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News Article

Political imprisonment is once again haunting Latin America, with El Salvador emerging as a stark new example under President Nayib Bukele. Once praised for modernizing the country, Bukele has instead refined the authoritarian tactics of the past—using mass arrests, smear campaigns, and the state of exception to silence dissent. Lawyers, journalists, and community leaders who dare to criticize the government now face fabricated charges and indefinite detention. Among them is Ruth López, the renowned anti-corruption lawyer declared a prisoner of conscience after her disappearance and arrest in May 2025.

Behind each detention lies a message: in Bukele’s El Salvador, speaking out has a price. Reports reveal over 430 deaths in custody, families left without answers, and a justice system stripped of independence. As fear drives activists into exile and civic space collapses, international voices warn that the country’s democratic facade is crumbling. Calls are growing for global pressure—from the OAS to the United States—to demand accountability and the release of political prisoners before the last remnants of Salvadoran democracy vanish entirely.

News Article

Political imprisonment is surging in El Salvador under President Bukele, targeting lawyers, journalists, and activists who dare to speak out. Once a symbol of post-war democracy, the country now uses modern authoritarian tactics—forced disappearances, fake charges, and harsh prison conditions—to silence dissent. The case of Ruth López is just one of many. As fear spreads and critics flee, the world must decide how to respond.

News Article

On September 29, 2025, Huabing Xie became the 23rd person to die in ICE custody that fiscal year, making 2025 the deadliest year for ICE detainees since 2004. The Trump administration’s aggressive detention policies have led to a nearly 50% increase in the ICE detainee population, now around 60,000. Overcrowding, medical neglect, poor conditions, mental health crises, and even gun violence have contributed to the spike in deaths. Despite protests and some court interventions, ICE faces little accountability, worsened by reduced oversight and limited transparency.

News Article

Karen Spring of the Honduras Solidarity Network exposes how Canadian and U.S.-backed tourism expansion has dispossessed Indigenous Garifuna communities along Honduras’ north coast. During 13 years of U.S. and Canadian support for corrupt, militarized “Narco Regimes,” tourism investors — many Canadian and American — illegally acquired Garifuna lands in Trujillo Bay. Now, as Garifuna communities reclaim their ancestral territories, Canadian investors and companies like NJOI are leading racist defamation campaigns against Garifuna leaders and OFRANEH, falsely portraying themselves as victims. The conflict highlights the ongoing colonial exploitation of Indigenous lands under the guise of “development” and tourism.

News Article

In November 2016, historic peace accords were signed between the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) and the government. But several factions (called "dissidents") broke off from the FARC and refused to lay down their weapons. One of the largest is the Second Marquetalia, a FARC dissident faction led by Ivan Marquez.  Another rebel group, the National Coordinator of the Bolivarian Army (CNEB) emerged from the Second Marquetalia.

Now, as a sign of goodwill during its peace talks with the government, the CNEB is handing over armaments. This process with the CNEB could become one of Petro's few concrete peace achievements.

News Article

In El Salvador, defending human rights is becoming a criminal act. Members of the NGO UNIDEHC—lawyers, advocates, and community leaders—are facing raids, arrests, and even Interpol notices for standing up to forced evictions and state abuses. Human rights defender Fidel Zavala now faces three criminal cases and was returned to the very prison where he had denounced torture and death. This isn’t just repression—it’s retaliation, and it sends a chilling message to anyone who dares to speak out.

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