By Linda Cooper and James Hodge National Catholic Reporter, Aug. 18, 2014 They set out -- alone, terrified and at the utter mercy of gangs and criminal
The arduous journey from Tegucigalpa, Honduras to the border city of McAllen, Texas stretches some 1,500 long miles. To walk it at an average pace—withou
"... Norman Quijano, the mayor of San Salvador and candidate for the right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) party ... incited the crowd not to
"... By serving as an echo-chamber for ideologues like Abrams ... outlets like the Post deflect attention from real threats posed to the population by the
Photo: Colonel Jim Steele In 2004, with the war in Iraq going from bad to worse, the US drafted in a veteran of Central America's dirty wars to help set up
By New Times staff Broward-Palm Beach New Times, November 2, 2012 Ricardo Poma, proprietor of the Transal Corp., linked to the planc crash in Nicaragua th
Romney scrutinized over investments from Salvadoran families that ran a corrupt government, 12 years of murderous civil war and death squads. By Terry J. A
" ... According to the Salt Lake Tribune, 'about $6.5 million of $37 million that established the company (Bain) came from wealthy El Salvadoran families l
" ... I currently work under the auspices of the Bianca Jagger Human Rights Foundation (BJHRF), along with with legal experts, NGOs, and academics, to ...
By Daya Gamage | Asian Tribune | November 2, 2010 WikiLeaks disclosed US military- maintained Iraq War Logs show that a "Wolf Battalion" or "Wolf Brigade
By Carlos Dada | Miami Herald | October 30, 2p10 When I embarked six years ago into investigating the killing of Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero, I d
Journalist leads former guerrilla army to left's first presidential victory in country's historyJust over 17 years since the 1992 Peace Accords brought an
arirusila.blogactiv.eu Posted by AriRusila on 20/10/08 Helena Ranta Forensic dentist Helena Ranta says that officials of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs
Larry D. Hatfield and Susan Ferriss OF THE EXAMINER STAFF Fri, Dec. 1, 1995 The U.S. government may have paid off a San Francisco man and another former