• About
    • Board of Directors
    • Staff
    • Meet our Donors
    • News
  • Issues
    • Safety
    • Opportunity
    • Reporting
    • Recognition
    • Equity
  • Programs
    • Reporting Fellowships
      • Elizabeth Neuffer Fellowship
      • ¡Exprésate! LGBTQI+ Reporting Initiative
      • Gender Justice Reporting Initiative
      • Global Health Reporting Initiative
      • Round Earth Media
    • Grants & Funds
      • Fund For Women Journalists
      • Fund for Indigenous Journalists: Reporting on MMIWG2T
      • Kari Howard Fund for Narrative Journalism
      • Kim Wall Memorial Fund
      • Reproductive Rights Reporting Fund
      • Reproductive Health, Rights and Justice in the Americas
    • Physical & Digital Safety
      • Online Abuse and Harassment
      • Hostile Environment Training
      • Next Gen Safety Trainers
      • Women in Politics and Media
    • Mentorship & Professional Development
      • Gwen Ifill Mentorship Program
      • Fellowship Program for Afghan Women Journalists in Exile
    • Emergency Assistance
      • Emergency Fund for Women Journalists
      • Black Journalists Therapy Relief Fund
      • Alex Duval Smith Memorial Fund
    • Past Programs
  • Reporting
  • Community
  • Awards
    • Anja Niedringhaus Award
    • Courage in Journalism Award
    • Gwen Ifill Award
    • Annenberg Justice for Women Journalists Award
  • Resources
    • Self Care & Trauma
    • Research
    • Impact Reports
    • Webinars
  • Search
Search Donate
Reporting

Honduras, il volto violento dell’America Latina

July 5, 2017 | Francesca Volpi | L'Espresso

La scena del crimine dell’assassinio di due fratelli, Carlos Amador 22 anni, e Edwin Amador, 20 anni, assassinati a sangue freddo per le strade del quartiere di Suyapa, a TeguciagalpaDue ragazzi di notte nella piccola comunità Guadalupe Carney, fuori la città di Tocoa nel dipartimento di Colon, in Honduras

 

Omicidi di strada, gang di giovanissimi che controllano interi quartieri, regolamenti di conti, rapine ed estorsioni. Minacce ai giornalisti, sindacalisti, attivisti dei diritti umani. E’ la quotidianità nel Paese centro americano dopo il colpo di stato militare del 2009, raccontata da queste immagini.
Fotoreportage prodotto con il sostegno di International Women Media Foundationdi Francesca Volpi

© Riproduzione riservata
About the Author

Francesca Volpi

Francesca Volpi is a freelance Italian photographer based in Rome. She focuses on underreported social issues and conflicts. She’s been covering Ukraine since the beginning of the Revolution movement in… Read More.

Original Publication
L'Espresso
Related Topics
Conflict
More From This Author
‘I couldn’t have the baby’: Honduras’s poor suffer most from draconian abortion laws Derecho a la salud reproductiva en Honduras Derecho a la salud reproductiva en Honduras See All

Sign Up For Our Mailing List

Mission

We unleash the potential of women journalists as champions of press freedom to transform the global news media.

Address

1625 K Street NW, Suite 1275
Washington, DC 20006, USA

Contact Us

info@iwmf.org
(+1) 202-496-1992

Connect
Privacy Terms of Service

Copyright © 2023 International Women's Media Foundation. All Rights Reserved.
Nonprofit Web Design by NMC.