2.942 မြင်ကွင်းများ
Faced with a lack of prosecution of those accused of crimes against humanity committed during Argentina’s military dictatorship, family members and descendants of the country’s estimated 30,000 disappeared took action. In the mid-1990s, they began gathering outside of accused perpetrators’ homes and workplaces to publicly shame them and raise awareness about the government’s systematic and brutal targeting of its people — and how it had gone unpunished. The human rights group HIJOS (Sons and Daughters for Identity and Justice Against Forgetfulness and Silence) led and labeled this direct-action style of protest “escrache,” or exposure.
လွှတ်ပေး: Dec 04, 2020
အချိန်: 14 မိနစ်များ
ဘာသာစကား: Español
စတူဒီယို: The New York Times
နိုင်ငံ: United States of America
သွန်း: Camilo Juarez Pais