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Guatemala’s poor indigenous people. After centuries of persecution, plight of indigenous people remain largely unchanged. Published On 19 Apr 2010 19 Apr 2010.
More than 400 people were kidnapped in Guatemala in 2008, but the country’s public ministry reported that the number of kidnappings had decreased by 65 percent in 2015.
Fox News host Tucker Carlson has said that it should be "pretty simple" for the U.S. government to just tell the Central American country of Guatemala to "stop off-loading poor people" who later ...
The numbers are revealing. Forty percent of Guatemalans do not have access to running water inside their home. And for ...
Widespread lack of access to safe drinking water and adequate sanitation services puts the health and other rights of ...
Six in 10 Guatemalans live in poverty, and more than 50% of the country's poor are indigenous people, according to the World Bank. Twenty percent of Guatemala's population lives in extreme poverty.
Guatemala’s topography and geography mean its people are acutely vulnerable to multiple natural hazards—earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis, landslides, floods, droughts, tropical storms ...
Guatemala’s indigenous people grow impatient with their champion ... They make up 44% of the population and live largely in poverty. More than half have homes that lack indoor plumbing.
Tucsonan Mary Jane Henley, a member of the board of directors for Adopt-a-Village in Guatemala, is making customized masks to benefit the nonprofit organization’s COVID-19 Crisis Relief Fund.