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In Peru, a rural schoolteacher rises from obscurity to the presidency
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Pedro Castillo: From rural schoolteacher to Peru s presidency
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News analysis: U.S. expands fight against Central American corruption. Will it stem immigration? By Tracy Wilkinson, Los Angeles Times
Published: July 18, 2021, 4:30pm
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WASHINGTON – The Biden administration is significantly expanding its offensive against corruption and other “root causes” of illegal immigration from Central America, but its new tactics are far from guaranteed to work any better than past failed efforts.
Officials cast the fight against corruption and “bad governance” as the most essential component in improving conditions in El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala and probably the most difficult to win after decades of struggling democracies, control by rapacious elites and sclerotic legal institutions.
Saturday, 17 Jul 2021 07:51 AM MYT
Emigres in Little Havana wave American and Cuban flags as they react to reports of protests in Cuba against the deteriorating economy, in Miami, Florida July 11, 2021. Reuters pic
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HAVANA, July 17 Thousands of Cubans protesting against their government managed to catch the attention of US President Joe Biden, but they have been left deflated by his response.
Most Cubans even those that had never heard of him welcomed Biden’s presidency after four years of worsening relations and increasing sanctions under his predecessor Donald Trump.
Daily Times
July 17, 2021
Thousands of Cubans protesting against their government managed to catch the attention of US President Joe Biden, but they have been left deflated by his response.
Most Cubans even those that had never heard of him welcomed Biden’s presidency after four years of worsening relations and increasing sanctions under his predecessor Donald Trump. Prior to his election, Biden had told online opposition news outlet Cibercuba that he would eliminate Trump’s restrictions on remittances and travel, which he said had harmed Cubans and separated families.
But six months into his tenure, Cubans are still waiting for concrete action to back up the promises. “Obviously, he’s disappointed many (Cubans) who hoped, not that he would return to the (Barack) Obama policies, but that he would reverse Trump’s crudest measures,” Cuban academic and former diplomat Carlos Alzugaray told AFP. “There’s no doubt there was a lot of expectation over many things”
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