney General’s Office granted protective measures to Belinda, prohibiting Rivera from approaching or attempting to contact her, as well as from engaging in any offensive conduct. He has also been ordered to remove all social media content in which he discusses the artist. In its official statement, the law firm asserted that being a public figure does not justify the use of someone’s image or the disclosure of private information without consent, calling such actions a form of gender-based violence and a violation of human rights.

The complaint follows the release of Rivera’s autobiographical book Tragos Amargos, where he discusses his connection with the actress and discloses details about their past relationship. In an interview with the television program Siéntese Quien Pueda, Rivera mentioned possessing “very strong” material about Belinda, according to Hola. The two were romantically linked in 2019 while serving as coaches on La Voz México, though both initially denied it. Rivera later changed his version and admitted to a relationship that reportedly lasted six months.

A History of Public Exposure

During his appearance on La Casa de los Famosos 2024, the singer revisited his past with Belinda, sharing details about their breakup and offering vague comments about the reasons behind it. His public remarks renewed interest in a relationship that Belinda has never discussed, maintaining her distance from the speculation surrounding her name.

Belinda’s silence throughout the years now reads as deliberate. Women in entertainment have often watched their personal lives become fuel for public consumption, stripped of privacy and context. Her legal action sets a clear boundary and reclaims agency over her name and image. Female artists across Latin America are increasingly confronting the same issue, taking control of their stories after years of being spoken for.

A Shift in Latin Entertainment

The entertainment industry in Latin America has long profited from personal controversy, often at the expense of women’s privacy. A new generation of female artists is now rejecting that expectation. Belinda’s move echoes a growing pattern among women in music and film who are choosing to draw lines between their art and their private lives. The public is beginning to witness a shift where fame does not have to equal exposure, and dignity becomes part of the narrative.

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