Mexico ignores children's rights
The study is based on information provided by the Unicef, the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, and the United Nations Development Program
The study is based on information provided by the Unicef, the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, and the United Nations Development Program
The list Encinas provided did not seem to include the 38 bodies recently found in Guadalajara
Mario Marín and Kamel Nacif are both wanted by the Interpol for the torture of Lydia Cacho
Mexico’s government put out a statement last month, claiming that there is enough medication for those who have been diagnosed with HIV
Its oil richness has diminished, while the economic and monetary policies have sparked an unprecedented inflation
In 2006, municipal, state, and federal officials sexually attacked and tortured at least 11 women who were protesting against the construction of a new airport in the State of Mexico, then governed by Peña Nieto
The Inter-American Court of Human Rights ruled that the Mexican government was guilty of sexual torture against 11 women from San Salvador Atenco in 2006
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“There’s no money except from my pocket,” said the 65-year-old, who has had an armed bodyguard since one trafficker came to the shelter demanding to see the woman he had exploited
Lydia Cacho released a book denouncing a pederasty and pedophilia network, where Kamel Nacif was involved