Massacres have increased in the month of September in Colombia with the main victims being young individuals.
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Six out of ten people who were murdered in Mexico in 2019 had obtained a high school diploma while a quarter of the victims were under the age of thirty.
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In the Amazon of Peru, activists for human rights and for the environment are especially vulnerable to being murdered.
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Historically, capitalism has created criminality because of the need to survive the “death sentence” of peasantry and poverty.
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Article 218 of the Colombian Constitution defines the national police as a “permanent armed body of civilian nature… whose primary purpose is to maintain the necessary conditions for the exercise of public rights and freedoms.”
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In Honduras, established structures can facilitate high-profile organized crimes.
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After the death of Javier Ordóñez, Colombian youth have taken to the streets to protest against police brutality.
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The Salón del Nunca Más at the corner of a plaza in Granada, Colombia, is a small monument conceived and managed by local victims of violence, particularly from guerrilla and paramilitary groups in the late 20th century.
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Artículo 19 released new data about the amount of aggression that journalists received in 2020 in comparison to previous years.
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The issue is visible now; police brutality is a reality in Brazil as records show a 7% increase in cases.
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