
Hundreds of women in Havana rallied against the U.S. energy embargo, but the scene says more than that. It shows how Cuban women, and by extension many Latin American women, are still asked to absorb scarcity, defend dignity, and perform national endurance in public.
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Keiko Fujimori leads Peru’s crowded presidential field, but her polling strength reflects more than campaign momentum. It is shaped by memory, fear, a desire for order, and a political surname that represents stability for some voters and a warning of democratic erosion for others.
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In Mexico, Samara Martínez’s campaign to decriminalize euthanasia has transcended a private illness narrative. It has evolved into a regional examination of dignity, religion, medicine, and state authority, challenging Latin America to determine who defines mercy at the end of life.
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Fifty years after the coup, Argentina continues to wrestle with its lost loved ones, stolen children, and what justice really means. With state support fading and denial growing louder, the Mothers’ weekly march in Buenos Aires feels less like a ritual and more like a warning.
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