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She Took On Colombia’s Soda Industry. Then She Was Silenced.

Prensa/medios de comunicación

Descripción

BOGOTÁ, Colombia — It began with menacing phone calls, strange malfunctions of the office computers, and men in parked cars photographing the entrance to the small consumer advocacy group’s offices.

Then at dusk one day last December, Dr. Esperanza Cerón, the head of the organization, said she noticed two strange men on motorcycles trailing her Chevy sedan as she headed home from work. She tried to lose them in Bogotá’s rush-hour traffic, but they edged up to her car and pounded on the windows.

Período13 nov. 2017

Contribuciones de los medios

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Contribuciones de los medios

  • NombreShe Took On Colombia’s Soda Industry. Then She Was Silenced.
    Grado de reconocimientoInternacional
    Nombre/canal del medio de comunicaciónThe New York Times
    Tipo de medio de comunicaciónWeb
    País/TerritorioEstados Unidos
    Fecha13/11/17
    DescripciónBOGOTÁ, Colombia — It began with menacing phone calls, strange malfunctions of the office computers, and men in parked cars photographing the entrance to the small consumer advocacy group’s offices.

    Then at dusk one day last December, Dr. Esperanza Cerón, the head of the organization, said she noticed two strange men on motorcycles trailing her Chevy sedan as she headed home from work. She tried to lose them in Bogotá’s rush-hour traffic, but they edged up to her car and pounded on the windows.
    Productor/autorWesley Tomaselli from Bogotá, Anahad O’Connor from San Francisco and Ayesha Venkataraman from Mumbai, India.
    URLhttps://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/13/health/colombia-soda-tax-obesity.html?searchResultPosition=5
    PersonasLuis Fernando Gomez Gutierrez