Central America
Panamanian nurses claim that they are not being paid during the pandemic
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Yesterday, nurses in Panama complained about the lack of payment to professionals hired during the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition, they highlighted the poor working conditions in which frontline workers fighting against the Coronavirus were working.
Ana María Reyes, president of the National Association of Panamanian Nurses (ANEP), demanded that President Laurentino Cortizo and other relevant authorities take “the necessary steps to have the necessary funds available to comply with the working conditions, to make payments due and to honor commitments.”
“Nurses do not want to be seen only as heroes, we demand to be treated with respect, justice and equity,” said Reyes. The reason for the salary irregularity is the “contingency professional services” contract signed by nurses during the pandemic with the government, which runs for three or six months. This, according to ANEP, makes them work “in constant uncertainty.”
Central America
El Salvador records 845 homicide-free days under President Bukele’s administration
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In the 68 months of President Nayib Bukele’s administration, authorities have reported a total of 845 homicide-free days. According to the Security Cabinet, this achievement is attributed to government measures such as the Territorial Control Plan and the state of exception.
Police statistics indicate that between March 27, 2022, and February 25, 2025, during the state of exception, 732 days without homicides have been recorded. As part of this strategy, security forces have arrested 87,000 gang members and their collaborators.
The latest homicide-free day was recorded by the police on Tuesday, February 25, marking the 22nd day of the month and the 48th of the year without violent deaths.
Central America
Arévalo calls corruption the “fuel of inequality” and reaffirms commitment to public transparency
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Guatemala’s President, Bernardo Arévalo, stated on Friday that corruption is “the food of misery” in his country and reaffirmed his government’s commitment to continuing to strengthen public spending transparency.
During the first anniversary of the National Commission Against Corruption (CNC) established by his administration, the president expressed his satisfaction with the progress made.
“The road has been difficult,” he said, “but I am greatly satisfied with the fight against corruption, which is the fuel of inequality and the food of misery,” the president declared before members of the international community and government officials.
Arévalo also mentioned that the people who elected him in 2023 for a four-year term that began on January 14, 2024, “demand that we combat corruption.”
Central America
Zúñiga hopes CIDH experts can help investigate intellectual authors of Berta Cáceres’ murder
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Bertha Zúñiga, daughter of the murdered Honduran environmentalist Berta Cáceres, expressed her hope on Friday to EFE that the expert group appointed by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (CIDH) will help investigate the authorship of the crime to “heal the wounds” and rebuild the social fabric in indigenous communities affected by the hydroelectric project her mother opposed.
The Interdisciplinary Group of Independent Experts (GIEI) represents an “effort to exhaust the investigations” into the responsibilities of all individuals involved in Cáceres’ murder, as well as in the “violence suffered” from the implementation of the Agua Zarca hydroelectric project, led by the company Desarrollos Energéticos S.A. (DESA), emphasized Zúñiga.
“We hope that, with the collaboration of the prosecutorial entities, (the experts) will effectively collaborate to move forward on what we have proposed and demanded for many years: formally requiring the intellectual authors of this crime and analyzing the related crimes,” including corruption and other violations, as well as proposing a comprehensive reparation plan for the victims of the hydroelectric project,” Zúñiga explained.
The CIDH appointed a group of four experts from Argentina, Chile, the United States, and Guatemala on Friday to provide technical assistance to Honduras in investigating the intellectual authorship of Cáceres’ murder, which occurred on March 2, 2016, while she was sleeping in her home in La Esperanza, despite the multiple death threats she had reported due to her opposition to the Agua Zarca project.
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