Marina Walker Guevara

Deputy Director   International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

Marina Walker Guevara is ICIJ’s deputy director. A native of Argentina, she has reported from a half-dozen countries and her investigations have won and shared more than 12 national and international awards. Over a ten-year career, she has written about environmental degradation in Latin America by multinational corporations; shadowy U.S. government HIV/AIDS prevention programs in Africa, and the cigarette mafia in the Tri-Border Area of South America, among other topics. In March 2006 she was awarded the European Commission Lorenzo Natali Prize (Latin America and the Caribbean region) for her reporting about environmental damage caused in Peru by a U.S.-based mining company; that investigation also won her the 2006 Reuters-IUCN Media Award for Excellence in Environmental Reporting. She graduated magna cum laude from Universidad Nacional de Cuyo in Mendoza, Argentina, with a bachelor’s degree in communication sciences, and earned a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Missouri.

State Department resisted handing over PEPFAR spending documents

HIV prevention was a side project for this nonprofit until it received an $8.3 million grant for abstinence programs in developing countries

The HIV epidemic in Ethiopia is widespread due to poverty, discrimination, and widespread commercial sex

How America’s top cigarette firms fueled a billion-dollar underground trade

Paraguay's corruption fuels a criminal economy

Paraguay es uno de los mayores productores mundiales de cigarrillos de contrabando

Landlocked Paraguay emerges as a top producer of contraband tobacco

Tobacco is the most widely smuggled legal substance, and it's trafficking fuels organized crime and corruption

In the Philippines, U.S. aid has helped bolster a government whose military is tied to extrajudicial killings

Once-loyal Turkey passed up aid to maintain its own Iraq policy

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