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“Not one less”: feminists blame Milei for the lack of policies to protect women

Feminist organizations in Argentina carried out this Monday the annual “Not a less” march, the first under the Government of Javier Milei, who is responsible for promoting hatred towards women and “dissidence” through discourses and adjustment policies.

“The arrival of Javier Milei and Victoria Villarruel (vice president), their economic, political, social, material and symbolic measures constitute an attack on the entire Argentine people and in particular they express their denial of gender violence, hatred of women and sexogeneric disssidents,” said the organization Women of Latin American Matria (Mumalá), in a statement.

The marches were held in several cities of the country, with an epicenter in Buenos Aires, where thousands of people met in front of the National Congress to demand the declaration of a “national emergency” in terms of sexist violence and show their repudiation of Milei’s reforms.

“Because fundamental public policies were dismantled to prevent violence, while femicides do not stop growing. Approving the ‘base law’ deprives us of the right to retire and transforms us into a colony for transnational corporations. Because with hatred and hunger there is no freedom and because hunger is violence ‘Not One Less’,” the feminist collective remarked in a document.

So far this year, Argentina has registered 127 victims of sexist violence, one every 35 hours, of which 114 were femicides, three lesbicides, one trans/travesticide and nine linked femicides of adult men and children, according to the femicide observatory ‘Adriana Marisel Zambrano’, which runs the NGO La Casa del Encuentro.

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The numbers of women’s deaths are stable in a decade, since the National Registry of Femicides of the Supreme Court of Justice, which has been recording data since 2014, gave the figures of a total of 2,446 direct victims of femicide in the country with an average of almost 245 murders per year.

“The statistics do not go down with an absent State that shows no interest in developing public policies for the approach, assistance and prevention of gender violence and with an Undersecretariat for Protection against Gender Violence that seems to have no voice,” the NGO explained.

One of Milei’s first measures, after assuming as president on December 10, was the dissolution of the Ministry of Women, Gender and Diversity, which now became an undersecretary under the orbit of the Ministry of Justice without a declared action plan or budget.

The first “Not one less” was on June 3, 2015, after the case of Chiara Páez, a 14-year-old pregnant woman, who was beaten to death by her 17-year-old boyfriend because she refused to have an abortion.

After nine years, for the organizations the calls are still in force because the claims continue to be unfulfilled.

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International

Deportation flight lands in Venezuela; government denies criminal gang links

A flight carrying 175 Venezuelan migrants deported from the United States arrived in Caracas on Sunday. This marks the third group to return since repatriation flights resumed a week ago, and among them is an alleged member of a criminal organization, according to Venezuelan authorities.

Unlike previous flights operated by the Venezuelan state airline Conviasa, this time, an aircraft from the U.S. airline Eastern landed at Maiquetía Airport, on the outskirts of Caracas, shortly after 2:00 p.m. with the deportees.

Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello, who welcomed the returnees at the airport, stated that the 175 repatriated individuals were coming back “after being subjected, like all Venezuelans, to persecution” and dismissed claims that they belonged to the criminal organization El Tren de Aragua.

However, Cabello confirmed that “for the first time in these flights we have been carrying out, someone of significance wanted by Venezuelan justice has arrived, and he is not from El Tren de Aragua.” Instead, he belongs to a gang operating in the state of Trujillo. The minister did not disclose the individual’s identity or provide details on where he would be taken.

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International

Son of journalist José Rubén Zamora condemns father’s return to prison as “illegal”

Guatemalan court decides Wednesday whether to convict journalist José Rubén Zamora

The son of renowned journalist José Rubén Zamora Marroquín, José Carlos Zamora, has denounced as “illegal” the court order that sent his father back to a Guatemalan prison on March 3, after already spending 819 days behind barsover a highly irregular money laundering case.

“My father’s return to prison was based on an arbitrary and illegal ruling. It is also alarming that the judge who had granted him house arrest received threats,” José Carlos Zamora told EFE in an interview on Saturday.

The 67-year-old journalist was sent back to prison inside the Mariscal Zavala military barracks on March 3, when Judge Erick García upheld a Court of Appeals ruling that overturned the house arrest granted to him in October. Zamora had already spent 819 days in prison over an alleged money laundering case.

His son condemned the situation as “unacceptable”, stating that the judge handling the case “cannot do his job in accordance with the law due to threats against his life.”

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International

Miyazaki’s style goes viral with AI but at what cost?

This week, you may have noticed that everything—from historical photos and classic movie scenes to internet memes and recent political moments—has been reimagined on social media as Studio Ghibli-style portraits. The trend quickly went viral thanks to ChatGPT and the latest update of OpenAI’s chatbot, released on Tuesday, March 25.

The newest addition to GPT-4o has allowed users to replicate the distinctive artistic style of the legendary Japanese filmmaker and Studio Ghibli co-founder Hayao Miyazaki (My Neighbor Totoro, Spirited Away). “Today is a great day on the internet,” one user declared while sharing popular memes in Ghibli format.

While the trend has captivated users worldwide, it has also highlighted ethical concerns about AI tools trained on copyrighted creative works—and what this means for the livelihoods of human artists.

Not that this concerns OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, which has actively encouraged the “Ghiblification”experiments. Its CEO, Sam Altman, even changed his profile picture on the social media platform X to a Ghibli-style portrait.

Miyazaki, now 84 years old, is known for his hand-drawn animation approach and whimsical storytelling. He has long expressed skepticism about AI’s role in animation. His past remarks on AI-generated animation have resurfaced and gone viral again, particularly when he once said he was “utterly disgusted” by an AI demonstration.

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