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tv   [untitled]    August 19, 2016 5:30am-5:47am EDT

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>> [speaking spanish] just one in spanish, please. >> very briefly the first was in
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the first book for example if the 72 migrants that were kill killed. how have the receptions of the book then in spanish? >> my first answer is no. i've never used that way when i called on migration. i never saw the indigenous population. i didn't pretend to end the work about migration across mexico is but was a product of the coverage that needs to be done. it's changing all the time, so no.
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yes i dedicate some chronicles to talk about indigenous populations in guatemala. the state of north the government say in 2012 they are leaving a lot of communities in the area so there is a huge success of the government. when they move from that area it is indigenous who leave their
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because they don't have the land to leave to and of course if you see a plane near you i'm going to give you 100 that's normal, that's fair. you have to do that if you live like this kind of people. so, yes there is a chronicle about life and of course in guatemala like in mexico it is easier in the indigenous population for the same reasons.
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>> [inaudible] supposedly it is going to remember in spanish we make it a process. i thought anybody going to read the book because it was about, nobody. nobody -- i think there's a good
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acceptance here in the united states. the read the books. i appreciate. without no solution. i think we have time for these questions and then we will have to start wrapping up. what solutions do you think could be taken to stem the
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violence? to see any particular signal of change in the country, no. i don't think the solutions apply for the real combat. no. my answer is no. >> [speaking spanish] [speaking spanish] >> why is there so little mention how it has affected both
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mexico and central america? >> it is complex to explain but i think they would see hi a lot with the paper mexico is still developing right now in the part of the country. yes, i have the same answer. it doesn't explain all. it is an approximation of the organized crime. of course i say mexican government. if the organized crime has no contact with government, it's not organized crime. if you don't have contact with
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the government. >> there is a fabulous artist we work with very closely for talks about organized crime which is the government and then you have the transnational crime which we haven't talked about today the transnational corporations extracting the technologies handle this and it's killing people and so forth, so you have all these crimes going on but the only organized crime of th that. the mexican organization of
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crime of the 28 crimes that you can connect under a big don't connect just one. the role of mexico with the migration of central america is more now than in mexico. to talk about the train and these cannot be when the united states goes down. >> they gave them money to
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enforce. right now i just have an assumption that it's pretty logical. >> i don't think anybody on -- >> one more -- [speaking spanish]
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[speaking spanish] [speaking spanish] [speaking spanish] looking at central america which was very important to.
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especially in the context of mexico. having applied for the last 20 years. they are from one to another to another. [inaudible] if i have the answer i write another book just with those.
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what happened in central america because it is very diverse and you cannot compare coaster rica it's not. it's the biggest construction of the state. that's the first chapter of the book. the state's. [speaking spanish] i think that's a huge problem
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that society was built i covered to police massacres and one of eight people [inaudible] if the crossfire but for example, 16 years than they have just one bullet inside her mouth and there's another. there is that massacre on the
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human rights reports. they survived the massacre. she hears how his son begged for his life and she just talked with us. she hears how the police told her son and just talked with journalists because we counter so tha what does that tell you t the state you have a mother who doesn't believe in the state even after they killed her son.
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what can happen in a society where a mother in the best of the case goes with journalists and publish the story that we have about how to publish the story. the states and of the government and institutions. [applause]

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