Economy ministry launches bid to sell national water company Aysa as the …
Martina Jaureguy
Martina Jaureguy is a politics, human rights and society reporter for the Buenos Aires Herald. She was previously an editor for the Argentine publication BAE Negocios. Her work has also appeared in Página/12, El Destape Web, and Revista Cordón. She earned a degree in journalism from Lomas de Zamora National University.
The judiciary revealed the list in a press conference alongside their relatives. ‘Today, we feel free,’ one of them …
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The massive outing protesting femicides and government austerity will also include doctors, scientists, and university professors
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A massive march protesting femicides flooded the streets on June 3, 2015, leading to a major societal change in Argentina
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Grillo, who was shot in the head during a protest in March, will be transferred to another hospital for rehab
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A labor court put a temporary stop to part of a decree that prevented a majority of key sectors like education and aviation to carry out massive protests
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The Buenos Aires province governor also called for Peronist unity as a contrast to party infighting ahead of the local elections in September
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Former rector Caamaño accused the judiciary of ‘steamrolling university autonomy’ after they formally stripped her of any decision-making capabilities
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Her son Enrique Jorge Aggio was kidnapped and murdered in 1976, and his body identified in 2010
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Human rightsLatin America
Head of Americas rights watchdog: ‘These aren’t easy times for human rights’
IACHR Director José Luis Caballero Ochoa told the Herald there’s a ‘fragility’ in the exercise of human rights in the region
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Politics
Less than half of public primary school students have access to English classes in Argentina
Only 46% of schools have access to classes, according to a study by the British Council
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The decision means 30% of its remaining employees will be fired, the government said