Argentina Protesters Seek Justice for Victims of Live-Streamed Femicide
- Thousands protested in Buenos Aires on September 27, 2025, demanding justice for Morena Verdi, Brenda Del Castillo, and Lara Gutierrez, who were murdered and found buried in Florencio Varela.
- The triple femicide followed the victims being lured into a van on September 19, then tortured and killed by a drug trafficking gang as a warning to others, with parts livestreamed to a private group.
- Protests led by feminist groups such as Ni Una Menos spanned multiple Argentine cities, highlighting widespread gender violence amid criticism of President Milei's neoliberal policies and the state's weakening role.
- Authorities arrested twelve suspects, including five by September 26, and are investigating Pequeño J, believed to have ordered the killings, while family members and activists called for accountability and stronger gender violence policies.
- The protests and investigations underscore Argentina's ongoing crisis of gender-based violence linked to organized crime and economic decline worsened by policy cutbacks, with demands for justice and systemic change continuing.
184 Articles
184 Articles
There are the faces and names of Brenda del Castillo, Morena Verdi and Lara Gutiérrez on the signs of the thousands of people who protested in Buenos Aires on Saturday to ask for justice for their feminicide. The march, which crossed the streets of the capital and other cities of Argentina, was called by the feminist movements to demand truth and justice for the three girls victims of a crime that is shaking the country. "We are here for them an…
Thousands of people took to the streets of Buenos Aires on Saturday to demand justice for three girls, alleged victims of a drug cartel. All three were tortured and then murdered by criminals who streamed the incident live on a closed social media group.
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