Progressive candidate Roberto Sánchez and right-wing Keiko Fujimori will compete in a …
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 security ministry said Argentina is the ‘least violent country’ in the region and that it had its lowest …
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Trying to move around the Argentine capital is becoming increasingly difficult, with long queues and never-ending waiting times
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The move opens the door to mining projects in areas that surround glaciers, which critics say could contaminate water sources
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Human rights
Argentina stops sending DNA kits to identify potential children of dictatorship victims in Europe
The government has only been carrying out tests in European countries when the case is part of a trial. This was not necessary in previous decades
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Their reunion takes place less than a month after Kast took office. The two leaders share similar political and economic views
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With the count still underway, Keiko Fujimori leads and there will likely be a runoff with one of the other 34 candidates
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Science & Innovation
Argentine microsatellite released in space during Artemis II mission breaks record
ATENEA, developed by Argentine public institutions, established communication 70,000 kilometers away from Earth as part of US Moon mission
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Leonardo Szuchet replaced Joaquín Mogaburu, following the arrival of new justice minister Juan Bautista Mahíques
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50th Anniversary 1976 CoupHuman rights
Institution key to finding babies stolen by dictatorship suffers 60% budget cut under Milei
The National Bank of Genetic Data, created to identify children of victims disappeared by the last regime, has seen a drop in salaries, staff and resources since 2023
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50th Anniversary 1976 CoupHuman rights
Argentines call for memory, truth, and justice 50 years after the last military coup
In a document read at the Plaza de Mayo, human rights organizations demanded fair sentences for dictatorship criminals and questioned Javier Milei’s policies
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An announcement on the radio, streets full of soldiers and deep uncertainty of what would come next. This is how the coup unfolded 50 years ago