The charges include forced imprisonment, torture, and rape in Mansión Seré and …
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.
In late March, a judge left a large portion of the reform without effect, considering it went against labor …
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Human rightsPoliticsThe Rosca
LLA deputy reveals draft bills to drop charges against alleged dictatorship torturers
The documents, which have not been submitted to Congress, appear to argue for charges to be dropped because of lengthy delays in trying cases
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Screenshots posted by Deputy Lourdes Arrieta detail the logistical run-up and may implicate high-profile politicians. ‘It’s time for the truth to be revealed’
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Villarruel, who is the Upper House head, claimed she had no say in the matter and called for a session to discuss the issue
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In recent months, the vice president has also missed Milei’s landmark May Pact and made controversial comments about France days before the president’s meeting with Macron
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Higher education institutions did not reopen for the second semester of 2024 this week as staff went on strike over pay
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Human rights
Milei dissolves investigation unit that helped find dictatorship-era appropiated children
The government argued that the unit had judicial attributions that were unconstitutional
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The legal battle continues, as the former president gave an interview and his ex-partner filed a new statement with the judiciary
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In a blurring of the line between security and defense, the military could be deployed without declaring a state of siege if a new legal project is approved
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Argentina’s former first lady claimed she had been living in the guest house at the presidential residence since July 2023
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A federal judge was assigned to dig into claims by two deputies that they were tricked into meeting dictatorship-era officials convicted of crimes against humanity