The government, who never granted the resources for the law approved in …
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.
Carlos Suárez Mason died in 2005 and was never convicted despite being in charge of clandestine detention centers in …
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International relationsLatin AmericaPolitics
Mercosur joint declaration fails to include Malvinas sovereignty claim
Presidents of Mercosur member states met for a summit and criticized Milei for being the only absentee
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In a win for freedom of expression, hundreds reporters will return to work after the public newswire’s sudden closure in March
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Human rightsPoliticsSociety
Ley Bases protester released after three weeks in jail, four still under arrest
Despite being freed, Facundo Gómez remains charged with alleged public intimidation and attacking police authorities
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BusinessEnvironmentInternational relations
Malvinas Islands government launches offshore oil drilling public consultation
Access from Argentina to the website of the company in charge of the potential drill has been blocked
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The March closure of the 700-person news agency has been internationally criticized as an attack on freedom of expression
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Human rightsSociety
Thousands of new state layoffs pull hundreds from gender, memory and welfare programs
‘These layoffs can be translated as citizens losing their rights’
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The bill, along with the fiscal package, are already approved as general items but deputies will have to vote on changes made by senators
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Loan allegedly disappeared while picking oranges during a lunch in the country. What started as a missing child case is now being investigated as possible child trafficking
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Alperovich was convicted of abusing and raping his niece and former secretary between 2017 and 2018
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A modified version of the controversial bill made it through the upper house this week: a look into the changes that now have to go through the Chamber of Deputies