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Guatemala President Fumes Over Infected Deportees From US
GUATEMALA CITY (AP) — Guatemala’s president questioned his country’s relationship with the United States, revealing frustration over the U.S. continuing to send deportees infected with COVID-19 to a country struggling to manage the crisis.
Cuba’s Top Diplomat for US Relations Says Ties at New Low
HAVANA (AP) — Cuba’s top diplomat in charge of relations with the United States said Thursday relations have sunk to a new low, and potentially could sink even lower with the appointment of Florida Sen. Marco Rubio as acting chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee.
Farmworkers: NOW They Are Essential? (OPINION)
Despite their shiny new label, however, the dystopian reality hidden in the letter is that half of all agricultural workers in the U.S. are undocumented.
As Virus Swamps Peru, Venezuelan Migrants Collect the Dead
LIMA, Peru (AP) — Faustino López was terrified after his wife, Angélica, was hospitalized with the coronavirus last month.
World Central Kitchen Responds to Statement by La Morada Restaurant
“The assertions made in this statement are either a distortion of the truth, or simply not true at all,” WCK said in a statement.
Mayor Says Mexico City Will Begin Gradual Reopening June 1
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Even as Mexico saw its largest one-day death toll, Mexico City announced Wednesday it will begin a gradual reopening June 1.
Iran Pushes Burgeoning Businesses With Venezuela as a Right
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Iran’s ambassador to Venezuela said Wednesday that the two nations, both under increasing U.S. pressure, are exercising their right to trade freely in a deal that includes shipping the South American nation five tankers of gasoline to relieve deep shortages.
NEW POLL: 1 in 4 US Latinos Know Somebody Infected by COVID-19
“More disconcerting is the fact that a startling high percentage of Latinos —27%— report that they know someone who wants a test, but has been unable to get tested,” a Latino Decisions memo about the poll said.
As Latinos Are Among Hardest Hit by Pandemic, Leaders Expect Federal Census Undercount
Latino leaders recently told The Hill that census outreach was a top priority in predominantly-Latino South Texas before the pandemic struck.
Citing ICE COVID-19 Lawsuit, Lawyers and Advocates Continue Call for Release of Migrant Detainees From New Jersey Prison
Besides updates from the legal team about the status of the lawsuit, the press conference also included remarks by individuals who have been in contact with the four plaintiffs, including those were working on the case of plaintiff Héctor García Mendoza, who advocates say is asthmatic.
ACLU Files Lawsuit Against Puerto Rico’s ‘Fake News’ Laws
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — The American Civil Liberties Union announced on Wednesday it is representing two journalists in challenging Puerto Rico laws that makes it a crime to share information about emergencies on the island that the U.S. territory’s government considers “fake news.”
The Moving Border: Part One, The North (A Latino USA Podcast)
Latino USA visits Ciudad Juárez, where they tell the story of a mother and daughter who have been mired in a web of changing policy and subjected to ongoing violence.
Lives Lost: ‘A Nightmare,’ Says Parishioner Who Lost Parents
NEW YORK (AP) — Reyna Martínez kept silent when the coronavirus killed her mother. She would hide in a bathroom and cry to keep the secret from her father.
Why I Am a Liberal Member of Puerto Rico’s Statehood Party (OPINION)
My faith in the PNP and the statehood movement as a whole was resurrected primarily because of one person: former senator Zoé Laboy.
Long-Suffering California GOP Sees Revival in Rare House Win
LOS ANGELES (AP) — California Republicans have been waiting for a turning point and some think it’s finally arrived.
Biden Hires Chávez Granddaughter to Help on Latino Outreach
WASHINGTON (AP) — Joe Biden’s presidential campaign is bringing on the granddaughter of civil rights leader César Chávez as a senior adviser to help with Latino outreach and building out its operation in the states.
Mexico City Virus Deaths Triple Official Toll, Group Says
MEXICO CITY (AP) — A registry of death certificates in Mexico City suggests there were 4,577 cases where doctors mentioned coronavirus or COVID-19 as a possible or probable cause of death, more than three times the official death toll in the city.
Statement From La Morada With Regards of Ending Our Relationship With World Central Kitchen
Aid efforts should be grounded on principles of social justice, mutuality, working class and poor people empowerment instead of policing, charity and profit.
In Argentina, the Next Generation Finds Its Voice
Ofelia Fernández is the youngest lawmaker in Latin America. Despite online hate, she’s leading the youth movement for the political rights of women.
‘This Is War’: Virus Charges Beyond Latin American Hot Spots
QUITO, Ecuador (AP) — Beyond the hot spots of Brazil and Mexico, the coronavirus is threatening to overwhelm Latin American cities stretching from Chile to the Colombian Amazon in an alarming sign that the pandemic may be only at the start of its destructive march through the region.
AT&T Quits Venezuela as US Sanctions Force It to Defy Maduro
MIAMI (AP) — AT&T said Tuesday it will immediately ditch Venezuela’s pay TV market as U.S. sanctions prohibit its DirecTV platform from broadcasting channels that it is required to carry by the socialist administration of Nicolás Maduro.