Thousands of people have disappeared in Latin America during decades-long conflicts. Many have never been found, presumed to be the victims of dictatorships, insurgencies or organized crime.
Takeaways From AP's Reporting on the Thousands Disappeared in Colombia, Peru and Paraguay Thousands of people have disappeared in Latin America during decades-long conflicts. Many have never been ...
There are similarly wrenching but less well-known traumas elsewhere in the region. In Peru, Colombia and Paraguay, for example, many people are still searching for answers. Loved ones have found ...
There are similarly wrenching but less well-known traumas elsewhere in the region. In Peru, Colombia and Paraguay, for example, many people are still searching for answers. Loved ones have found ...
Recommended Videos In Peru, Colombia and Paraguay, for example, many people are still searching for answers. Loved ones have found comfort in their faith but have faced years of uncertainty and a ...
In Peru, out of 20,000 disappeared people, only 3,200 remains have been found. In Colombia, five decades of war left a staggering death toll and more than 124,000 people missing. Paraguay’s ...
The Pan Amazon has a legacy of both violent and non-violent protest that dates from the onset of European colonization, through the Brazilian Empire and the Andean Republics of the nineteenth century,
Disney movies have a way of making us all long for a fictional, enchanted kingdom. The settings are always so magical an
The Colombian government plans to pitch a new tax reform to Congress to raise at least 12 trillion pesos ($2.86 billion) needed to finance its budget, Finance Minister Diego Guevara said on Thursday,
More about Annie Correal Julie Turkewitz is the Andes Bureau Chief for The Times, based in Bogotá, Colombia, covering Colombia, Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru. More about Julie Turkewitz
Latin American leaders don’t like submitting to the United States in imperial mode. They also have an alternative.
In many middle-income countries, majorities say the Bible, Quran or another religious text should influence national law at least a fair amount.