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Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega (2nd l) with his children Luciana (l), Camila and Maurice Ortega (r).
AMERICAS

Nicaragua’s political dynasty: heirs in a golden cage

Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo have nine children, eight of whom work in the family business. They serve as government advisors, oversee an oil distribution business and run most of the country’s television channels and advertising companies benefiting from state contracts. But their movements are restricted, and they must respond at all times to the orders of their mother, the vice president

The Tamaulipas massacre: how the American Dream dies in Mexico
MIGRANT ROUTES TO THE US

The Tamaulipas massacre: how the American Dream dies in Mexico

Lorena Arroyo / Pablo Ferri / Hector Guerrero|Comitancillo (Guatemala) / Camargo (Tamaulipas, Mexico)|

They invested and risked everything in search of a better life, traveling to the United States without documents that would allow them to work. But they were found shot dead, and their bodies charred in the north of Mexico, a territory where migrants are preyed on by cartels and a corrupt system takes advantage of them. That’s how the hopes of a group of 15 Guatemalans turned into a nightmare. EL PAÍS has reconstructed their story

Workers erecting the new border wall in the desert of Baja California.
AMERICAS

Trump’s other walls

Lorena Arroyo / Hector Guerrero / Teresa de Miguel|Mexico City / Sonora / Baja California|

The most efficient barrier built by the 45th president of the United States is not made of cement or steel. Instead, what’s managed to stop both legal and illegal immigration is an intricate web of executive actions, administrative orders and agreements with other countries obtained through threats. The real and virtual hurdles built over the last four years have affected the lives of thousands

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