CREATE ACCOUNT

FORGOT YOUR DETAILS?

Issue Mar 01-07 2023: Central American coffee farmers are facing a shortage of workers due to the migration of thousands of people to the United States, leading to a dramatic decrease in revenue.

Read More

Issue Feb 22-28 2023: Jair Bolsonaro, the former president of Brazil, has been staying in Orlando, Florida, since December 2022.

Read More

Issue Feb 22-28 2023: U.S. President Joe Biden has put forward a new plan that would impose “strict restrictions” on asylum seekers who enter the country through the border.

Read More

Issue Feb 22-28 2023: Cuba holds “The Festival of Habano.” Habanos SA is a famous and successful cigar manufacturer that holds a multi-day festival, which this year ended on March 4th.

Read More

Issue Feb 15-21 2023: A study carried out by CID-Gallup has indicated that people from Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, and Honduras are the Latin Americans with the “greatest intention to migrate.”

Read More

Issue Feb 15-21 2023: More than the basis of the Mexican population’s diet, corn has significant historical, cultural, social, spiritual, and economic value.

Read More

Issue Feb 15-21 2023: Guatemala’s economy, immigration, and a phenomenon known as “nearshoring” were at the forefront of United States and Guatemalan relations. Fátima Najarro in La Hora of Guatemala City stated that, “according to official reports, the two countries have made progress together on an agreement for nearshoring.” Several people, like Janio Rosales, who

Read More

Issue Feb 08-14 2023: The Washington Post recently reported that the United States and Mexican governments are negotiating a new immigration agreement that may benefit the United States but raises questions about Mexico’s interests.

Read More

Issue Feb 08-14 2023: Immigration and emigration from Guatemala are topics that Guatemalan politicians have not yet fully addressed.

Read More

Issue Feb 08-14 2023: The Honduran chancellor, Eduardo Enrique Reina, has announced that a date is being worked out for the country’s president, Xiomara Castro, to travel to the United States and visit detention centers for children that are on the border with Mexico. The U.S. government has confirmed its willingness to arrange for Castro

Read More
image_pdfimage_print
TOP