
Ana Vanessa Herrero
Articles
-
1 month ago |
estadao.com.br | Ana Vanessa Herrero |Silvia Foster-Frau
Ele não sabia quando os dias começavam e terminavam dentro das quatro paredes amarelas, descascadas e sem janelas de sua cela na prisão de Guantánamo. Diuvar Uzcátegui os registrava fazendo um pequeno rasgo na última página em branco de uma Bíblia após cada terceira refeição. O livro foi dado a ele pelos guardas militares, junto com um cobertor e um colchão de espuma de 2 cm de espessura para dormir. Seu banheiro era um balde conectado a uma torneira na cela.
-
1 month ago |
washingtonpost.com | Silvia Foster-Frau |Ana Vanessa Herrero
No podía distinguir cuándo comenzaban y cuándo terminaban los días dentro de las cuatro paredes amarillas, peladas y sin ventanas, de su celda en Guantánamo. Diuvar Uzcátegui llevaba la cuenta del tiempo haciendo una pequeña marca en la última página en blanco de una Biblia después de cada tercera comida. Los guardias militares le habían dado el libro, junto con una manta y una colchoneta de espuma de 3/4 de pulgadas (1,9 cms) para dormir.
-
1 month ago |
washingtonpost.com | Silvia Foster-Frau |Ana Vanessa Herrero
Cuando llegó el primer vuelo de inmigrantes a la base de Guantánamo, la secretaria de Seguridad Nacional, Kristi L. Noem, dijo que eran “los peores de los peores”. El secretario de Defensa, Pete Hegseth, los calificó como criminales de “alta amenaza” que habían cruzado la frontera para traer “violencia y caos a nuestras comunidades”.
-
1 month ago |
detroitnews.com | Silvia Foster-Frau |Ana Vanessa Herrero
NATIONSilvia Foster-Frau, Ana Vanessa HerreroWashington PostView Comments He couldn’t tell when the days started and ended within the windowless, peeling yellow four walls of his prison cell in Guantánamo. Diuvar Uzcátegui kept track of them by putting a small tear in the last, blank page of a Bible after every third meal. The book was given to him by the military guards along with a blanket and a ¾-inch foam pad to sleep on. He went to the bathroom in a bucket connected to a tap in the cell.
-
1 month ago |
washingtonpost.com | Silvia Foster-Frau |Ana Vanessa Herrero
He couldn’t tell when the days started and ended within the windowless, peeling yellow four walls of his prison cell in Guantánamo. Diuvar Uzcátegui kept track of them by putting a small tear in the last, blank page of a Bible after every third meal. The book was given to him by the military guards along with a blanket and a ¾-inch foam pad to sleep on. He went to the bathroom in a bucket connected to a tap in the cell. And though he couldn’t see his fellow detainees, he could hear them.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →