Come Usare, i bitcoin

C’è chi compra e chi investe in criptovalute, ma i bitcoin sono nati come moneta scambiabile…e allora come puoi usare i bitcoin?

Per poter usare i bitcoin e trasferirli ad altri utenti oppure utilizzarli per pagare prodotti e servizi, devi possedere un wallet. Qui trovi l’elenco di tutti i wallet disponibili e puoi scegliere quello più adatto alle tue esigenze.

In questo articolo ti spieghiamo il principio su cui si basa l’utilizzo di un wallet, per permetterti di inviare bitcoin ad un altro utente, che sia esso un amico a cui vuoi inviare un regalo oppure una delle tante attività che sempre più spesso accettano questa forma di pagamento. Su questo sito trovi negozi e professionisti che accettano bitcoin.

Sia che tu voglia effettuare un pagamento on-line che di persona utilizzando i tuoi bitcoin, hai bisogno di due cose:

1 Il tuo wallet

2 L’indirizzo bitcoin a cui inviare il pagamento

Per quanto riguarda il primo punto puoi trovare tutte le informazioni sul nostro articolo con l’elenco completo dei wallet disponibili.

Sul tuo wallet troverai l’opzione invia o trasferisci (send in inglese) bitcoin; una volta che avrai selezionato tale opzione solitamente ti viene richiesto

• L’indirizzo bitcoin (detto anche chiave pubblica) a cui vuoi inviare il pagamento

• La quantità di bitcoin che vuoi inviare

• Confermare la transazione tramite un PIN, una password oppure semplicemente cliccando su “INVIA”

Come è fatto un indirizzo Bitcoin

Gli indirizzi bitcoin si trovano solitamente in due formati. In base alla tipologia di wallet che stai utilizzando, è più comodo utilizzare l’uno o l’altro formato:

Indirizzo alfanumerico

Gli indirizzi bitcoin nascono sotto forma di una serie di numeri e lettere come questa:

1GB9NgFfBSetUkgbdZGkM5CJrWNMQ5PaPs

Durante un pagamento, quando ti viene chiesto di inserire l’indirizzo a cui inviare i bitcoin,  basta che copi la stringa e la incolli nell’apposito spazio.

Questa tipologia di indirizzi è la più comune e ti consigliamo di utilizzarla quando effettui una transazione utilizzando uno dei wallet che si gestiscono tramite computer.

Indirizzo QR code

Questa tipologia di chiave pubblica si presenta sotto forma di QR code, le informazioni contenute sono le stesse dell’inidrizzo alfanumerico. Ma in questo caso non è necessario copiare ed incollare l’indirizzo, basta inquadrare il QR code con un dispositivo dotato di fotocamera.

Come puoi immaginare questa tipologia di indirizzi è molto comoda quando si utilizza un Mobile Wallet. Infatti non sempre è facile utilizzare la funzione copia/incolla sul proprio smartphone, è invece molto semplice utilizzare la fotocamera. Solitamente, in corrispondenza dello spazio per l’inserimento dell’indirizzo, è presente una icona come questa  per accedere alla fotocamera.

Qui sotto ti mostriamo un esempio di indirizzo bitcoin sotto forma di QR code.

Se sei già in possesso di un Mobile Wallet, o ne hai appena scaricato uno, ti abbiamo messo a disposizione un indirizzo pubblico per fare un test. Puoi fare una prova inquadrando il QR code sottostante, l’indirizzo pubblico viene automaticamente inserito nell’apposito campo.

Questa metodologia di pagamento risulta molto utile in caso tu voglia usare i bitcoin tramite il tuo smartphone. Infatti qualora volessi ricevere bitcoin sul tuo wallet, sarà sufficiente mostrare il QR code rappresentante la tua chiave pubblica e farlo inquadrare dal dispositivo della persona da cui vuoi ricevere bitcoin.

E’ più semplice farlo che spiegarlo, quindi ti consigliamo di fare alcune prove inviando una piccola quantità di bitcoin magari utilizzando due tuoi wallet differenti (non ci sono limiti ai wallet che puoi creare e sono tutti gratuiti).

Però attenzione, non è tutto gratis; ogni transazione bitcoin ha un costo che serve per tenere in piedi la rete bitcoin che ti permette di effettuare le transazioni. Le commissioni solitamente sono espresse in bitcoin, per cui il loro costo aumenta e diminuisce al variare del prezzo della criptovaluta.

Nel prossimi articoli tratteremo l’argomento delle commissioni della blockchain, per aiutarti a capire

quanto può costarti una transazione volta per volta

The true story of Griselda Blanco – the woman who became Colombia’s cartel Queen

It was a quiet Monday afternoon in a suburb of Medellín, Colombia when a man on a motorcycle pulled up outside Cardiso butchers. Engine still running, he went inside and walked up to a frail-looking elderly woman sitting on a bench after collecting her weekly meat order.

The man fired twice point-blank at the woman’s temple, before making his motorbike get away from the scene.

Infamous Griselda Blanco came to be known as “The Godmother”

As people scattered from the shop, the 69-year-old victim’s daughter-in-law Yesica Trujillo, who’d been paying for the order at the counter, knelt by the dying woman. To a passer-by, it may have looked like a robbery gone wrong, but Yesica knew the truth – it was an assassination. The dying woman was no innocent – she was the notorious “Godmother of cocaine”, Griselda Blanco.

So infamous was her life that just seven months before her murder in September 2012, Blanco made a deal with a Hollywood production company to tell her story. Called Cocaine Godmother, with Catherine Zeta-Jones playing the lead, it’s set to air early next year on Lifetime.

“I’ve tried not to homogenize her or find a sympathetic quality because I don’t think she had one,” said Catherine at a press conference for the movie in Cannes last month. “There’s something fantastic about how she was the boss of a dangerous man’s world. You gotta give it to her.”

Talking about her transformation to play the 5ft-nothing cocaine queen, the actress added: “I gained weight, I was hunched over. If I had balls, I’d have grabbed them from time to time. I wanted to let it all hang out. She thought she was beautiful. She was the movie star starring in her own movie. She didn’t give an s**t.”

Blanco became the first Colombian drug lord to export the Medellín Cartel’s cocaine to the United States

Such is the drama of Blanco’s rise and fall that there is another (as yet untitled) high-profile biopic in the pipeline from heavyweight channel HBO – this time starring Jennifer Lopez as the drug baroness.

“I’ve been fascinated by the life of this corrupt and complicated woman for many years,” the singer revealed when the project was announced last year.

The very nature of her murder – a motorcycle assassination – mimicked Blanco’s calling card during her death-and-dealing reign in ‘80s Miami, when her far-reaching drug cartel netted £60million every month in cocaine trafficking.

“Some people thought that Blanco felt she had to be more violent because she was a woman in a man’s world, but I don’t,” says Al Singleton, a retired Miami police detective who was part of the federal task force that targeted the drug queen when she was at her most powerful. “I’ve been told by people who were close to her that this was just Griselda Blanco’s nature.”

Blanco was arrested on drug charges in 1985

Born in extreme poverty in Colombia, she grew up in Barrio Trinidad – one of the most notorious hillside slums outside Medellín – before running away from home aged just 14.

Desperate to escape the physical abuse of her mother’s boyfriends, she lived on the streets, pickpocketing, looting and – when things got really desperate – selling her body for sex.

In her late 20s, Blanco met Alberto Bravo, a known cocaine trafficker for the Medellín Cartel – the world’s biggest and most notorious drug runners and the current subject of hit Netflix series Narcos.

Bravo employed her to buy unrefined cocaine for him, which he would process in empty garment factories that he’d converted into labs, and the pair soon fell in love.

SHUTTERSTOCK

Catherine Zeta-Jones will play Blanco next year in an original Lifetime movie called Cocaine Godmother

Between them, the couple quickly established a successful drugs operation and lived well on the profits of their fledgling business. However, both Blanco and Bravo knew that to make any serious money they needed to be in New York, where the cocaine market was worth millions.

“They emigrated to Queens and got married,” says Professor Bruce Bagley, author of Drug Trafficking In The Americas. “There, the couple masqueraded as clothes importers, knowing that with their Colombian connections they could capture a huge market share by undercutting the Italian Mafia, who at that time controlled distribution in the city.”

It didn’t take long, and in 1971, along with her husband, Blanco became the first Colombian drug lord to export the Medellín Cartel’s product to the United States, years before Pablo Escobar would follow in her footsteps.

And it wasn’t the only way Blanco was blazing a trail. She notoriously pioneered the use of young women as drug mules, preying on street hustlers who’d jump at the opportunity to make some money and work for La Madrina (“The Godmother”), the moniker she was given by the hundreds of criminals she employed.

GETTY – CONTRIBUTOR

Blanco supplied Colombian cocaine to the US years before drug lord Pablo Escobar

“She was quite the innovator,” adds Bruce. “Blanco came up with the idea of creating customized bras and girdles with hidden pockets to hold cocaine. She also established a specialist lingerie shop in Medellín, the sole purpose of which was to tailor-make drug-smuggling underwear so that her army of mules could get the cartel’s product into the US.”

In 1971, one of her infamous cocaine corsets was discovered abandoned in a women’s bathroom at Miami International Airport. It contained almost 7lb of the drug, which had been sewn into 58 separate compartments.

Fake breasts were filled with two large packets of coke.

A year later one of Blanco’s mules, 33-year-old Mariela Zapata, was caught by customs officials at the same airport with 41/2lb of pure cocaine in her underwear – with a street value of over £300,000.

AP: ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wagner Moura plays Pablo Escobar in hit show Narcos

Even though Zapata was charged with unlawful importation of cocaine and deported to a Colombian prison, she refused to reveal her boss, such was the loyalty that Blanco instilled in her mules.

However, for every mule that was caught, it was estimated that up to 10 slipped under the noses of US customs agents. At its peak in the early ‘70s, Blanco and Bravo’s business was shipping as much as 11/2 tons of cocaine into America every month. The couple’s enterprise became so successful that it was agreed Bravo should return to Colombia to restructure and operate the business from Medellín, while Blanco stayed in New York to expand the empire and keep competition to a minimum.

However, left to her own devices, Blanco’s personal drug use began to increase, and she started smoking large quantities of unrefined cocaine called “bazooka”.

Her burgeoning addiction quickly fuelled a paranoia that not only was her husband cheating on her in their relationship and business but also that her enterprise was under surveillance. In the grip of paranoia, Blanco prepared an escape plan that involved a fully fuelled private jet on 24-hour standby at Miami International Airport.

AFP

Escobar was arrested and held in prison in 1991. He escaped the following year and was killed in 1993

But her fears became reality in 1975 when a joint NYPD/Drug Enforcement Administration investigation called Operation Banshee – due to the number of female mules under surveillance – came knocking.

It was the biggest cocaine case in history, however, the feds were too late – Blanco’s Miami jet had left for the Colombian capital Bogotá days before.

By the time she arrived back in her home country, Blanco was sure that her husband had begun plotting against her with the up-and-coming Pablo Escobar. Such was her distrust that, rather than meet privately as husband and wife, they arranged to do it in public, flanked with bodyguards, in a nightclub car park in Bogotá.

Stepping from her car, Blanco was mocked by her husband over her Godmother title. Incensed, she grabbed a pistol from her boot and shot her husband. A gunfight ensued, which left Bravo dead.

NETFLIX

Blanco had connections to the Medellín Cartel, the subject of hit Netflix series Narcos

His cold-blooded murder earned Blanco a new nickname: the “Black Widow”. With no one left to stand in her way, she wasted no time in taking full control of the cocaine empire they’d built and run the business from Colombia, where she was safe from US prosecution.

“Her position of power was bolstered even more when she married again in 1978,” explains Bruce, referring to her wedding to bank robber Dario Sepulveda, whose brother worked as one of her gunmen. That year, the couple had a son, Michael Corleone Blanco, named in honor of Al Pacino’s character in the Godfather movies.

With husband and son in tow, Blanco finally returned to Miami via Mexico on a Venezuelan passport courtesy of the full-time document forger on her payroll. But what also made her entry easier was the change in her appearance from years of cocaine abuse. Although still only in her 30s, her bloated face left her looking far older than her years.

In Miami, Blanco rarely left her luxury six-bedroom penthouse in the exclusive Biscayne Bay area. But she still managed to orchestrate a deadly campaign of violence, using an army of Colombian and Cuban hitmen to rid her of any competition for control of the city.

GETTY – CONTRIBUTOR

Jennifer Lopez is slated to play Blanco in an HBO adaptation of the drug queen’s life

From an early age, Michael saw first-hand his mother’s ruthless nature, even witnessing an assassination by one of Blanco’s henchman Jorge “Rivi” Ayala when he was just three.

But worse was to come – in 1983, aged just five years old, his father was murdered right in front of him. Little did he know that it was his mother who had ordered the hit, after her marriage to Sepulveda had broken down a year earlier and he’d kidnapped Michael, taking him back to Colombia.

Desperate to get her son back, Blanco’s hit squad dressed as police officers and pulled Sepulveda over as he drove home. Michael was in the back of the car, screaming at them to stop as they fired bullets into his father. He was immediately smuggled back into Miami to be reunited with his mother.

With her business still thriving, Blanco had become renowned for coke-fuelled orgies at her penthouse, where she also kept her growing collection of random drug-money purchases. These included pearls that once belonged to former Argentinian First Lady Eva Perón, a tea set of Queen Elizabeth’s, and a MAC-10 machine gun inlaid with gold and emeralds.

GETTY – CONTRIBUTOR

Lopez said she is “fascinated by the life of this corrupt and complicated woman”

However, her reign as the Godmother of cocaine came to a sudden halt in February 1985, when she was finally arrested on drug charges in her Californian home.

“She was propped up in bed reading the Bible,” Detective Bob Palombo, one of the arresting DEA agents, said in an interview at the time, adding: “She looked up at first in a bit of a shock.”

While Blanco was handed a 15-year sentence for drug trafficking charges, the DEA was desperate to make her pay for her homicidal history, too, so set to work revisiting cases for evidence.

By 1994, when she’d been in prison for almost a decade, they managed to indict Blanco for three first-degree murders.

NETFLIX

The success of Narcos may be a reason two separate studios are pushing to create adaptations of Blanco’s life

“When we explained to her that each charge carried a possible death sentence, she threw up,” remembers Detective Singleton. “There was nothing defiant about her – she really appeared to be just a pathetic old woman.”

Destined for Florida’s Death Row, Blanco cheated death once more thanks to a technicality. The state’s star witness – and her former hitman – Jorge “Rivi” Ayala was revealed to have engaged in phone sex with secretaries from the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office from behind bars. In the end, she was given an additional 20-year sentence, of which she served nine.

The 61-year-old Godmother was finally released from prison in June 2004 and deported back to Colombia, where one of the last-known pictures of her was taken at Bogotá Airport in a simple shirt and jeans.

By then, Blanco’s drug business had moved on without her and was now in the hands of younger, hungrier and more ambitious gangs. Instead, she was left to spend her remaining years living off the profits from several properties in and around Medellín that she had owned for decades. Her beloved son Michael stayed in the US, capitalizing on the Blanco name and reputation – it’s believed he was one of the driving forces behind selling the rights deal for Cocaine Godmother.

“In the end, her power and money were gone and she had legions of enemies waiting for her,” says Bruce.

And it was one of those enemies who walked into the butchers that September day in 2012. Griselda Blanco would never get to see her notorious life immortalized on screen.

The Insane, Unbelievable, Totally True Story Behind USA’s Drug Drama Queen of the South

Courtesy of Eniac Martinez/USA Network.

USA’s new narco-drama Queen of the South, which premieres this Thursday, has perhaps one of the most bonkers backstories in TV history. The series itself is based on a novel, La Reina del Sur, which takes its inspiration from real-life players in the drug game. The novel’s first adaptation was a telenovela by the same name starring Kate del Castillo—and if the actress’s name sounds familiar, it’s because you probably heard about her earlier this year: she was the one who introduced Sean Penn to the infamous drug lord El Chapo, whom he interviewed for a splashy, controversial article in Rolling Stone.

ADVERTISEMENT

Naturally, with a backstory like that, Vanity Fair had to speak with Queen of the South executive producer David Friendly to find out where USA’s new show fits in.

Queen of the South follows a charismatic protagonist named Teresa (Alice Braga) whose desirability belies her true asset—a cunning, ruthless mind. As the American pilot opens, Teresa paces and preens in her pristine, Cribs-worthy mansion and discusses her drug kingpin—er, queen in—philosophy via voiceover. Then, right before our eyes, she’s assassinated by a single gunshot through her window. Her death sends us plunging back into the past to find out how she got here.

Friendly said when he came across La Reina del Sur three years ago, he knew he wanted to make a show out of it. He contacted Telemundo, which ran its own 63-episode adaptation in 2011, and was told that the English-language rights had to be acquired from the novel’s author, __ Arturo Pérez-Reverte.__

According to Friendly, getting the author’s go-ahead was no cakewalk.

“For about a year, literally, I spoke to his agent in Spain every day begging him to let me make an offer for the English rights to the book,” Friendly said. “I thought it was a terrific story.” Eventually, his relentless perseverance won out: “They got tired of my phone calls, I think, so they allowed me to option the book.”

As the show made its three-plus-year journey to the screen, two big events catapulted Telemundo’s adaptation, its female lead, and some of the narrative’s key inspirations into the spotlight. This January, Rolling Stone ran Sean Penn’s interview with El Chapo. The drug lord, whose real name is Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera, runs the Sinaloa cartel in Mexico—where Queen of the South’s protagonist is from. El Chapo has escaped prison in Mexico twice; he was still a wanted convict in hiding when Penn interviewed him.

How on earth did Penn manage to get in touch with El Chapo? Reina del Sur star Kate del Castillo introduced them. Turns out that she and El Chapo had been in contact ever since he reached out to her, asking del Castillo to help him make a biopic about his life. Naturally, del Castillo’s involvement introduced both the actress and her telenovela to many people who had never heard of either before.

As fate would have it, the real-life Reina del Sur, whose real name is Marllory Chacón, also made headlines this year when she was implicated among others, including El Chapo, in the Panama Papers scandal.

 

As all of the intrigue surrounding his upcoming series’s real-life and fictional influences unfolded, Friendly said, “I was certainly aware of what was going on, and I was fascinated.” But in the end, he considered himself nothing more than an “interested observer.”

“It really had nothing to do with our show and what we were doing,” Friendly said. Instead, his focus remained on one thing: making his adaptation as good as it could possibly be, especially for its underserved Hispanic audience.

“There is a balance going on here,” Friendly said. The show is set in the U.S. and centers on a Mexican-born protagonist. Getting her story right, and making it resonate with both Hispanic and non-Hispanic viewers, required some precise considerations—and a couple tweaks to the original storyline. For instance, in the books, Teresa makes her home in Spain; in USA’s series, Teresa ends up in Dallas. It’s a nod to U.S. viewers—one that also introduces the potential for some fascinating angles on ever-contentious border issues, should the show decide to go in that direction.

As a nod to Hispanic audiences, Friendly also wanted to ensure that Spanish made its way into the show—in the right way. “It’s set in the U.S., so obviously the main language is English,” he explained. “But there is a fair amount of Spanish in the show with subtitles.”

And for her part, the show’s Brazilian leading lady Alice Braga was more than happy to put in the work that would make her character, and the story as a whole, ring true. That may be why the book’s author loved this adaptation, according to Friendly. Throughout the pilot, Braga is magnetic and confident—a believably compelling honcho in the narcosphere. That enthusiasm and energy is present both on- and offscreen; the actress was in constant communication with the directors and show-runners to make sure everything about her character, from her behaviors to her accent, rang true.

“She literally carries around a tattered copy of the book with her every shoot day,” Friendly said. “We’re talking about months here. And she has passages underlined.

The Role of Women in Drug Cartels

Is single-handedly running an international drug cartel network only a men’s game? Most of what we see in pop culture, TV, and the media would suggest so. Pablo Escobar lives on in infamy as the figurehead of the Medellin cartels, defining an era in Colombian history. While shows like Narcos have been criticized at the source for a lack of historical accuracy, this is nonetheless how the past of these drug-dealing days is remembered. And it’s a version of the past—whether true or not—where women are subservient pawns in all aspects of the male-dominated black-market industry. In business, we see the likes of Pablo’s mother being manipulated into sequestering money in her couch cushions, and in the men’s personal lives, women are treated as sex objects, standing on the sidelines as mere objects of conquest and power.

Pablo Escobar’s Wife in Narcos, Photo Credit The Guardian

Again, I won’t claim that Netflix’s Narcos should be a historical encyclopedia of what really happened in Medellin. There have been several alternatives offered which are said to offer a truer history. But many of the modern-day portrayals of the Latin American drug cartels on TV show much of the same—women serving as the spoils of men who become infinitely richer in their risky dealings. While women do hold their own in shows like Queen of the South, this show is a fictional account of modern-day drug cartels with some historical context but no actual historical basis.

So, is There a #Herstory to Drug Trafficking?

The short answer: YES! If we look back at Pablo Escobar himself, his wife, Tata, became much more involved in day-to-day operations as his trusted advisor. This is a swift departure from how we see her represented in Narcos—a woman standing in Pablo’s shadow, at the mercy of his every whim. Even after Pablo’s death, Tata maintained limited involvement with the Medellin cartel and received money from them as an exile in Argentina—in 2000 she was arrested for money laundering.

Griselda Blanco Photo Credit El Espectador

And what about the likes of powerful historical figures like Griselda Blanco? Known as the “Queen of Narco-Trafficking,” she was part of the Medellin cartels and largely responsible for the establishment of Miami as a base for the cocaine trade dating back to the 1970s. Her ruthlessness and brutal tactics rivaled those of Escobar himself, and she is believed to have killed as many as 200 people who threatened her empire. Similarly, in Mexico, Enedina Arellano Felix first worked with her brothers on the sidelines of the Tijuana cartel. She made key financial decisions before becoming the head of the cartel, based on information from the DEA, in the early 2000s. Some even credit her as Mexico’s first female drug lord.

A Look at the Women of Today’s Cartels, Photo Credit El Blog del Narco

While there was a documentary made on Blanco in 2006—Cocaine Cowboys—we don’t see the same portrayal of these powerful, independent women in the drug trade in scripted Hollywood films. But perhaps this is all about to change. J.Lo will be starring in and executive producing a full-length feature on the life of Blanco on HBO, a film whose female lead will certainly be able to stand up to Pablo Escobar’s Hollywood portrayal in Narcos. And the drug cartel future may be female as well. The most unsuspecting drug “queenpin” have been replacing the traditional image of the kingpin at the head of the cartel. Who would suspect the retired grandmother, the actress, or social media personality to be working behind the scenes of such a large scale and illicit operation? Nathan Jones, professor at Sam Houston State University, argues that it is because of these unsuspecting characteristics that women have been able to come to the reigns of the cartels—men are more likely to be caught in the line of fire.

What’s Next?

In short, the reality is this—on screen, we’re accustomed to seeing the women of the drug cartels as mere background players. But on the ground, things couldn’t be more different. Now that the DEA has captured El Chapo, it is a “queenpin” from the Medellin cartel’s past—Maria Teresa Osorio de Serna—who remains one of the few figures left on their most wanted list.

Even if Hollywood and textbooks want to leave out the role of women in drug cartels, it’s clear that many of them have been and will continue to be leaders in this dangerous profession.

‘Ghost’ woman from Colombia takes El Chapo’s DEA most-wanted spot

Now that El Chapo is back behind bars, the “most-wanted” position of the US Drug Enforcement Administration is up for grabs. It has reportedly been filled by Maria Teresa Osorio De Serna, a Colombian woman wanted for money laundering and drug-trafficking.

Little is known of Osorio De Serna, whose date of birth ranges from 1950 according to the DEA in New York to 1945 according to the DEA’s New Jersey branch. In fact, so little is known of the woman that she has been described as “practically a ghost” by BBC Mundo.

There are no charges against De Serna in her native Colombia but in the US she is wanted for her connection to the infamous Medellín cartel, for whom she is thought to have laundered millions of dollars.

The cartel was made famous by drug lord Pablo Escobar, who controlled a cocaine empire from Colombia, smuggling the drug into the US until he was killed in 1993.

The DEA has little to go on in finding Osorio De Serna, whose exact involvement with the cartel is not known. Her last known address was in Hialeah, Florida, and she is known to use the aliases Maria Teresa Correa, Gloria Bedoya, and Iris Conde.

Rumors that Sean Penn has been enlisted to track her down are unsubstantiated.

Is Mysterious Colombian Trafficker Now World’s Most Wanted?

Maria Teresa Osorio de Serna

Media outlets are heralding a little-known Colombian drug trafficker as the top priority for US law enforcement now that Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán is once again behind bars. But this stranger-than-fiction story may be mostly fiction.

On January 11, BBC Mundo reported that Colombian national María Teresa Osorio de Serna has become the US Drug Enforcement Administration’s (DEA) most wanted international fugitive following the recapture of Mexican drug lord “El Chapo” Guzman on January 8.

Osorio de Serna’s connection to the drug trade is not well-known — even among those who follow Colombia’s underworld closely — except that she was a major money launderer for the once-powerful but long-defunct Medellin Cartel, according to the BBC. “She is practically a ghost,” the media outlet writes. “Almost nobody knows of her.”

 

How could such an unknown figure become the DEA’s top priority? The BBC based their report on Osorio de Serna’s appearance on the anti-drug agency’s list for the Most Wanted Fugitives – International Division, which contains only two other names: El Chapo and another little-known figure, John Alexander Thompson, a suspected heroin trafficker whose nationality is not stated. Using this list as evidence, BBC Mundo concludes that Thompson and Osorio de Serna have replaced El Chapo as the DEA’s most wanted international fugitives.

Osorio de Serna’s criminal profile provides another layer of mystery and intrigue. She is wanted by US authorities for money laundering and cocaine conspiracy, yet she has no criminal charges against her in Colombia, according to RCN.

Shortly after the BBC Mundo article was published, Colombia’s National Police told InSight Crime it was verifying the information it had on Osorio de Serna.

InSight Crime Analysis

Despite Osorio de Serna’s placement on the DEA’s shortlist of Most Wanted international criminals, it is highly unlikely she has replaced El Chapo as the world’s most sought-after fugitive. Whatever her criminal profile may be, there are a number of drug bosses across Latin America that are surely a higher priority for US law enforcement.

One piece of evidence that points to this conclusion is the US Narcotics Rewards Program. The program — which is run through the Department of State — offers no monetary reward for Osorio de Serna, but it offers millions of dollars for information on numerous other drug traffickers from Latin America. For instance, US authorities currently have a $5 million bounty on the head of Dario Antonio Usuga, alias “Otoniel,” who runs the Urabeños, Colombia’s most powerful criminal organization. The same is true for Ismael Zambada Garcia, alias “El Mayo,” the most visible leader of Mexico’s Sinaloa Cartel now that El Chapo is once again in prison.

 

Another good indicator of a drug lord’s status in the US is how much they are sought after in their home countries. The United States is a key security ally of both Colombia and Mexico and works closely with intelligence officials to track down the most wanted suspects like El Chapo. It should come as little surprise then that Otoniel is the subject of a massive manhunt in Colombia, or that El Mayo is set to become the principal target for Mexico’s security forces. It would be a major surprise, however, if Osorio de Serna is, in fact, a top priority for the United States given Colombian authorities do not appear to be making a concerted effort to capture her.

But the most sure-fire way of knowing that Osorio de Serna is not the most wanted drug fugitive is by asking the DEA. In an e-mail, the anti-drug agency told InSight Crime that the individuals on its most-wanted lists are not ranked by priority. The DEA also pointed out that not all international fugitives appear on the shortlist containing Osorio de Serna. El Mayo, for example, can be found on the Most Wanted Fugitives list for the DEA’s El Paso, Texas Division.

Without more information, it is hard to know just how instrumental Osorio de Serna has been in orchestrating and facilitating international drug shipments over the years. It is certainly not unheard of for a woman to play a prominent role in Colombia’s underworld. Notorious drug lord Pablo Escobar was mentored by Griselda Blanco, also known as the “Queen of Cocaine.” However, there is little evidence to suggest Osorio de Serna has risen to become the DEA’s biggest target.

The DEA’s response opens up its own set of questions. What exactly is the purpose of a most wanted fugitives list, if, by all appearances, it lacks coherence and is far from comprehensive? And what does it say about the ability of US authorities to coordinate anti-drug efforts if the information on different agencies’ websites is contradictory? The Narcotics Rewards Program, for example, lists El Mayo as being captured, despite his profile on the DEA’s most wanted fugitives list. (In addition to being misinformed, the Narcotics Rewards Program is also severely outdated: Héctor Beltrán Leyva, alias “El H,” is still classified as “wanted.” Beltrán Leyva, the head of Mexico’s once-powerful Beltrán Leyva Organization, was arrested in October 2014.)

Ultimately, the BBC Mundo story tells us less about a shadowy figure in Colombia’s underworld than it does about the organizational weaknesses of US anti-drug authorities. Whether these errors are aberrations or speak to a larger problem within the DEA and other anti-drug agencies is a much more interesting question, but one that doesn’t have a ready answer.

El Chapo, ora la più ricercata dalla Dea è la “signora” della coca colombiana

Maria Teresa Osorio, legata al cartello di Medellín, è in cima alla lista dei narcotrafficanti in fuga dopo la cattura del super boss messicano

 

A differenza dei suoi ‘colleghi’ non sembra amare la celebrità. Una qualità che finora l’ha aiutata a nascondersi così bene, da essere praticamente un fantasma, perché di lei non si sa quasi nulla anche nel suo stesso paese natale. Eppure la colombiana Maria Teresa Osorio, dopo la cattura di Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, il narcotrafficante messicano appena arrestato, è ora in cima alla lista dei latitanti internazionali più ricercati dalla Dea americana, l’Agenzia Usa per il contrasto alla droga, insieme a John Alexander Thomson, accusato di traffico di eroina.

In Colombia Osorio non ha carichi pendenti con la giustizia, mentre negli Usa è ricercata per riciclaggio di denaro sporco e traffico di cocaina. Legata all’ormai estinto cartello di Medellín, fondato dal celebre Pablo Escobar, questa donna dal 2010 è stata inserita nella lista dei narcotrafficanti in fuga più ricercati dalla Dea. Di lei non esistono immagini, se non l’unica che circola in rete, la stessa presente anche negli archivi Usa, in cui si vede una donna mora, dagli occhi marroni e vestita di bianco, alla moda e con gioielli.

Le poche, e contraddittorie, informazioni disponibili sono quelle consultabili sulle schede della Dea. Secondo il file compilato dalla divisione internazionale dell’Agenzia americana, Osorio è conosciuta con quattro alias, cioè María Teresa Correa, María Teresa De Serna, Gloria Bedoya e Iris Conde, è alta 1,52 metri, pesa 61 chili, è nata nel 1950 e il suo ultimo domicilio conosciuto è da qualche parte in Colombia. In base ai dati presenti nel file del New Jersey invece è alta 1,57 metri, pesa 72 chili, ha capelli castani, è nata tra il 1945 e 1950, il suo ultimo domicilio noto è a Hialeah a Miami, negli Stati Uniti, e ha altri due alias – Maria Teresa Serna-Osorio e Teyer Washington. Non si sa se sia armata e pericolosa.

Il suo nome è comparso nel 1997 in un reportage del quotidiano colombiano El Tiempo, dedicato all’impero delle Chivas, una rete di narcotrafficanti e riciclaggio di denaro diretta dalla colombiana Mery Valencia de Ortiz, conosciuta anche come La Señora. Nell’articolo Maria Teresa Osorio compare come uno dei suoi membri. All’epoca un giudice del distretto di New York aveva emesso a suo carico un ordine giudiziale con l’accusa di traffico di droga tra Colombia e Stati Uniti e si riteneva vivesse in Colombia. Per le autorità colombiane era un “elemento di basso profilo di collegamento nella guerra tra i vari cartelli all’inizio degli anni ’90”.

Ma in un altro articolo del Tiempo, del 2013, si parla di lei invece come di “una abile narcotrafficante, una figura ‘di peso’, che in oltre 20 anni non ha lasciato alcuna traccia fotografica, né ha a suo carico alcun mandato di cattura”. Nei database della procura e della polizia non ci sono infatti informazioni precise su di lei. Una vera ‘stranezza’, secondo una fonte ben addentro al mondo criminale e giuridico colombiano, citata dalla Bbc: “Sorprende che in questo paese, dove i criminali si conoscono tutti l’uno con l’altro, nessuno sappia chi sia questa donna”.

After El Chapo: The World’s 10 Most Wanted Drug Lords

This list has been edited to reflect the arrest of Gerson Gálvez Calle, aka Caracol.

Joaquín ‘El Chapo’ Guzmán, the world’s most-wanted drug lord, was captured on January 8 in his home state of Sinaloa, known as the “cradle of Mexican drug trafficking” because of the large number of infamous narcos born there.

Now that he’s back behind bars, six months after he escaped, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has stamped the word “captured” across his picture on its “most wanted international fugitives” web page.

The page contains just two other names, neither of whom appear to be particularly relevant today.

One is a Colombian named Maria Teresa Osorio de Serna who is wanted for “money laundering and cocaine conspiracy” and is said to have links to Pablo Escobar’s Medellin cartel. The other is John Alexander Thompson, aka Coach, who is wanted for heroin distribution and is said to be either African or Caribbean, without specifying a country.

Screenshot via D.E.A

DEA spokeswoman Barbara Carreno told VICE News that the agency was receiving many confused inquiries because of delays in updating its website.

“The fact that Maria Teresa [Osorio de Serna] is one of two people on the international page is more of a function of that not being kept up so well,” she said. “With all the queries we’re getting, we’re going to make sure everybody is where they need to be so people can find them easier.”

In the meantime, here is a brief guide to the world’s most-wanted drug lords.

Ismael Zambada García, aka El Mayo – Sinaloa Cartel (Mexico)

Screenshot via D.E.A

Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada is a legendary figure in the Mexican underworld who has reputedly never spent a day in prison. Believed to be in his late 60s, El Mayo has long been considered to be as important a figure in the Sinaloa cartel as El Chapo, though he keeps a much lower profile. Zambada and the Sinaloa cartel are known to traffic a wide range of narcotics, such as domestically produced heroin, marijuana, and methamphetamine, while also providing transit for South American cocaine.

Both capos first rose to prominence within the Guadalajara cartel in the 1980s, with El Mayo gathering influence in the 1990s, most of which Chapo spent in jail. The two kingpins teamed up again following Chapo’s first escape from a maximum-security jail in 2001 to become leading figures in a broad alliance of Sinaloa groups known then as the Sinaloa Federation. They were both on the same side when the Federation split in 2008.

The elusive El Mayo gave an interview to the news magazine Proceso in 2010 in which he argued that his capture or death would make little difference to drug trafficking in Mexico as there would always be others to take his place.

El Mayo has seen several members of his family arrested in recent years, including his brother and three sons. The most important, Vicente Zambada Niebla, was extradited to the US in 2010 and later pled guilty and accepted a plea bargain of a minimum of 10 years in prison. He had originally sought to get out of a trial by arguing that he had negotiated immunity from prosecution deal in exchange for becoming a DEA informant before his arrest.

Related: A Turf War in a Previously Dreamy Coastal City Points to Splits in Chapo’s Sinaloa Cartel

Rafael Caro Quintero — Sinaloa Cartel (Mexico)

Screenshot via D.E.A

Rafael Caro Quintero is one of the Sinaloa-born founders of the Guadalajara cartel who was captured in 1985 in a crackdown launched following the kidnap, torture, and murder of DEA agent Kiki Camarena.

Caro Quintero was sentenced to 40 years in prison, but a judge suddenly released him in August 2013 on a technicality. By the time new arrest warrants were issued, Caro Quintero was long gone, with most assuming he had headed for the Sinaloa cartel’s bastion in the Sierra Madre.

The release of Caro Quintero triggered expressions of fury in the US, where the Camarena case is a highly sensitive and symbolic issue within law enforcement. The US Treasury Department also repeatedly claimed that businesses associated with his family remained major players in drug money laundering.

Within Sinaloa, some say Caro Quintero resumed a prominent role within the cartel alongside El Mayo and El Chapo.

Related: The Godfather of Mexican Drug Trafficking Was Released From Prison and Has Disappeared

Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, aka El Mencho — Jalisco New Generation cartel (Mexico)

Screenshot

Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, alias El Mencho, is the best-known leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, known as CJNG in Spanish, which is considered to be the fastest-growing criminal organization in Mexico.

It began roughly five years ago, partly from the remnants of other dismantled cartels. It is now considered to be the second most important trafficking organization in Mexico after the Sinaloa cartel, with which it is said to maintain an alliance. The CJNG has made a particular name for themselves in the production of synthetic drugs, especially methamphetamine.

El Mencho and the CJNG received little attention until 2015 when the CJNG carried a series of direct attacks on law enforcement in the state of Jalisco. These included the shooting down of a military helicopter in May.

Since then the pursuit for El Mencho has intensified and the authorities have arrested his brother and son, as well as several other high ranking cartel figures. These captures are believed to have triggered a spike in homicides in Jalisco state.

Related: How the Jalisco New Generation Cartel Is Terrorizing the People of Western Mexico

José Adán Salazar Umaña, aka Chepe Diablo-—Texis Cartel (El Salvador)

Screenshot

José Adán Salazar Umaña is one of the presumed leaders of the Texis cartel, said to control several drug smuggling routes through El Salvador that he operates for different Colombian and Mexican cartels.

The DEA mentioned Salazar, who is known as Chepe Diablo, as a suspected drug trafficker and money launderer in 2001. The US Treasury Department added Salazar to their “Kingpin List” in May 2014, designating him as a “foreign narcotics trafficker.”

Chepe Diablo reportedly encourages his operatives not to carry weapons, instead of having them rely on corrupt police to provide them with protection. The cartel’s ability to work freely is also allegedly aided by their leader’s links to the Salvadoran business and political world. Chepe Diablo owns a hotel chain and cattle ranches and is a former president of the first division league of Salvadoran soccer.

The Salvadoran treasury ministry initiated an extensive investigation into Chepe Diablo in 2014 and 2015, but it was shut down by the attorney general’s office.

Investigative reports by journalists in El Salvador suggest the Texis cartel may have been active since the early ’90s, though it remained under the radar until recently.

Related: El Salvador’s Young People Are Killing, Dying, and Running

Dario Antonio Úsuga, aka Otoniel — Los Urabeños (Colombia)

Screenshot via state.gov

Dario Antonio ‘Otoniel’ Úsuga is the leader of Colombia’s largest and most feared cartel, the Urabeños. The US government offers a reward of $5 million for information leading to his capture.

Otoniel’s organization is based in the coastal region of Urabá, just east of the Panamanian border. Alongside producing and moving cocaine, the organization also runs extortion rackets and is involved in human trafficking. The Urabeños reportedly maintain strong ties to the Sinaloa cartel in Mexico. They are said to receive much of the payment for their cocaine in weapons.

With an estimated 2,000 active members, the Urabeños — also known as Clan Úsaga, after the drug lord — also have a nationwide presence and have fought bloody turf wars with other cartels. The Colombian military and police recently began airstrikes against the group.

A number of Otoniel’s close associates have been captured or killed in recent months.

Related: Lines In The Sand: Tracing Cocaine’s Path Through Africa to Europe

Wei Hsueh-Kang — United Wa State Army (Myanmar)

Screenshot via state.gov

Wei Hseuh-Kang is a top commander with United Wa State Army, a massive narco rebel force that controls vast swaths of territory in eastern Myanmar, a notorious drug-producing region known as the Golden Triangle.

The group, which is backed by China, is said to maintain up to 30,000 heavily armed troops, and is described by the DEA as “the dominant heroin trafficking group in Southeast Asia, and possibly worldwide.” They also manufacture huge quantities of meth.

The former DEA director for East Asia described Wei, 63, as “the financial genius” behind the United Wa State Army, “as well as the CEO.” He was one of the first people to be officially labeled a “Drug Kingpin” by American authorities after the Foreign Narcotics Designation Kingpin Act was passed in 1999.

The US has been after him since the early ’90s, and the State Department is offering a $2 million dollar reward for information that leads to the drug lord’s capture. If caught, he faces heroin conspiracy charges in New York.

Related: On Patrol With Myanmar Rebels Fighting Both the Army and Drug Addiction

Haji Lal Jan Ishaqzai — Afghanistan

Screenshot via whitehouse.gov

Haji Lal Jan Ishaqzai became a major Afghan heroin producer in the ’80s and ’90s, eventually moving his stronghold to the southern city of Kandahar in 2001.

The drug lord allegedly lived on the same street as and received protection from, Ahmed Wali Karzai — the half-brother of then-president Hamid Karzai. Efforts to catch the drug lord became more apparent after Ahmed Karzai was killed in 2011.

Ishaqzai was arrested in 2012, after being one of the United States most wanted 10 kingpins. He escaped two years later after allegedly paying bribes totaling up to $14 million to local officials. Ishaqzai’s disappearance from prison and return to trafficking was a major embarrassment for the Afghan authorities.

Related: Here’s What Might Explain Why Afghanistan’s Opium Production Dropped by Half This Yea

Rocco Morabito — ‘ndrangheta (Italy)

Screenshot via Italian interior ministry

Rocco Morabito is is a boss of the ‘ndrangheta — reputedly the most powerful mafia organization in Italy. He grew up in the Calabria region of southern Italy but later moved to Milan where he was known for throwing expensive parties and was labeled the “the king of cocaine” by the local media.

The ‘ndrangheta is believed to have over 60,000 affiliates across the world with some estimating its turnover as totaling 3.5 percent of Italy’s GDP. Drug trafficking is the ‘ndrangheta’s most profitable business, relying on deep connections with Latin American trafficking groups such as Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel.

“El Chapo liked to work with people from Calabrian traffickers because of their harshness,” said anti-mafia magistrate Nicola Gratteri. “He found them more reliable than Colombians or Peruvians.”

Morabito is currently one of the seven “most wanted criminals” named by the Italian police, though there are reports that he may have moved to Brazil where he has sought to tighten his connections with the South American cartels while maintaining his role as a cocaine importer into Europe.

Related: How the ‘Ndrangheta became the McDonald’s of Mafias

Semion Mogilevich, aka The Brainy Don — Russian Mafia (Russia)

Screenshot via FBI

Semion Mogilevich is reputedly the most important boss within the Russian mafia, considered among the most wide-reaching criminal networks in the world, one in which drug trafficking is just one branch of illegal activities.

Before his death in 2006, poisoned former KGB spy Alexander Litvinenko claimed on tape that Mogilevich had a “good relationship” with Russian President Vladimir Putin. The official report on Litvinenko’s death was released this week and stated that Putin “probably” sanctioned the murder of Litvinenko.

Mogilevich, known as the Brainy Don, was arrested for tax evasion in Russia in 2008 but was released the following year. The FBI put Mogilevich on its most-wanted list in 2009. The Bureau removed in 2015 saying this was because the United States does not have an extradition treaty with Russia, where he is currently believed to be living freely.

Related: Putin ‘Probably’ Ordered Litvinenko’s Death, Inquiry Finds

Mihael Karner – Slovenia

Photo via DEA

According to the DEA, Mihael Karner runs an international steroid trafficking organization along with his wife, Alenka, and his brother, Matevz. The three were indicted in March 2010 in the US District Court of Massachusetts on charges of conspiracy to launder money, conspiracy to distribute controlled substances, and conspiracy to import controlled substances into the United States.

The Slovenian national allegedly sells steroids on the internet, primarily via the websites Asia Pharma and British Dragon. US authorities say Karner relies on a sophisticated international network of shell companies to launder his illicit steroid earnings, and he has reportedly made more than $50 million by trafficking illegal steroids throughout the world.

Karner and his wife were arrested at their Austrian ski chalet in late 2011, but they were released on bail and promptly disappeared. Investigators suspect they still operate their steroid business in Slovenia, which does not have an extradition treaty with the US. The US Treasury Department added Karner, his brother, and wife to the list of international drug kingpins, and three other key business associates of Karner were also added to the list in 2015.

Since their inclusion on this list, the following have been captured:

Gerson Gálvez Calle, aka Caracol — Barrio King (Peru)

Photo via Peru Police Department

Gerson Gálvez Calle was Peru’s most wanted criminal and the head of an organization known as Barrio King.

Gálvez, who is known as Caracol, allegedly ran the group’s operations from his prison cell before his release last year after serving 12 years of a 15-year sentence for attempted murder, robbery, and drug trafficking. He immediately went into hiding after his release.

Police sources say Caracol dreams of turning his organization into the country’s first “true cartel” — controlling the cocaine supply chain from field to the consumer — capable of competing with Mexico’s famed trafficking groups.

The Barrio King is alleged to have already shipped hundreds of millions of dollars worth of cocaine hidden in ship containers from Callao, Peru’s largest port, to destinations in Mexico and Europe.

The gang is also allegedly behind a turf war in Callao that left around 140 people dead last year.

Caracol was arrested April 30, 2016, in Colombia.

Related: Colombian Police Have Tracked Down ‘The Snail’, Peru’s Most-Wanted Drug Trafficker

Keegan Hamilton, Valerio Bassan, Joe Parkin Daniels, Simeon Tegel, Gaston Cavanagh, and Jo Tuckman contributed to this report.

An earlier version of this story misidentified Italian magistrate Nicola Gratteri as Gaterri. The story has been amended.

 

Difference Between Growth and Development

Main Difference – Growth vs Development

Although many people assume growth and development to be the same, there is a significant difference between growth and development. However, growth is often a part of development. Growth refers to the increase in size and number whereas development refers to an improvement of circumstances. This is the main difference between growth and development.

This article will explore,

1. What Does Growth Mean

         – Definition, Meaning, Features, Examples

2. What Does Development Mean

         – Definition, Meaning, Features, Examples

3. What is the difference between Growth and Development?

What Does Growth Mean

Growth typically refers to an increase in size or number. This increase is often measurable. For example, a tree can grow. Its growth can be measured from its height. Similarly, an organization can also grow by adding more staff or other organizations to it. Profit of a company can also grow. For more examples, look at the following sentences.

Everyone was amazed at the growth of the company.

Jake had a growth spurt when he was 15 years old – he grew taller than all his older brothers.

The growth of the plants and trees are affected by the weather.

There is a 16% growth in this year’s profits.

He looked like a ruffian, with several day’s growth of beard.

The fertility of the land and rainfall affect the growth of the crops.

The finance minister refused to comment on the economic growth of the country.

 

What Does Development Mean

Development mainly refers to progress and improvement. It often encompasses a growth as well as an improvement of circumstances. Development is a qualitative measure. Thus, when something develops, the quality of that thing also improves. If a tree develops, its changes will not only be the size – it will stay healthy, bear fruits and continue growing. The same applies to a child or a company. Thus, development refers to the overall changes and the progressive changes of a thing.

The following examples will help you to understand the meaning of this noun more clearly.

A balanced diet and exercise are imperative for the development of muscles.

The president was very interested in the economic development of the country.

The illustrations in the book show the development of a baby inside a mother’s womb.

Personal development is the primary aim of education, not wealth or status.

Brain drain is the greatest obstacle to the development of the country.

The economic development of this company astonished many financial analysts.

The development of a child’s mind is fascinating to observe. 

Difference Between Growth and Development

Meaning

Growth: Growth refers to the increase in size and number.

Development: Development refers to an improvement in circumstances.

Measure

Growth: Growth has a quantitative measure.

Development: Development has a qualitative measure.

Interrelation

Growth: Growth basically refers to the increase in size and number.

Development: Development encompasses overall changes including growth and other progressive changes.

Difference Between Arrogance vs Ignorance

Main difference – Arrogance vs Ignorance

Arrogance and ignorance are two negative qualities that we should get rid of. Arrogance is an exaggerated sense of one’s own importance or abilities that make him believe that he is better than everyone else. Ignorance is the lack of information, knowledge, understanding or education. This is the main difference between arrogance and ignorance. However, arrogance and ignorance can sometimes be interrelated. Arrogance can lead a person to ignore something important, and ignorance of other’s abilities and talents can also make a person arrogant.

This article covers,

1. What Does Arrogance Mean – Meaning, Grammar, and Usage

2. What Does Ignorance Mean – Meaning, Grammar, and Usage

3. Difference Between Arrogance and Ignorance

What Does Arrogance Mean

Arrogance refers to an exaggerated sense of one’s own importance or abilities. An arrogant person believes that he is better, smarter, or more important than other person and looks at others with an insulting or condescending attitude. Arrogance can also be described as being unpleasantly proud.

Arrogance is a noun, and the adjective of arrogance is arrogant. The following sentences contain examples of both arrogant and arrogance.

He won the gold medal, but he is not arrogant about it.

The arrogance of my boss is astounding.

Everyone was shocked by her arrogance.

His self-confidence is sometimes seen as arrogance.

Her arrogance earned her a lot of enemies.

Arrogance is a very unattractive quality.

He walked with an air of arrogance.

 

What Does Ignorance Mean

Ignorance refers to the lack of knowledge or information about something. Ignorance can also refer to the lack of education or lack of understanding. Ignorant is the adjective form of ignorance. The American Heritage dictionary defines ignorance as “the condition of being uneducated, unaware, or uninformed” and the Oxford dictionary defines it as “lack of knowledge and information.”

Racial discrimination is often born out of ignorance.

Public ignorance is a major issue in disease control.

We acted in ignorance of the rules.

The ignorant villagers beat him to death.

Many teenagers are ignorant about history.

She was blissfully ignorant of the troubles he was facing.

An individual might willfully ignore something due to his arrogance. Since an arrogant person thinks that he is better than everybody else, he might not be interested in learning others’ opinions. In a way, arrogance is also caused by ignorance; the very fact that a person considers himself better and more important than others implies ignorance.

Difference Between Arrogance and Ignorance

Definition

Arrogance is the exaggerated sense of one’s own importance or abilities.

Ignorance is the lack of knowledge, information or education.

Noun

Arrogance is the noun form of arrogant.

Ignorance is the noun form of ignorant.

Interrelation

Arrogance can be caused by ignorance.

Ignorance can also be caused by arrogance.