David C Adams
Senior Editor, Univision News
David Adams is a Senior Editor at Univision News, responsible for English language content. He was previously Miami bureau chief for Thomson Reuters, leading coverage of the Southeast US and Caribbean.
British-born, Adams came to the United States in the summer of 1992 after five years as a freelance correspondent in Central America. He spent 15 years as the Miami-based Latin America correspondent of the Tampa Bay Times, Florida’s largest newspaper. During a career spanning four decades he has covered the civil wars in Central America, the U.S. invasion of Panama, the Zapatista uprising in Mexico and other historic events in Cuba and Haiti as well as U.S. politics and immigration issues.
In 2002, Adams was awarded the Maria Moors Cabot prize by Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism for outstanding reporting on Latin America and commitment to Inter-American understanding. His twin, Paul Adams, is an award-winning correspondent for the BBC.
Récord histórico de cubanos en la frontera y la isla caribeña no los acepta deportados
Por primera vez en cuatro años, funcionarios estadounidenses y cubanos se reúnen en Washington para tratar temas migratorios. La reunión se produce en un momento en el que hay una oleada de cubanos en la frontera - 32,000 en el último mes - mientras que Cuba no acepta vuelos de deportados.
LO MÁS RECIENTE

Can Russia be forced to pay for the cost of the war in Ukraine with frozen assets?
When the fighting is done, vast sums of money will be needed in the future for reparations to rebuild Ukraine and to help ensure its long-term security. So who will pay for that?

¿Se puede obligar a Rusia a pagar con dinero congelado el costo de la guerra en Ucrania?
Cuando los combates terminen, en el futuro se necesitarán enormes sumas de dinero para la reconstrucción de Ucrania y ayudar a garantizar su seguridad a largo plazo. ¿Quién pagará eso? ( Read this article in English)

After 50 days of the war in Ukraine, are the Russia sanctions having any effect?
With a total of 9,655 sanctions against it, Russia is now the most sanctioned country in the world, ahead of Iran. Of these, 6,901 have been imposed since February. But the high price of oil and gas, ironically a result of the war, is fueling Vladimir Putin's war machine. ( Leer en español)
¿Podrán más de 9,000 sanciones contra Rusia acabar con la guerra en Ucrania?
Con un total de 9,199 sanciones en su contra, Rusia es ahora el país más sancionado del mundo, por delante de Irán. De ellas, 6,445 se han impuesto desde febrero. Pero el alto precio del petróleo y el gas, irónicamente resultado de la guerra, está alimentando la maquinaria bélica de Vladimir Putin. ( Read this article in English)

War in Ukraine enters new phase as Putin seeks to salvage "victory" in the eastern Donbas
The war in Ukraine is entering a new phase focused on the east of the country that could determine the outcome of the Russian invasion ordered by President Vladimir Putin. While Russia's war machine still has enormous combat power, it has suffered heavy losses in men and equipment, experts say. (Leer en español)

La guerra en Ucrania entra en una segunda fase que definirá la duración del conflicto
La guerra en Ucrania entra en una nueva fase enfocada en el este del país que podría determinar el resultado de la invasión rusa ordenada por el presidente Vladimir Putin. ( Read this article in English)














