A verdict in Argentina’s first-ever trans-homicide case will be announced in August
Valen Iricibar
Valen Iricibar is an editor at the Buenos Aires Herald. An award-winning journalist, editor and podcaster, their work specializes in policy, gender-based violence and LGBTQIA issues in audio and print. A doting cat parent, they live in their hometown Buenos Aires surrounded by books, audio equipment and cat toys.
With three people passing away in one weekend alone, advocates say the city government’s response isn’t enough
-
The protocol authorizes federal forces to clamp down on any form of roadblock and criminalizes protesters attempting to hide their identity
-
He acknowledged differences with the Milei administration, saying his government would have to coexist with one that has priorities he ‘does not share’
-
The administration’s first decree confirmed that the Milei is cutting Argentina’s number of ministries by half, with only nine taking their oath on Sunday
-
Wrists, spit and sexists feature in this week’s exploration of the Herald’s bilingual quandaries
-
Two women, each with two daughters, are the first of at least 20 Argentines being held there to leave the Gaza Strip
-
The Herald explores some Argentine terms that came up around the presidential run-off
-
The car favored by death squads was used as an apparent intimidation strategy this week and the Ministry for Women, Gender, and Diversities received bomb threats
-
The far-right libertarian economy won Argentina’s 2023 presidential run-off by 12 percentage points on Sunday
-
The country’s seminal sex education law is continually under attack, with activists and educators citing concerns about its demonization during the electoral campaign
-
2023 electionsPolitics
Citing anonymous sources, LLA accuses military police of unproven electoral fraud
The far-right coalition published a letter addressed to Federal Judge MarÃa Servini claiming there was fraud in the October election without providing evidence