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  • Between 20 and 30 activists identified with anarchist ideology occupied the building of the Rectory of the National Autonomous University of Mexico breaking its armored windows with hammers and stones under David Alfaro Siqueiros' painting, on April 19th, 2013, at the end of a student demonstration in demand for the reinstatement of 5 students expelled from bachelor. During the occupation, a reporter was stripped of his video camera.. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Activists occupy UNAM Rectory
  • Between 20 and 30 activists identified with anarchist ideology occupied the building of the Rectory of the National Autonomous University of Mexico breaking its armored windows with hammers and stones under David Alfaro Siqueiros' painting, on April 19th, 2013, at the end of a student demonstration in demand for the reinstatement of 5 students expelled from bachelor. During the occupation, a reporter was stripped of his video camera.. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Activists occupy UNAM Rectory
  • Between 20 and 30 activists identified with anarchist ideology occupied the building of the Rectory of the National Autonomous University of Mexico breaking its armored windows with hammers and stones under David Alfaro Siqueiros' painting, on April 19th, 2013, at the end of a student demonstration in demand for the reinstatement of 5 students expelled from bachelor. During the occupation, a reporter was stripped of his video camera.. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Activists occupy UNAM Rectory
  • Between 20 and 30 activists identified with anarchist ideology occupied the building of the Rectory of the National Autonomous University of Mexico breaking its armored windows with hammers and stones under David Alfaro Siqueiros' painting, on April 19th, 2013, at the end of a student demonstration in demand for the reinstatement of 5 students expelled from bachelor. During the occupation, a reporter was stripped of his video camera.. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Activists occupy UNAM Rectory
  • Between 20 and 30 activists identified with anarchist ideology occupied the building of the Rectory of the National Autonomous University of Mexico breaking its armored windows with hammers and stones under David Alfaro Siqueiros' painting, on April 19th, 2013, at the end of a student demonstration in demand for the reinstatement of 5 students expelled from bachelor. During the occupation, a reporter was stripped of his video camera.. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Activists occupy UNAM Rectory
  • Activists protests against  forced disappearance in front of the Foreign Ministry in Mexico City on August 30th, 2012. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120830_Forced-Dissapearance_04.JPG
  • Activists protests against  forced disappearance in front of the Foreign Ministry in Mexico City on August 30th, 2012. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120830_Forced-Dissapearance_03.JPG
  • Activists hang a banner against forced dissapearance on the fences in front of the Foreign Ministry in Mexico City on August 30th, 2012. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120830_Forced-Dissapearance_01.JPG
  • Nadin Reyes, daughter of Edmundo Reyes Amaya holds a banner with a portrait of her father, on August 30th, 2012.  Edmundo, or Andrés Reyes Amaya, alleged member of the Revolutionary Popular Army, sociailst armed organization, was dissapeared my members of Mexican Army on May 25th, 2007. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120830_Forced-Dissapearance_05.JPG
  • Portraits of  forced disappearance victims are shown in front of the Foreign Ministry in Mexico City on August 30th, 2012. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120830_Forced-Dissapearance_02.JPG
  • An activists tries to calm hooded activist who threw stones and TV sets against riot cops. Activists from movement Yosoy132, among ex-prisoners from December 1st, 2012 riots,  protested outside Televisa building in Mexico City on May first, 2013, called by social media invitations. The protest reclaimed Televisa its responsibility on disinformation on its contents. The detonating of the protest is a joke made by a TV worker who mocked against activists who occupied UNAM Rectory, in front of TV cameras  on April 26th, 2013. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Protest outside Televisa
  • An activist carries a puppet of a dinosaur with the presidential band and a banner with Televisa logo.  Activists from movement #yosoy132 who allege electoral fraud in mexican presidencial elections protest in Mexico City streets on May 7th, 2012.  (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120707_Protest_03.jpg
  • Hooded activists throw stones and TV sets against riot cops. Activists from movement Yosoy132, among ex-prisoners from December 1st, 2012 riots,  protested outside Televisa building in Mexico City on May first, 2013, called by social media invitations. The protest reclaimed Televisa its responsibility on disinformation on its contents. The detonating of the protest is a joke made by a TV worker who mocked against activists who occupied UNAM Rectory, in front of TV cameras  on April 26th, 2013. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Protest outside Televisa
  • Hooded activists throw stones and TV sets against riot cops. Activists from movement Yosoy132, among ex-prisoners from December 1st, 2012 riots,  protested outside Televisa building in Mexico City on May first, 2013, called by social media invitations. The protest reclaimed Televisa its responsibility on disinformation on its contents. The detonating of the protest is a joke made by a TV worker who mocked against activists who occupied UNAM Rectory, in front of TV cameras  on April 26th, 2013. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Protest outside Televisa
  • Hooded activists throw stones and TV sets against riot cops. Activists from movement Yosoy132, among ex-prisoners from December 1st, 2012 riots,  protested outside Televisa building in Mexico City on May first, 2013, called by social media invitations. The protest reclaimed Televisa its responsibility on disinformation on its contents. The detonating of the protest is a joke made by a TV worker who mocked against activists who occupied UNAM Rectory, in front of TV cameras  on April 26th, 2013. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Protest outside Televisa
  • Activists from movement #yosoy132 who allege electoral fraud in mexican presidencial elections protest in Mexico City streets on May 7th, 2012.  (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120707_Protest_02.jpg
  • Activists from movement #yosoy132 who allege electoral fraud in mexican presidencial elections protest in Mexico City streets on May 7th, 2012.  (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120707_Protest_04.jpg
  • A statue is covered by a plastic bag in its head and labeled with a banner that reads 'Sopriana'.   Activists from movement #yosoy132 who allege electoral fraud in mexican presidencial elections protest in Mexico City streets on May 7th, 2012.  (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120707_Protest_01.jpg
  • Activists from movement Yosoy132, among ex-prisoners from December 1st, 2012 riots,  protested outside Televisa building in Mexico City on May first, 2013, called by social media invitations. The protest reclaimed Televisa its responsibility on disinformation on its contents. The detonating of the protest is a joke made by a TV worker who mocked against activists who occupied UNAM Rectory, in front of TV cameras  on April 26th, 2013. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Protest outside Televisa
  • Activists from movement Yosoy132, among ex-prisoners from December 1st, 2012 riots,  protested outside Televisa building in Mexico City on May first, 2013, called by social media invitations. The protest reclaimed Televisa its responsibility on disinformation on its contents. The detonating of the protest is a joke made by a TV worker who mocked against activists who occupied UNAM Rectory, in front of TV cameras  on April 26th, 2013. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Protest outside Televisa
  • Mexico: Activists of the movement #yosoy132 close the access to Televisa, in Mexico City.  Televisa, the main national television station is indicated to support the presidential candidate Enrique Peña Nieto who is alleged as winner in a controversial electoral process. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120727_Televisa_05.jpg
  • Activists from movement Yosoy132, among ex-prisoners from December 1st, 2012 riots,  protested outside Televisa building in Mexico City on May first, 2013, called by social media invitations. The protest reclaimed Televisa its responsibility on disinformation on its contents. The detonating of the protest is a joke made by a TV worker who mocked against activists who occupied UNAM Rectory, in front of TV cameras  on April 26th, 2013. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Protest outside Televisa
  • A couple kisses in front of riot cops. Activists from movement Yosoy132, among ex-prisoners from December 1st, 2012 riots,  protested outside Televisa building in Mexico City on May first, 2013, called by social media invitations. The protest reclaimed Televisa its responsibility on disinformation on its contents. The detonating of the protest is a joke made by a TV worker who mocked against activists who occupied UNAM Rectory, in front of TV cameras  on April 26th, 2013. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Protest outside Televisa
  • Activists from movement Yosoy132, among ex-prisoners from December 1st, 2012 riots,  protested outside Televisa building in Mexico City on May first, 2013, called by social media invitations. The protest reclaimed Televisa its responsibility on disinformation on its contents. The detonating of the protest is a joke made by a TV worker who mocked against activists who occupied UNAM Rectory, in front of TV cameras  on April 26th, 2013. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Protest outside Televisa
  • Mexico: Activists of the movement #yosoy132 close the access to Televisa, in Mexico City.  Televisa, the main national television station is indicated to support the presidential candidate Enrique Peña Nieto who is alleged as winner in a controversial electoral process. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120727_Televisa_06.jpg
  • Activists of the movement #yosoy132 close the access to Televisa, in Mexico City.  Televisa, the main national television station is indicated to support the presidential candidate Enrique Peña Nieto who is alleged as winner in a controversial electoral process. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120727_Televisa_04.jpg
  • Activists from movement Yosoy132, among ex-prisoners from December 1st, 2012 riots,  protested outside Televisa building in Mexico City on May first, 2013, called by social media invitations. The protest reclaimed Televisa its responsibility on disinformation on its contents. The detonating of the protest is a joke made by a TV worker who mocked against activists who occupied UNAM Rectory, in front of TV cameras  on April 26th, 2013. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    Protest outside Televisa
  • A member of the movement #yosoy132 sits near policemen where activists close the access to Televisa, in Mexico City on July 27th, 2012.  Televisa, the main national television station is indicated to support the presidential candidate Enrique Peña Nieto who is alleged as winner in a controversial electoral process on july 1st, 2012 . (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120727_Televisa_cierre.jpg
  • Activistas protestan el 8 de agosto de 2015 tras el asesinato en un departamento de la Ciudad de México de la trabajadora Alejandra Negrete,  la maquinista Yesenia Quiroz, la modelo colombiana Mile Virginia Martín, la activista Nadia Vera y el fotoperiodista Rubén Espinosa / Activists protest in Mexico City on August 8th, 2015, after the worker Alejandra Negrete, makeup artist Yesenia Quiroz, the Colombian model Mile Virginia Martín, the activist Nadia Vera  and photojournalist Rubén Espinosa, were killed in a loft in Mexico City.  (Foto: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_07_-20150808-linea-de-frente.JPG
  • Activists free access to metro subway, after Mexico City government announced an increase of 2 mexican pesos per passenger. The minimum daily wage in Mexico City is about 63 pesos. Since December (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20131210_metro-popular_03.JPG
  • Periodistas y activistas protestan en la Procuraduría General de la República tras el asesinato de 3 periodistas solo en l mes de marzo de 2018. Los periodistas son Cecilio Pineda en Guerrero; Ricardo Monlui en Veracruz y Miroslava Breach en Chihuahua / Journalists and activists protest in the General Attorney of the Republic (PGR in its Spanish initials) office in Mexico City after the assassination of three journalists only in the month of March 2017. The journalists are Cecilio Pineda in Guerrero; Ricardo Monlui in Veracruz and Miroslava Breach in Chihuahua.  (Foto: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_14_-20170325-linea-de-frente.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_16.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_06.JPG
  • Central American migrants have to make deadly, irregular and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train through Mexico during weeks to arrive to the U.S.  The train is nicknamed "La Bestia" (The Beast) due to its dangerousness.<br />
<br />
Each Holly Week, along with Mexican human rights activists, make religious and protest activities during the "Viacrucis del migrante". <br />
<br />
This year, they walk on foot, since the evening of Thursday April 17th, after the train where they travel, under Ferrocarriles del Istmo enterprise orders, unhooked the gonads with people and left them abandoned in Tenosique. After being left, they made the decision to continue their way on foot. <br />
<br />
They have traveled on foot more than 100 km (328 000 ft) from Tenosique, Tabasco demanding an end to the violence against migrants and free transit through Mexico. (Photo credit: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_06.JPG
  • Central American migrants have to make deadly, irregular and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train through Mexico during weeks to arrive to the U.S.  The train is nicknamed "La Bestia" (The Beast) due to its dangerousness.<br />
<br />
Each Holly Week, along with Mexican human rights activists, make religious and protest activities during the "Viacrucis del migrante". <br />
<br />
This year, they walk on foot, since the evening of Thursday April 17th, after the train where they travel, under Ferrocarriles del Istmo enterprise orders, unhooked the gonads with people and left them abandoned in Tenosique. After being left, they made the decision to continue their way on foot. <br />
<br />
They have traveled on foot more than 100 km (328 000 ft) from Tenosique, Tabasco demanding an end to the violence against migrants and free transit through Mexico. (Photo credit: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_02.JPG
  • Activists free access to metro subway, after Mexico City government announced an increase of 2 mexican pesos per passenger. The minimum daily wage in Mexico City is about 63 pesos. Since December (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20131210_metro-popular_02.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_13.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_11.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_09.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_05.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_02.JPG
  • Lesbian and homosexual couples and activists joined in the Eastern Bus Passengers Station (Terminal de Autobuses de Pasajeros de Oriente) to perform the "Besaton" (group kiss) in Mexico City on May 17th, 2012. The Besaton, a protest in the International Day against Homophobia is made after a female couple was expelled by policemen and private security from the place on May 13th.. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130517_besaton_05.JPG
  • Greenpeace activists assemble the word ?¡No!? (with the radiation symbol inserted into it) out of one thousand candles at the Plaza Lerdo, in central Xalapa. Xalapa is only 60 km away from the Laguna Verde Nuclear Power Plant, which has two reactors similar to those used at the stricken Fukushima-Daiichi Nuclear Plant. (Photo: Greenpeace / Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_PS_GP_24.JPG
  • Eleven activists from Greenpeace Mexico display a giant 234m2 banner on a railway bridge over a main highway entering entrance to Chihuahua City, bearing the message 'For a GE Free Maize". Greenpeace demand Chihuahua's deputies a moratorium to sowing transgenic maize in Chihuahua state, Mexico. (Photo: Greenpeace / Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_PS_GP_20.JPG
  • Central American migrants participate in a meeting in the Mexican Senate after arriving to Mexico City on April 24th, 2014. Migrants have to make deadly, irregular and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train through Mexico during weeks to arrive to the U.S.  The train is nicknamed "La Bestia" (The Beast) due to its dangerousness.<br />
<br />
Each Holly Week, along with Mexican human rights activists, make religious and protest activities during the "Viacrucis del migrante". <br />
<br />
This year, they walk on foot, since the evening of Thursday April 17th, after the train where they travel, under Ferrocarriles del Istmo enterprise orders, unhooked the gonads with people and left them abandoned in Tenosique. After being left, they made the decision to continue their way on foot. <br />
<br />
They have traveled on foot more than 100 km (328 000 ft) from Tenosique, Tabasco demanding an end to the violence against migrants and free transit through Mexico. (Photo credit: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_14.JPG
  • Central American migrants have to make deadly, irregular and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train through Mexico during weeks to arrive to the U.S.  The train is nicknamed "La Bestia" (The Beast) due to its dangerousness.<br />
<br />
Each Holly Week, along with Mexican human rights activists, make religious and protest activities during the "Viacrucis del migrante". <br />
<br />
This year, they walk on foot, since the evening of Thursday April 17th, after the train where they travel, under Ferrocarriles del Istmo enterprise orders, unhooked the gonads with people and left them abandoned in Tenosique. After being left, they made the decision to continue their way on foot. <br />
<br />
They have traveled on foot more than 100 km (328 000 ft) from Tenosique, Tabasco demanding an end to the violence against migrants and free transit through Mexico. (Photo credit: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_09.JPG
  • Central American migrants have to make deadly, irregular and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train through Mexico during weeks to arrive to the U.S.  The train is nicknamed "La Bestia" (The Beast) due to its dangerousness.<br />
<br />
Each Holly Week, along with Mexican human rights activists, make religious and protest activities during the "Viacrucis del migrante". <br />
<br />
This year, they walk on foot, since the evening of Thursday April 17th, after the train where they travel, under Ferrocarriles del Istmo enterprise orders, unhooked the gonads with people and left them abandoned in Tenosique. After being left, they made the decision to continue their way on foot. <br />
<br />
They have traveled on foot more than 100 km (328 000 ft) from Tenosique, Tabasco demanding an end to the violence against migrants and free transit through Mexico. (Photo credit: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_04.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_18.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_01.JPG
  • People line waiting to receive money in exchange of their vote for presidential candidate Enrique Peña Nieto, later alleged as winner, in Iztapalapa, east of Mexico City on june 30th, 2012. After numerous complaints on coercion, including a complex delivery of credit cards on supermarkets by Monex and Soriana, the whole presidential electoral process was impugnated by candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador and pointed as fraudulent by citizens and activists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120630_Vote-Coercion.jpg
  • Central American migrants have to make deadly, irregular and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train through Mexico during weeks to arrive to the U.S.  The train is nicknamed "La Bestia" (The Beast) due to its dangerousness.<br />
<br />
Each Holly Week, along with Mexican human rights activists, make religious and protest activities during the "Viacrucis del migrante". <br />
<br />
This year, they walk on foot, since the evening of Thursday April 17th, after the train where they travel, under Ferrocarriles del Istmo enterprise orders, unhooked the gonads with people and left them abandoned in Tenosique. After being left, they made the decision to continue their way on foot. <br />
<br />
They have traveled on foot more than 100 km (328 000 ft) from Tenosique, Tabasco demanding an end to the violence against migrants and free transit through Mexico. (Photo credit: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_08.JPG
  • Central American migrants have to make deadly, irregular and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train through Mexico during weeks to arrive to the U.S.  The train is nicknamed "La Bestia" (The Beast) due to its dangerousness.<br />
<br />
Each Holly Week, along with Mexican human rights activists, make religious and protest activities during the "Viacrucis del migrante". <br />
<br />
This year, they walk on foot, since the evening of Thursday April 17th, after the train where they travel, under Ferrocarriles del Istmo enterprise orders, unhooked the gonads with people and left them abandoned in Tenosique. After being left, they made the decision to continue their way on foot. <br />
<br />
They have traveled on foot more than 100 km (328 000 ft) from Tenosique, Tabasco demanding an end to the violence against migrants and free transit through Mexico. (Photo credit: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_07.JPG
  • Central American migrants have to make deadly, irregular and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train through Mexico during weeks to arrive to the U.S.  The train is nicknamed "La Bestia" (The Beast) due to its dangerousness.<br />
<br />
Each Holly Week, along with Mexican human rights activists, make religious and protest activities during the "Viacrucis del migrante". <br />
<br />
This year, they walk on foot, since the evening of Thursday April 17th, after the train where they travel, under Ferrocarriles del Istmo enterprise orders, unhooked the gonads with people and left them abandoned in Tenosique. After being left, they made the decision to continue their way on foot. <br />
<br />
They have traveled on foot more than 100 km (328 000 ft) from Tenosique, Tabasco demanding an end to the violence against migrants and free transit through Mexico. (Photo credit: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_01.JPG
  • Activists free access to metro subway, after Mexico City government announced an increase of 2 mexican pesos per passenger. The minimum daily wage in Mexico City is about 63 pesos. Since December (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20131210_metro-popular_05.JPG
  • Activists free access to metro subway, after Mexico City government announced an increase of 2 mexican pesos per passenger. The minimum daily wage in Mexico City is about 63 pesos. Since December (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20131210_metro-popular_04.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_04.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_03.JPG
  • Lesbian and homosexual couples and activists joined in the Eastern Bus Passengers Station (Terminal de Autobuses de Pasajeros de Oriente) to perform the "Besaton" (group kiss) in Mexico City on May 17th, 2012. The Besaton, a protest in the International Day against Homophobia is made after a female couple was expelled by policemen and private security from the place on May 13th.. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130517_besaton_04.JPG
  • Central American migrants participate in a meeting in the Mexican Senate after arriving to Mexico City on April 24th, 2014. Migrants have to make deadly, irregular and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train through Mexico during weeks to arrive to the U.S.  The train is nicknamed "La Bestia" (The Beast) due to its dangerousness.<br />
<br />
Each Holly Week, along with Mexican human rights activists, make religious and protest activities during the "Viacrucis del migrante". <br />
<br />
This year, they walk on foot, since the evening of Thursday April 17th, after the train where they travel, under Ferrocarriles del Istmo enterprise orders, unhooked the gonads with people and left them abandoned in Tenosique. After being left, they made the decision to continue their way on foot. <br />
<br />
They have traveled on foot more than 100 km (328 000 ft) from Tenosique, Tabasco demanding an end to the violence against migrants and free transit through Mexico. (Photo credit: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_15.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_12.JPG
  • Lesbian and homosexual couples and activists joined in the Eastern Bus Passengers Station (Terminal de Autobuses de Pasajeros de Oriente) to perform the "Besaton" (group kiss) in Mexico City on May 17th, 2012. The Besaton, a protest in the International Day against Homophobia is made after a female couple was expelled by policemen and private security from the place on May 13th.. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130517_besaton_03.JPG
  • Lesbian and homosexual couples and activists joined in the Eastern Bus Passengers Station (Terminal de Autobuses de Pasajeros de Oriente) to perform the "Besaton" (group kiss) in Mexico City on May 17th, 2012. The Besaton, a protest in the International Day against Homophobia is made after a female couple was expelled by policemen and private security from the place on May 13th.. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130517_besaton_01.JPG
  • Eleven activists from Greenpeace Mexico display a giant 234m2 banner on a railway bridge over a main highway entering entrance to Chihuahua City, bearing the message 'For a GE Free Maize". Greenpeace demand Chihuahua's deputies a moratorium to sowing transgenic maize in Chihuahua state, Mexico. (Photo: Greenpeace / Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_PS_GP_21.JPG
  • Central American migrants have to make deadly, irregular and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train through Mexico during weeks to arrive to the U.S.  The train is nicknamed "La Bestia" (The Beast) due to its dangerousness.<br />
<br />
Each Holly Week, along with Mexican human rights activists, make religious and protest activities during the "Viacrucis del migrante". <br />
<br />
This year, they walk on foot, since the evening of Thursday April 17th, after the train where they travel, under Ferrocarriles del Istmo enterprise orders, unhooked the gonads with people and left them abandoned in Tenosique. After being left, they made the decision to continue their way on foot. <br />
<br />
They have traveled on foot more than 100 km (328 000 ft) from Tenosique, Tabasco demanding an end to the violence against migrants and free transit through Mexico. (Photo credit: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_10.JPG
  • Central American migrants have to make deadly, irregular and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train through Mexico during weeks to arrive to the U.S.  The train is nicknamed "La Bestia" (The Beast) due to its dangerousness.<br />
<br />
Each Holly Week, along with Mexican human rights activists, make religious and protest activities during the "Viacrucis del migrante". <br />
<br />
This year, they walk on foot, since the evening of Thursday April 17th, after the train where they travel, under Ferrocarriles del Istmo enterprise orders, unhooked the gonads with people and left them abandoned in Tenosique. After being left, they made the decision to continue their way on foot. <br />
<br />
They have traveled on foot more than 100 km (328 000 ft) from Tenosique, Tabasco demanding an end to the violence against migrants and free transit through Mexico. (Photo credit: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_05.JPG
  • Central American migrants have to make deadly, irregular and clandestine travels hidden in the wagons and gonads of the train through Mexico during weeks to arrive to the U.S.  The train is nicknamed "La Bestia" (The Beast) due to its dangerousness.<br />
<br />
Each Holly Week, along with Mexican human rights activists, make religious and protest activities during the "Viacrucis del migrante". <br />
<br />
This year, they walk on foot, since the evening of Thursday April 17th, after the train where they travel, under Ferrocarriles del Istmo enterprise orders, unhooked the gonads with people and left them abandoned in Tenosique. After being left, they made the decision to continue their way on foot. <br />
<br />
They have traveled on foot more than 100 km (328 000 ft) from Tenosique, Tabasco demanding an end to the violence against migrants and free transit through Mexico. (Photo credit: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_Migrants_viacrucis_03.JPG
  • Activists free access to metro subway, after Mexico City government announced an increase of 2 mexican pesos per passenger. The minimum daily wage in Mexico City is about 63 pesos. Since December (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20131210_metro-popular_01.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_17.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_15.JPG
  • A group of masked activists who tried to arrive to San Lázaro Legislative Palace clashed with riot police, who maintained a strict encapsulation strategy, during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_10.JPG
  • A religious man reacts as a male couple kisses putting a banner that reads "God bless our love" (referring him ans his wife). .Lesbian and homosexual couples and activists joined in the Eastern Bus Passengers Station (Terminal de Autobuses de Pasajeros de Oriente) to perform the "Besaton" (group kiss) in Mexico City on May 17th, 2012. The Besaton, a protest in the International Day against Homophobia is made after a female couple was expelled by policemen and private security from the place on May 13th.. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130517_besaton_02.JPG
  • Six Greenpeace activists unfurl a huge (100m square) banner with the message in Mexican: ?¿Nuclear? No, thanks?, on the new Mexican Senate building, 78m high. Currently the Mexican energy authorities are demanding an expansion of nuclear energy facilities over the next 15 years. 04/11/2011 (Photo: Greenpeace / Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_PS_GP_19.JPG
  • An activist shows a placard with a photography of one of the 49 children who died during an accidental fire in Guardería ABC Hermosillo in 2009, northern state of Sonora, during a protest there sctivists of the movement #yosoy132 closed the access to Televisa, in Mexico City on July 27th, 2012. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20120727_Televisa_03.jpg
  • Attendants to the caravan of central american mothers pray  in La Patrona, located in Amatlán de los Reyes, Veracruz, where they were received by "Las Patronas", a local collective of women who brings free food and water to the migrants traveling in the train, on October 17th, 2012..Pictured: Rubén Figueroa, activist of Mesoamerican Migrant Movement (left) and Suyapa del Socorro Muñoz Mendoza, from Chinandega, Nicaragua (center).  (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20121017_caravan_03.JPG
  • A group of universitary activist rioted against the College of Sciences and Humanities directive installations on  February 6th, 2013, after 6 students were expelled from school and 10 more were arrested in two different acts in one week.  ..Riots  happened after students from public schools marched remembering the Federal Police takeover of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) back in February 6th, 2000, to end a 10 months long student strike that demanded public and costless universitary edication. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    20130206 student riots
  • A group of universitary activist rioted against the College of Sciences and Humanities directive installations on  February 6th, 2013, after 6 students were expelled from school and 10 more were arrested in two different acts in one week.  ..Riots  happened after students from public schools marched remembering the Federal Police takeover of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) back in February 6th, 2000, to end a 10 months long student strike that demanded public and costless universitary edication. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    20130206 student riots
  • A group of universitary activist rioted against the College of Sciences and Humanities directive installations on  February 6th, 2013, after 6 students were expelled from school and 10 more were arrested in two different acts in one week.  ..Riots  happened after students from public schools marched remembering the Federal Police takeover of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) back in February 6th, 2000, to end a 10 months long student strike that demanded public and costless universitary edication. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    20130206 student riots
  • A group of universitary activist rioted against the College of Sciences and Humanities directive installations on  February 6th, 2013, after 6 students were expelled from school and 10 more were arrested in two different acts in one week.  ..Riots  happened after students from public schools marched remembering the Federal Police takeover of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) back in February 6th, 2000, to end a 10 months long student strike that demanded public and costless universitary edication. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    20130206 student riots
  • Activist Miguel Barrera is detained before the beginning of protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_08.JPG
  • A group of universitary activist rioted against the College of Sciences and Humanities directive installations on  February 6th, 2013, after 6 students were expelled from school and 10 more were arrested in two different acts in one week.  ..Riots  happened after students from public schools marched remembering the Federal Police takeover of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) back in February 6th, 2000, to end a 10 months long student strike that demanded public and costless universitary edication. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    20130206 student riots
  • A masked activist holds Molotov cocktails during protests against the first Presidential Inform, in Mexico City on September 1st, 2013. Unionized teachers from the National Coodinator of Education Workers (CNTE) stopped confrontations. 16 people were arrested, including 3 independent media journalists. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    PL_20130901_clashes_07.JPG
  • A group of universitary activist rioted against the College of Sciences and Humanities directive installations on  February 6th, 2013, after 6 students were expelled from school and 10 more were arrested in two different acts in one week.  ..Riots  happened after students from public schools marched remembering the Federal Police takeover of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) back in February 6th, 2000, to end a 10 months long student strike that demanded public and costless universitary edication. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    20130206 student riots
  • A group of universitary activist rioted against the College of Sciences and Humanities directive installations on  February 6th, 2013, after 6 students were expelled from school and 10 more were arrested in two different acts in one week.  ..Riots  happened after students from public schools marched remembering the Federal Police takeover of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) back in February 6th, 2000, to end a 10 months long student strike that demanded public and costless universitary edication. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    20130206 student riots
  • A group of universitary activist rioted against the College of Sciences and Humanities directive installations on  February 6th, 2013, after 6 students were expelled from school and 10 more were arrested in two different acts in one week.  ..Riots  happened after students from public schools marched remembering the Federal Police takeover of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) back in February 6th, 2000, to end a 10 months long student strike that demanded public and costless universitary edication. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    20130206 student riots
  • A group of universitary activist rioted against the College of Sciences and Humanities directive installations on  February 6th, 2013, after 6 students were expelled from school and 10 more were arrested in two different acts in one week.  ..Riots  happened after students from public schools marched remembering the Federal Police takeover of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) back in February 6th, 2000, to end a 10 months long student strike that demanded public and costless universitary edication. (Photo: Prometeo Lucero)
    20130206 student riots