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A family collect the body of their daughter - killed during a Salvadoran Air Force bombardment around the town of Carolina, Morazan. Badly injured, she had been evacuated by the army but was returned three days later in a coffin, March 1984.
1media/Family Collect the body of their daughter_thumb.jpeg2022-02-08T19:26:21+00:00Gina Leonf0ac362b4453e23ee8a94b1a49fbeeafde2a0a4912“El Salvador: Between War and Revolution” - photographer photographs taken by Mike Goldwater during the Salvadoran Civil War, a 12-years long conflict resulted in the death of more than 75 thousand people and the displacement of over one million.plain2022-02-08T19:41:32+00:00NORTHERN MORAZAN PROVINCE, EL SALVADOR, MARCH 1984: A family collect the body of their daughter - killed during a Salvadorean Airforce bombardment around the town of Carolina.El SalvadorDEATHburdencarrycoffinel salvadorfatherparentsouth americaMike GoldwaterThis family have come to collect the body of their daughter who was killed during a Salvadoran Airforce bombardment.SVEl Salvador1Gina Leonf0ac362b4453e23ee8a94b1a49fbeeafde2a0a49
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12022-02-08T19:07:25+00:001992 Civil War in El Salvador Ends9Treaty is Signed in Mexicoplain2022-02-08T20:22:17+00:00https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1992-01-17-mn-198-story.html. - by RICHARD BOUDREAUX 1992 "The president of El Salvador and 10 leftist guerrilla leaders shook hands in a tearful encounter Thursday as they signed a treaty ending their tiny Central American nation’s 12-year conflict, the Western Hemisphere’s bloodiest legacy of the Cold War."
Scholarly article about the aftermath of 1992 Peace Treaty Robin Maria DeLugan (2005) Peace, Culture, and Governance in Post-Civil War El Salvador (1992-2000), Journal of Human Rights.
Peace, Culture, and Governance in Post–Civil War El Salvador (1992–2000) "The 1992 signing of the San Andrés Peace Accords in Chapultepec, Mexico ended the 12-year-long civil conflict in El Salvador that cost more than 100,000 lives. The roots of this civil conflict are deep, and to frame the civil conflict in terms of Cold War ideologies is at best a partial explanation. Small oligarchies supported by dictatorial regimes, widespread poverty and social marginalization, the steady removal of lands from the control of rural populations, and the negation of an indigenous population are constant factors that characterize El Salvador. These factors have motivated popular unrest in El Salvador for more than two centuries."