Latin American Publications!

126 readers
12 users here now

A community for Latin American publications.

NOTE: All the publications in this feed are Latin American in origin; that does not mean they only report on Latin American news.

founded 5 months ago
MODERATORS
2001
 
 

Of the total number of deaths, 19 were caused by motorcycle accidents.

On Friday, the Dominican Republic Emergency Operations Center (COE) reported that 29 traffic fatalities occurred during the Christmas and New Year holidays, 31% less than the previous year.

RELATED:

Dominican Republic Warns of Increased Femicides

COE’s Awareness for Life 2025–2026 operation recorded 245 traffic accidents with 307 people injured, in addition to 769 cases of alcohol poisoning and 163 cases of food poisoning, including 52 minors between the ages of 11 and 17.

The National Health Service (SNS) submitted the list of minors treated for alcohol poisoning to the Attorney General’s Office and the Ministry of Public Health so that legal and preventative measures can be taken.

Provinces with the most accidents were Santo Domingo (12.24%), the National District (9.4%), San Pedro de MacorIs (8.8%), San CristObal (7.7%), La Altagracia (7.7%), and Puerto Plata (6.9%). Of the total number of deaths, 19 were motorcycle fatalities, two were pedestrian accidents, and eight were in light vehicles.

The National Institute of Transit and Land Transportation (INTRANT) also reported 25,108 roadside assistance calls, while the General Directorate of Transit and Land Transportation (DIGESETT) issued 21,996 fines for traffic violations.

Director general PN supervisa operativos preventivos en distintos puntos del Gran Santo Domingo por festividades de recibimiento del Año Nuevo 2026

📰 Amplíe: https://t.co/oyOMKSLtZt pic.twitter.com/5zLxBW27Xw

— Policía Nacional República Dominicana (@PoliciaRD) January 1, 2026

The text reads, “The Director General of the National Police oversees preventative operations at various points in Santo Domingo for the New Year 2026 festivities.”

Among the fines issued, 6,773 were to motorcyclists without helmets, 2,416 to drivers without licenses, 1,732 for driving without insurance, 1,689 for running red lights, and 957 for not wearing seatbelts.

The Public Works’ Military and Police Commission assisted 3,138 roadside calls, while Civil Defense responded to 297 domestic emergencies, including minor accidents and blood pressure checks.

Meanwhile, the Directorate of Out-of-Hospital Emergency Care (DAEH) attended to 1,231 people, and the SNS reported that public hospitals received 3,068 patients throughout the holidays.

The COE’s operations involved more than 48,000 first responders, 1,301 assistance posts, 250 ambulances, 44 rescue units, 14 vehicle extrication teams, 21 mobile workshops, and three helicopters from the Ministry of Defense.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | Dominican Republic: Immigration authorities detained 573 Haitian migrants, of whom 458 were deported through different border control checkpoints. pic.twitter.com/JdpzRiHVHZ

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) August 22, 2025

teleSUR: JP

Source: EFE – El Nacional


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

2002
 
 

La Paz city is once again the stage for a battle over Bolivia’s economic soul. As President Rodrigo Paz pushes forward with an aggressive economic overhaul, the streets have filled with resistance. Workers, miners, and teachers are sending a clear and defiant message: “Bolivia is not for sale.”

RELATED:
Bolivian President Paz Convenes Mayors to Discuss Emergency Decree 5503 Amid National Strike

At the center of this storm is Supreme Decree 5503, a sweeping 121-article measure that critics say represents the final burial of Bolivia’s nationalization project and the return of a painful neoliberal “shock doctrine.”

Neoliberal shock therapy has begun in Bolivia. Fuel subsidies have just been cut by the new pro-US govt, massive inflation begins:

Gas prices ⬆️ 83%
Diesel ⬆️ 163%
Bus fares ⬆️ 100%
Food ⬆️ 100+%

Unions have given the govt 24hrs to reverse the decision or mass protests begin. pic.twitter.com/6kcZPSAe64

— Ollie Vargas (@Ollie_Vargas_) December 19, 2025

Anatomy of a “Shock”: What Is Decree 5503?

Supreme Decree 5503 was introduced by the Paz administration as a response to what it calls a structural and terminal economic crisis.

With a declared $30 billion fiscal deficit and dangerously low international reserves, the government has framed this decree as an emergency fix to avoid total collapse.

But behind the technical language lies a radical economic experiment. The decree aims to move Bolivia away from a state-led rentier model toward what the government calls “capitalism for all.”

In practice, that means opening the economy to market forces and foreign capital, at a staggering social cost.

Among its most controversial measures:

  • The “Sharp Increase in Fuel Prices” (Gasolinazo): Fuel subsidies have been eliminated overnight, triggering price hikes of 84% for gasoline and 162% for diesel.
  • Dismantling State Oversight: Import and export controls have been scrapped, effectively removing the state’s regulatory role in trade.
  • Extra Powers for the Central Bank: The Central Bank of Bolivia (BCB) has been granted authority to engage in international currency operations and financial swaps to manage the country’s dollar shortage.

The government has promised a 20% minimum wage hike and a new PEPE cash transfer program to cushion the blow. But for most Bolivian families, these gestures cannot keep up with the skyrocketing costs of living.

Bolivia's workers unions announce an indefinite general strike against the neoliberal austerity measures announced this week.

No dialogue or negotiation, all the measures must be repealed first. No honeymoon period for the right-wing govt. https://t.co/t3Ku9ycQN4 pic.twitter.com/A74D708N4N

— Ollie Vargas (@Ollie_Vargas_) December 19, 2025

Structural Changes: The “Fast-Track” to Neocolonialism

Beyond fuel prices, Decree 5503 introduces a new legal and institutional framework that critics say places Bolivia’s natural wealth at the mercy of transnational corporations.

Through the creation of an Extraordinary Investment Promotion and Protection Regime, the administration has effectively rewritten the rules of state sovereignty.

Key aspects include:

  • “Positive Administrative Silence”: Investment projects now receive automatic approval if the state fails to respond within 30 days, turning bureaucratic silence into corporate green lights.
  • 15-Year Legal Stability: New investors in energy, mining, and agribusiness get 15 years of guaranteed rules, shielding them from future tax or regulatory changes.
  • Bypassing Parliament: Strategic projects can now be approved directly by presidential decree, without any legislative debate or oversight.
  • International Arbitration: Disputes with foreign firms will now go to international tribunals, stripping Bolivia of jurisdiction over its own resources.

To make this new model work, the decree also creates a Single Window for Strategic Investments (VUIE), a fast-track mechanism to bypass what neoliberal economists call the “obstacle state.” For many Bolivians, this is not efficiency; it is the legal infrastructure of neocolonial exploitation.

US companies want to build huge data centers in Bolivian areas with large Indigenous populations. They also no doubt want access to Bolivia's massive lithium reserves. The rightwing Paz government will not hesitate to be vendepatrias.
Only Indigenous & unions can stop this. pic.twitter.com/v9LzoLRZ34

— UAINE (@mahtowin1) December 30, 2025

Beyond Gasoline: The Plunder of Strategic Natural Resources

Though the “gasolinazo” has stolen public attention, Decree 5503 goes much deeper than fuel prices. It lays out the groundwork for a wholesale privatization of strategic natural resources, from lithium and mining to agriculture and pipelines.

  • Lithium and the Salt Flats: The decree’s vague language about “circuits for resource development” is widely understood as an opening for foreign control over lithium extraction in the world-famous Salar de Uyuni. Critics warn this could accelerate the privatization of one of Bolivia’s most valuable assets.
  • Mining and Metals: Projects in gold, tin, silver, and zinc now qualify for the new 30-day “Fast-Track” approval. Environmental and community safeguards risk being pushed aside for the sake of investor timelines.
  • Hydrocarbons and LPG: While fuel prices skyrocket, the decree quietly authorizes private companies to use state-owned pipelines and storage for their own imports, an unprecedented move toward privatization of infrastructure.
  • Agro-industrial Wealth. The end of domestic “fair price” requirements for basic food exports like soy, sugar, and meat will allow agribusiness elites to chase global profits while undermining Bolivia’s food security.

The pattern is clear: under the pretext of attracting investment, sovereignty over Bolivia’s strategic industries is being handed back to those who see the nation’s natural wealth as mere commodities for extraction.

BREAKING: The new President of Bolivia is now working to terminate lithium mining contracts with China & Russia, in favor of a deal with the United States.

President Rodrigo Paz's Foreign Minister said, "We are looking for a long-term relationship with U.S., relations based on… pic.twitter.com/5yOI36eFLD

— George (@BehizyTweets) December 13, 2025

The Workers’ Offensive: “Bolivia Is Not For Sale”

The social and political backlash has been immediate. The Bolivian Workers’ Center (COB), the country’s most powerful labor federation, has mobilized in massive protests, joined by miners, factory workers, and educators.

For nine consecutive days, La Paz has been the epicenter of marches, hunger strikes, and street confrontations. Protesters accuse the Paz administration of governing for the rich while imposing IMF-style austerity on the poor.

The “Bolivia Is Not For Sale” March, stretching from Calamarca to the capital, has become a symbol of national resistance. Union leaders like Mario Segundo Quispe describe the struggle as one of dignity and survival: “This is a government of millionaires, not of the humble.”

COB leader Claudio Choque has dismissed government accusations of political manipulation, insisting the mobilizations are legitimate social and labor demands aimed at defending Bolivia’s resources.

For many, the memory of Bolivia’s neoliberal “shock therapy” in the 1980s, when thousands lost their jobs amid privatization, feels painfully alive again. And this time, workers say, they will not allow history to repeat itself.

#Bolivia | The Workers’ Central Union (COB) declared a national strike and widespread mobilization to reject the Supreme Decree 5503, known as the “gasolinazo,” which eliminates fuel subsidies and facilitates the transfer of resources to private entities.https://t.co/n0Uvmghwj0

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 22, 2025

Financial Sovereignty and the Central Bank’s New Role

Decree 5503 not only reshapes the economy it also redefines the country’s financial sovereignty. The Central Bank of Bolivia (BCB), once a bastion of public accountability, now gains extraordinary powers under the guise of technical necessity.

These powers include:

  • International Financial Operations. The BCB can now perform currency swaps and gold-backed transactions to stabilize the economy amid a severe dollar shortage.
  • Capital Repatriation Program. Wealth held abroad can return tax-free under the new “Regularization and Repatriation of Capital” program, as long as it stays in the country for two years or is “invested productively.”
  • Tax Amnesty for the Elite. Progressive economists argue this measure effectively launders elite capital, allowing powerful families to repatriate offshore wealth without penalty, a stark contrast to the heavy burden falling on workers and the poor.

Although the government sells these policies as emergency “technical corrections,” critics see a surrender to financial orthodoxy that abandons the principles of economic sovereignty forged during the nationalization era.

Most lithium reserves:

🇦🇷 Argentina: 23 million tons
🇧🇴 Bolivia: 23 million tons
🇨🇱 Chile: 11 million tons
🇦🇺 Australia: 8.9 million tons
🇨🇳 China: 6.8 million tons
🇨🇦 Canada: 5.7 million tons
🇩🇪 Germany: 4 million tons
🇨🇩 Congo (Kinshasa): 3 million tons
🇲🇽 Mexico: 1.7 million…

— World of Statistics (@stats_feed) November 13, 2025

The Social Cost and the Road to Abrogation

With Decree 5503, President Paz has charted a sharp turn toward what his team calls “capitalism for all”, but what grassroots movements describe as neoliberalism reborn.

By declaring a sweeping National Economic, Financial, Energy, and Social Emergency, the administration has effectively created a fast lane for privatization, deregulation, and external control.

The decree’s supposed social protections, a 20% wage increase, and the PEPE program for vulnerable families, barely scratch the surface of an inflationary shock that threatens to erode living standards overnight.

At the institutional level, ministries have been ordered to restructure budgets within ten days to accommodate the new economic model.

Combined with the 15-year guarantees for foreign investors, the policy risks cementing a long-term dependency on external capital and corporate governance.

In the streets, however, resistance is still alive and growing. The banners of “Bolivia Is Not For Sale” and the chants of miners and teachers echo a century-long struggle for sovereignty and dignity.

To them, this fight is not just about wages or fuel prices; it is about defending the right of the Bolivian people to decide the fate of their own resources.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | Bolivia: Sectors affiliated with the Workers' Union continued protesting against a decree that eliminates subsidies for hydrocarbons and threatens the natural resources. pic.twitter.com/s820l3z8Un

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 29, 2025

Sources: teleSUR – The Left Chapter – El País – 5503 Decree – La Izquierda Diario


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

2003
 
 

Mexico created a Technical Secretariat to coordinate the university, technological, and polytechnic subsystems.

The Education at a Glance 2025 report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) highlighted that postgraduate education reduces unemployment and increases salaries by up to 83%.

RELATED:

Mexico Launches Justice Plan for Cananea Miners

In OECD countries, tertiary education reduces unemployment by 4.9%, compared to 12.9% for those who did not complete upper secondary education, which highlights the importance of investing in education.

This understanding varies in Mexico, where unemployment represents 2.7% for those without upper secondary education, 3.6% for those with upper secondary education, and 4.3% for those with tertiary education.

However, Luis Chiba, the director of Kumon for Mexico and Latin America, stated that it is necessary to invest in education from an early age and warned that gaps in reading and English proficiency limit academic and professional performance in the region.

Kumon, a company specializing in extracurricular classes, announced it will strengthen its presence in Latin America. They will offer after-school classes in mathematics, English, and reading comprehension, seeking to raise the quality of education in the region.

Your skills are often influenced by where you grew up, and who your parents are.

Finding the factors behind skill differences between groups can help countries ensure all adults have a chance to succeed.

Learn more: https://t.co/EBCbOUGSNF | #OECDCentre4Skills pic.twitter.com/XH2ZFtJBDT

— OECD ➡️ Better Policies for Better Lives (@OECD) January 1, 2026

Guillermo Paras, general manager of Kumon, described education as a strategic decision and noted that English is key to university admissions, meeting employment requirements, and participating in global business.

Previously, the Mexican Ministry of Public Education (SEP) and the Ministry of Science, Humanities, Technology, and Innovation (Secihti) established a new Technical Secretariat to coordinate the university, technological, and polytechnic subsystems.

At the National Council for the Coordination of Higher Education (Conaces), Secretary of Education Mario Delgado and Secretary of Science Rosaura Ruiz approved the 2025–2026 work program and created 12 commissions to start it.

Ruiz highlighted the historical connection between education and science, programs such as postgraduate scholarships, the SaberesMX platform, and initiatives to strengthen mathematics instruction from the basic education level.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | Mexico: Authorities announced the recovery of 2,158 objects of historical and cultural interest during 2025. pic.twitter.com/Qs057BlYcd

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) January 2, 2026

teleSUR: JP

Source: EFE – La Jornada


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

2004
 
 

The U.S. actress denounces Palestinian suffering and calls for a greater flow of aid to Gaza.

On Friday, Angelina Jolie visited the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing, which connects the Gaza Strip with Egypt, to show solidarity with the Palestinian people and observe humanitarian operations on the ground.

RELATED:

Gaza’s Actual Death Toll Could Reach 680.000, UN’s Albanese Warns

Her visit aimed to assess the situation of Palestinians who have been transferred to Egypt for medical treatment and to examine the flow of aid into the Gaza Strip, which has been devastated by the Israeli offensive launched in October 2023. Images published on social media show Jolie speaking with authorities, Red Crescent workers, and drivers of trucks transporting humanitarian aid.

Human rights defenders and Gazans themselves have consistently denounced the insufficient entry of aid into the enclave due to the blockade maintained by Israel, despite a cease-fire agreement stipulating its obligation to increase the daily entry of food, fuel and medicine.

For the past two decades, Angelina Jolie has been noted for her humanitarian work on behalf of migrants and refugees in various parts of the world. She has held several honorary roles with a long and significant history at the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

🇵🇸 Angelina Jolie visited the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt to oversee humanitarian support efforts and express solidarity with the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip.

Read more: https://t.co/fU7cxvHxuD pic.twitter.com/uEVFOXCATY

— Roya News English (@RoyaNewsEnglish) January 2, 2026

From 2001 to 2012, Jolie served as a UN Goodwill Ambassador, undertaking more than 40 field missions to remote areas worldwide to learn about the conditions and needs of displaced people.

Subsequently, she served as Special Envoy for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, from 2012 to 2022, a period during which Jolie visited countries such as Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon, Colombia and Ecuador to meet with refugees and local authorities.

Since 2022, the U.S. actress has been more directly involved with grassroots organizations working on humanitarian issues. Over the years, Jolie has maintained a forceful position regarding the situation in Gaza.

“Gaza has become a mass grave for Palestinians and those helping them. As Israeli forces resume and expand their military offensive by air, ground and sea on the Gaza Strip, forcibly displacing people and deliberately blocking essential aid, Palestinian lives are once again being systematically destroyed,” Jolie said in April 2025.

“The people of Gaza are facing severe suffering and a humanitarian tragedy, and what I have seen of the stories of Palestinians is beyond description,” she said at the Rafah crossing on Friday.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | Middle East: The Gaza Government Operations Room announced that 200,000 prefabricated housing units are urgently required to shelter displaced families and provide safe living conditions. pic.twitter.com/4kHAPllWoi

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) January 1, 2026

teleSUR/ JF

Sources: EFE – EUPAC


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

2005
 
 

Caracas (OrinocoTribune.com)—To close the year on their version of a “positive note,” officials from the US empire have announced the extrajudicial murder of at least eight civilians—and potentially as many as 13—as part of their controversial Southern Spear Operation. Analysts have characterized this latest escalation as a continuation of their imperial “killing spree” targeting small boats under the guise of a so-called “war on drugs,” marking what observers describe as a bloody and cold-blooded conclusion to 2025.

On Tuesday, December 30, US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) carried out three separate strikes against three small boats in an undisclosed location. These attacks resulted in the summary execution of three victims, while an estimated five survivors were reportedly abandoned to the elements, despite official claims that search and rescue orders were in place.

On Dec. 30, at the direction of @SecWar Pete Hegseth, Joint Task Force Southern Spear conducted kinetic strikes against three narco-trafficking vessels traveling as a convoy. These vessels were operated by Designated Terrorist Organizations in international waters. Intelligence… pic.twitter.com/NHRNIzcrFS

— U.S. Southern Command (@Southcom) December 31, 2025

Just 24 hours later, on December 31, the violence continued with two additional strikes against two separate small boats. These end-of-year executions claimed five more victims at another unspecified location. Legal and military experts across the world, including from within the US itself and the United Nations, have labeled these actions as extrajudicial killings and war crimes. President Trump has attempted to sell the attacks as an effort to crack down on illegal drug flows from Venezuela, despite the fact the nation has been proven to be less than a marginal actor in international narcotics networks.

Experts point out that this recent wave of violence is defined by a deliberate increase in administrative opacity. For several weeks, SOUTHCOM has strategically withheld information regarding the specific countries off whose coasts these executions occur. In these latest reports, the US colonial military has further blurred geographical data by failing to specify whether the strikes took place in the Caribbean Sea or the Eastern Pacific. Legal and military experts have condemned this lack of transparency as a calculated tactic to shield US imperialism from international accountability for their continued maritime massacres, judicial overreach, and blatant disregard for human life.

Incorporating these latest acts of aggression, the totals for Operation Southern Spear have reached what monitors are calling devastating levels. As of the end of 2025, the campaign has resulted in the following:

Statistics

| Category | Total Count | |


|


| | Strikes | 35 | | Small Boats Sunk | 36 | | Confirmed Victims | 115 (five survivors not counted) |

These figures represent a trail of blood across the region where, according to analysts, the US military continues to act as judge, jury, and executioner against defenseless civilians on the high seas.

US Alleges Unverified Land Strikes in Venezuela Amid Rising Civilian Deaths in SOUTHCOM Killing Operation (+Primazol)

In recent months, the US has deployed more than 18,000 troops in the Caribbean and the Pacific as part of their revamped so-called “war on drugs” military campaign. According to statements from the White House, the mission has recently shifted toward the goal of “recovering” Venezuelan oil, which Washington claims belongs to the US settler state.

Analysts and Venezuelan authorities have maintained since the beginning of the campaign that the actual goal is regime change: aiming to remove the democratically elected government of President Nicolás Maduro, in order to facilitate the colonial exploitation of natural resources.

Special for Orinoco Tribune by staff

OT/JRE/AU


From Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond via This RSS Feed.

2006
 
 

“Our deepest condolences for the loss of life caused by the fire,” the Cuban Foreign Minister stated on social media. Rodriguez then expressed “solidarity with the Swiss people and government and with the families of the victims.”

He also wished a speedy recovery to the injured.

The fire at the Crans-Montana ski resort has killed approximately 40 people and injured around 115 others of various nationalities, according to the latest reports.

According ti reports, ñbetween 80 and 100 people are seriously injured, so the death toll could rise.

The fire broke out at a crowded bar called Le Constellation on New Year’s Eve in the canton of Valais, in southwestern Switzerland.

The cause of the fire is still unknown.

jdt/ro/jqo

The post Cuban FM expresses condolences after fire in Crans-Montana first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

2007
 
 

At the Cuban embassy in Guatemala City, members of the state mission and their families shared heartfelt words remembering the epic struggle waged from the 1950s to the present.

In his keynote address, Minister Counselor Roberto Socorro emphasized the significance of the revolutionary triumph, the decisive role of its leader, Fidel Castro, and detailed key events of the revolution.

At an event held at the premise of the National Coordination of the Medical Brigade, the Cuban ambassador to Guatemala, Nazario Fernandez, acknowledged the achievements and congratulated the healthcare professionals who have been providing their solidarity and support in the most remote and unexpected places for 27 years.

At the same time, the Cuban diplomatic representatives urged them to continue working diligently for the health of the Guatemalan people.

The head of the Medical Brigade, Dr. Mariheta Cutino, reaffirmed their commitment to fulfilling the mission entrusted to them by the Revolution.

From the evening of the 31st onward, every moment on social media, and still today, has been dedicated to Commander-in-Chief Fidel Castro in the centennial year of his birth.

jdt/ro/znc

The post Guatemala commemorates 67th anniversary of the Cuban Revolution first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

2008
 
 

Describing the negative context of the anniversary, the PSP explained that Latin America is going through dark times in which imperial measures are expressed with greater force and sharpness, with the aim of encircling “not only territories, but also the thought, hope, and common sense of the people.”

Therefore, it added, “as another year of the Cuban Revolution is commemorated, something deeper is also confirmed: another year of resistance, struggle, and moral victory for a people who do not surrender.”

The PSP also stated that the situation has never been easy for Cuba, but never as challenging as it is now, although the fervor that ignited consciences 67 years ago remains intact.

“Yesterday’s struggle is the pulse of the present. And the revolutionary dream, far from fading, continues to fuel the construction of the new man, as Che envisioned him: with ethics, solidarity, and historical commitment,” he states.

He also affirms that “Cuba remains standing, with its dignity intact, resisting the inhumane blockade and the media war” waged by the powerful empire that seeks to isolate it from the world.

“And yet, Cuba showed to the world that the revolution is not only defended: it is also shared. It did so with education, with healthcare, with science at the service of the people, with solidarity transformed into a bridge and not empty rhetoric,” which Fidel Castro summarized in the phrase “Homeland is Humanity.”

jdt/ro/mrs

The post Socialist Party of Peru celebrates Cuban Revolutionary anniversary first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

2009
 
 

In a message addressed to President Miguel Diaz-Canel, the United Left Movement (MIU) affirmed that January 1, 1959, is a memorable date in its historical, political, libertarian, and independence dimensions.

The note highlighted the significance of this year, in which the centennial of the birth of Commander-in-Chief Fidel Castro (1926-2016) is commemorated, “whose humanist, integrationist, internationalist, unitary, solidarity-based, anti-imperialist, and anti-colonialist legacy continues to guide the innovative resistance struggle of his people.”

Furthermore, the MIU condemned the economic, commercial, and financial blockade imposed by the United States on Cuba, which it described as inhumane and contrary to the will of the majority of the countries that make up the United Nations.

It also recognized the effort and sacrifice of the Cuban people in the struggle to defend the sovereignty of their homeland.

“We reaffirm our friendship and fraternal relations with the Communist Party of Cuba (PCC), with its State and Government authorities, and with the heroic and combative people,” the statement reads.

For its part, the Central Coordination of the Caamanista Movement highlighted the island’s resistance and endorsed the condemnation of U.S. aggression against countries such as Venezuela, Nicaragua, Mexico, and Colombia.

For its part, the Dominican Popular Movement asserted that the Cuban Revolution was the most significant in the region and in almost the entire world.

jdt/ro/gas

The post Dominican organizations reiterate support for Cuba first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

2010
 
 

He accuses the Central African Country’s ruling party of manipulating results.

On Friday, opposition candidate and former Central African Republic Prime Minister Anicet Georges Dologuele declared himself the winner of the Dec. 28 election and accused the ruling United Hearts Movement (MCU) of attempting to manipulate the results.

RELATED:

Central African Republic Heads to the Polls on Sunday

“When you come out of an election with good results, you remain calm and wait for the official announcement. But look at what is happening today, all these images circulating on social media. Since elections began in this country in 1981, we have never seen a situation like this, with so much nervousness and so much fear on the part of the ruling party,” Dologuele said.

Following the start of the release of provisional results by the National Electoral Authority (ANE), several candidates challenged the electoral process and denounced irregularities in the transmission of vote tally sheets.

“The ruling party is doing everything possible to manipulate the election results: they are breaking so-called tamper-proof envelopes to extract the official reports and alter them, sometimes even on the spot. I have been told that in Bangui, in a private residence, blank official reports are being filled in with falsified results,” stated Dologuele, who leads the Union for Central African Renewal (URCA) party.

“I am sure of it, because the heads of the polling stations have confessed that they received instructions not to hand over the reports. When my representatives and some of my parliamentary candidates requested them, they were told everything would be changed,” he added.

La gendarmerie sénégalaise a réaffirmé son engagement pour la paix internationale à travers l’action de la SENFPU2, déployée en République centrafricaine au sein de la MINUSCA. Basée à Berberati, l’unité a contribué à la sécurisation des élections présidentielle, législatives,… pic.twitter.com/1wAqTk7lds

— RTS SENEGAL (@RTS1_Senegal) January 2, 2026

The text reads, “The Senegalese police reaffirmed its commitment to international peace through the action of the SENFPU2, deployed in the Central African Republic as part of MINUSCA. The Berberati-based unit contributed to guaranteeing the presidential, legislative, regional and municipal elections of December 28, 2025, which were organized amid a sensitive institutional and security context.”

On Dec. 30, about 48 hours after polls closed, electoral authorities issued a statement demanding that tally sheets be given to candidates’ representatives.

“We received complaints from the candidates, particularly about the delivery of the tally sheets. We raised this matter with the ANE, which led to the publication of the statement,” explained Arsene Gbaguidi, the electoral affairs director of the United Nations Mission in the Central African Republic (MINUSCA).

Dologuele said he would await the decision of the Constitutional Council, which must rule definitively on the results between Jan. 15 and 16.

Seven candidates competed for the presidency, including incumbent Faustin-Archange Touadera and former prime ministers Anicet Georges Dologuele and Henri-Marie Dondra. The candidate who obtains more than 50% of the votes will be elected in the first round. If this does not happen, candidates will participate in a runoff.

Touadera was able to run after spearheading a 2023 referendum, which approved a constitutional change extending the presidential term from five to seven years and removing the two-term limit for the head of state. That amendment allowed the 68-year-old president, who has been in power since 2016, to run for a third term.

A major opposition platform, the Republican Bloc for the Defense of the Constitution (BRDC), boycotted the 2025 election, citing unfair conditions and a lack of democratic dialogue.

Since late 2012, the Central African Republic has experienced an intermittent civil war that has caused thousands of deaths and hundreds of thousands of displacements.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | Africa: Clashes have reignited in Uvira, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, between government forces and M-23 rebels. pic.twitter.com/KYXXZrkkCh

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) January 1, 2026

teleSUR/ JF

Source: EFE


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

2011
 
 

The award, established by the National Union of Artists and Writers of Cuba (UNEAC) in 2008 as the highest recognition for emblematic figures in world dance, thus distinguishes a supreme exponent of ballet, “perhaps the most extraordinary ballerina of our time,” declared critic Ahmed Pineiro.

Just a few days ago, the artist, decorated with the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire by King Charles III, gave two memorable performances of the classic Don Quixote in Havana.

Alongside the National Ballet of Cuba (BNC) and Cuban dancer Patricio Reve, a guest artist with the Royal Ballet in London and also a principal dancer with the Queensland Ballet (Australia), Nunez exuded charm, vibrant chemistry with her partner, and sublime technical mastery.

Pineiro rememered the Argentine dancer’s career and ties to Cuban ballet, asserting, “Her homeland is, in reality, dance, because for Marianela, ballet has always been more than just her profession; it’s a calling.”

The BNC specialist also highlighted how she was promoted to the coveted artistic rank of prima ballerina at only 20 years old, with her dream company: The Royal Ballet in the United Kingdom.

Furthermore, he compared the Argentine dancer’s artistry to that of Cuban prima ballerina assoluta Alicia Alonso, noting that “as with Alonso’s dancing, in Marianela’s, technique is subordinate to expression, and virtuosity to dramatic truth.”

jdt/ro/msm

The post Marianela Nunez receives Honorary Dance Award in Cuba first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

2012
 
 

The Venezuelan Ministry for Penitentiary Service announced that, as part of joint efforts with the judiciary, 88 people have been released from prison, who had been incarcerated for their involvement in the violent actions committed by the far-right following the July 28, 2024 presidential election.

This information was made public through a statement issued by the aforementioned ministry on Thursday, January 1, noting that these releases come from the comprehensive review of cases ordered by the president of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro. In this review peocess, the Venezuelan State individually evaluates each case and, in accordance with the law, adopts precautionary measures as part of a humanitarian justice policy aimed at the preservation of peace.

Unofficial translation of the statement is provided below:

The Ministry of Popular Power for Penitentiary Service informs the country that, as part of joint efforts with the Justice System, 88 new releases have taken place in recent hours, of persons who had been imprisoned for crimes committed in the context of violent actions by extremist sectors following the July 28, 2024 electoral process—aimed at generating destabilization and disregarding the sovereign will of the Venezuelan people.

These releases are part of the comprehensive review of cases ordered by the Constitutional President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro Moros, through which the Venezuelan State individually evaluates each situation and adopts, in accordance with the law, precautionary measures as part of a humanitarian justice policy focused on the preservation of peace.

Despite the constant siege faced by the nation, the Venezuelan State guarantees priosners dignified treatment, respect for human rights, and comprehensive care, reaffirming the Venezuelan government’s commitment to act in defense of stability, social justice, and national sovereignty.

Caracas, January 1, 2026

Venezuela Releases 99 More Detainees for Post-Election Violence, Incitement of Hatred

This new measure comes a week after the last one reported on December 26, when precautionary measures were granted that led to the release of 99 citizens who had been detained for the same reasons.

Thus, within one week, 187 prisoners who had been incarcerated for the July 2024 electoral violence have been released. This, according to the Ministry for Penitentiary Service, is a concrete expression of the Venezuelan State’s commitment to peace, dialogue, and justice. However, the Venezuelan Attorney General’s Office has emphasized that these measures do not imply impunity.

On July 29, 2024, after the results of the presidential election were announced, the far-right opposition, led by María Corina Machado and Edmundo González, deployed its “terror squads” throughout Venezuela to sow chaos, destruction, and death. Twenty-eight people were killed in the ensuing violence.

On July 29, the day after the election, 21 people died at the hands of the fascists. The far-right groups continued their terrorist actions for 72 hours, causing destruction, siege, and terror, and leaving seven more dead in their wake over the course of those days. Five of these deaths occurred on July 30 and one on August 1. Another woman was killed on August 3, 2024, as reported by Diario Vea.

Special for Orinoco Tribune by staff

OT/SC/DZ


From Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond via This RSS Feed.

2013
 
 

By Roger D. Harris and John Perry  –  Dec 30. 2025

2025 saw progressive governments in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) delegitimized and displaced. Right-wing forces have seized on drug-related crises to attack the so-called Pink Tide governments, driving a reactionary backwash and putting new, neoliberal administrations in power. The irony is that the rise in drug use and crime is driven by neoliberalism’s failure to meet social needs. But this has been successfully cloaked.

A further irony is that governments with the strongest records in limiting the social damage caused by illegal narcotics have been the principal targets of US destabilization campaigns. 

  • Contrary to Trump’s ludicrous mistruths, reports from the United Nations, the European Union, and even the US Drug Enforcement Agency certify that Venezuela is essentially free of drug production – no cocaine or marijuana production, and certainly no fentanyl.
  • With its community-based policing, Nicaragua is one of the safest countries in the whole region. In contrast, neighboring Costa Rica – under aggressively neoliberal administrations – is beset by a “tsunami of cocaine” and crime “amid a backdrop of growing inequality, high unemployment, and an erosion of investment in education,” according to a special report in the Los Angeles Times.
  • Cuba, despite over six decades of punishing Yankee blockades, is arguably the most gang-and drug-free country in the hemisphere.

Despite the reactionary backwash, more than half the region’s population is still governed by progressive administrations, of which the largest countries are Brazil, Mexico and Colombia. 

This could change in 2026, with presidential elections in Colombia and Brazil, where right-wing challenges threaten progressive gains. As the Financial Times observes, “Brazil’s global balancing act is trickier than ever.” Peru, where left-wing President Pedro Castillo was deposed and imprisoned two years ago, may also continue rightwards in elections scheduled for April. Of the current Pink Tide governments, Mexico appears best insulated from an imminent reversal. 

The “Donroe” DoctrinePresiding over these developments is an increasingly assertive US hegemon, citing a “Donroe” corollary to the nineteenth century Monroe Doctrine as justification for the havoc it is wreaking. Now formalized in the National Security Strategy, it claims to “reassert and enforce the Monroe Doctrine to restore American pre-eminence” in LAC.  As Venezuelan Ambassador Samuel Moncada warned the UN Security Council, Venezuela is only the “first target of a larger plan” to divide and conquer the region “piece by piece.” 

Through a combination of elections, judicial maneuvers, and extra-parliamentary pressure, including direct interference by Washington, countries that were formerly left or left-leaning have swung sharply to the right. This trend was evident in LAC’s four major elections in 2025 – in Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, and Honduras. 

There were, however, crumbs of comfort for progressives. In Ecuador, the victorious President Daniel Noboa – whose win is likely attributable to electoral fraud – has since lost key popular referendums. In Bolivia, President Rodrigo Paz faces massive popular resistance as he moves to impose austerity economics. And in Chile, the defeated communist candidate Jeannette Jara did nevertheless secure 42% in December’s runoff vote. 

Progressive governments have also shown a degree of unity in opposing US aggression against Venezuela, although Mexico and Brazil have also had to contend with Washington’s direct pressures on them. In Mexico, this included overt military threats.

The rightward shift is starkly illustrated by Chile’s election, where the outgoing Gabriel Boric had been a “flash in the pan” and unfulfilled expectations have “reshaped the political horizon of the left.” In March, when José Antonio Kast takes office, Chile will have a “Nazi” in power – or at least a self-avowed defender of the Pinochet dictatorship and the son of an actual German Nazi. Kast’s first foreign visit after his win was to Argentina’s hard-right Javier Milei, restoring an alliance between the two major Southern Cone countries. Both have large, right-leaning middle classes that sustained dictatorships in the recent past. 

“Trump’s policies have intensified the extreme polarization in which the far right has replaced the center right,” notes Steve Ellner, retired professor at Venezuela’s Universidad de Oriente. 

Across the region, the right now arguably constitutes a significant Washington-aligned force encompassing not only Chile and Argentina but also Paraguay, Bolivia, Ecuador, Panama, and El Salvador. All support Washington’s military aggression against Venezuela and genocide in Palestine. As Vijay Prashad observes, this new right bloc shares the libertarian economic doctrines of the Pinochet-era “Chicago Boys” (Kast’s brother was one of them), dramatized by Milei waving a chainsaw to symbolize his attack on the state.

Crime and the criminalization of migrationBoth left and right agree that organized crime poses a major threat to LAC’s security. Although statistics show that most of the region is safer than a decade ago, violence has surged in some previously safe countries and reactionary forces have pushed crime as an issue in many others. “Polls show that in at least eight countries, including Chile, security is the dominant voter concern, driving many Latin Americans to demand iron-fisted measures and show a greater tolerance for tough-on-crime policies,” reports The New York Times.

The right’s response is captured by the phrase la mano dura (“the iron fist”), exemplified by the torturous prisons of Nayib Bukele’s El Salvador. Such approaches have proven more attractive to electorates in Chile, Honduras, and Ecuador than the community-based strategies advanced by the left – even though they are proven to work. Rafael Correa successfully reduced crime in Ecuador a decade ago. Xiomara Castro, too, achieved a significant decrease in Honduras, where the homicide rate dropped to the lowest level in 30 years. Left-leaning Mexico most dramatically reduced homicides by 37%.

The right’s alarming yet successful rhetoric links rising crime to drug trafficking and immigration. Trump-style measures have been sold to many Latin Americans yet, as Michelle Elner of CodePINK explains*,* in Cuba and Venezuela he is blocking migrants from entering the US “while systematically destroying the conditions that allow them to survive at home.”

This framing resonated even in Chile, which remains Latin America’s safest country despite an increase in gang-related crime. Kast successfully blamed the increase on Chile’s half million Venezuelan migrants, whom he threatens to deport, while also proposing to construct a US-style border wall.

The principal driver of the region’s crime is the drug trade. The unseen elephant in the room is the US – the world’s largest market for illegal narcotics as well as the leading money launderer of drug profits and the cartels’ gunrunner of choice. Yet Washington portrays itself as an ally in drug-related crime prevention, claiming to be tackling “narcoterrorism” not only in Venezuela but also in Colombia and Mexico. 

This is hypocrisy of the highest order. As Venezuelan writer Francisco Delgado Rodríquez points out: “the only culprits are cartels and bandits with Latin American surnames, and their US counterparts or partners never appear, defying common sense given that the volumes of drugs, weapons, and profits generated necessarily require organized structures of their own on US soil.”

Nicaragua-based analyst Stephen Sefton also notes “the central role of the US government in manipulating the regional structures of organized crime and money laundering.” In reality, “US government propaganda uses the alibi of fighting organized crime and drug trafficking to justify its extensive military presence in the region.”

Trump has elevated this hypocrisy to new heights by releasing a former Honduran president who was serving a 45-year US prison sentence for drug trafficking and links to violent crime. Trump’s administration has gone on to murder, on the high seas, over 100 supposed drug traffickers, offering no proof of their crimes, and has committed acts of piracy against commercial vessels leaving Venezuela. This is in open defiance of the Law of the Sea, which the US explicitly cites in a different context – its actions to maintain “freedom of navigation” in the South China Sea. 

The surge of drug-related crime, and even more of the rhetoric surrounding it, have coincided with the rise of a powerful Christian right. Once overwhelmingly Catholic, the region has seen rapid growth in conservative Protestant evangelical movements, particularly in Central America. Evangelicals constitute approximately 43% of the electorate in Honduras, 40% in Guatemala and Nicaragua, 37% in El Salvador, 29% in Panama, and 27% in Costa Rice and Brazil. Aligned with the populist right, these movements tend to promote social conservatism and pro-Zionism. 

Regional fragmentation In 2014, the 33 member states of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) declared the region a Zone of Peace, pointedly asserting its sovereignty and its opposition to US military infiltration. In opposition to any such accord, Washington instrumentalizes a “war on drugs,” which Cuba has described as “a pretext to conceal military, paramilitary, and interventionist operations.” 

Biden’s expansion of US military penetration continued seamlessly with Trump – only intensified further. This includes the deployment of a full naval armada off Venezuela’s coast, major military buildups in Puerto Rico and Panama, and the recruitment of Trinidad and Tobago, Dominican Republic, and Guyana into the offensive against Venezuela. 

Trump began his new term with mass migrant deportations and sweeping tariffs imposed on the region in January, a lurch toward xenophobia and economic parochialism. In response, Honduran President Xiomara Castro, then head of CELAC, called an emergency meeting, which was then canceled for lack of regional unity. The pan-Caribbean CARICOM has seen unity undermined by Trinidad and Tobago’s servile support of Trump’s armada. In response, Black Studies professor Isaac Saney asks, “Will the Caribbean accept fragmentation as its fate, or will this rupture provoke a renewed Pan-Caribbean struggle for a future beyond empire?”

Indeed, other regional organizations such as the progressive-oriented CELAC and even the US-dominated Organization of American States (OAS) have waned, especially given the latter’s anemic response to US military aggression in the Caribbean. The OAS’s controversy-ridden Summit of the Americas, scheduled for December, has been postponed to 2026. 

Among the region’s most progressive forces, the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA) has faced setbacks, including the loss of Bolivia following the election of a right-wing president. The influential leadership of Ralph Gonsalves was also lost when he was voted out in St. Vincent and the Grenadines. 

“The level of fragmentation that we are seeing today among Latin American countries,” Foreign Policy observes, is “the most dramatic in the last half-century.”

President Maduro: Every Battle in 2025 Reaffirms Vitality of the People of Venezuela (+Defense Minister)

Great power competitionWashington’s push to consolidate hemispheric dominance is linked to efforts to counter China, now South America’s largest trading partner and the second largest for the overall LAC region.  China’s regional strategy sharply contrasts with Trump’s. China offers a win-win model of economic cooperation for mutual benefit, while the US proffers a zero-sum model of winners and losers.

China rejects excluding third parties from the region, while the US pledges to “deny non-Hemispheric competitors.” China emphasizes multilateral cooperation and shared Global South priorities, such as reforming international financial institutions, scientific collaboration, and high-tech investment. Beijing criticizes Washington’s “unilateral bullying.” 

Most LAC governments try to triangulate between Beijing and Washington, while also developing new trading partnerships with countries such as India. Under US pressure, however, Brazil and Mexico may impose new tariffs on Chinese goods, although trade with China remains crucial for both. Argentina’s President Milei accepted a US bailout, but nonetheless renewed a currency swap line with China. 

Washington is pressing its client states to take an anti-China stance, which it does not even take itself, by recognizing Taiwan and cutting formal diplomatic relations with the PRC. New rightist presidents in Bolivia and Honduras have promised to do so.

Furthermore, both the US and China need access to lithium, a vital mineral in advanced technology. Argentina, Bolivia and Chile possess around 60% of the world’s known reserves. But while China offers complementary investment and industrial partnerships in return for a share of such resources, the US offers military bases and threats. 

Despite the counter-hegemonic presence of China, the power of the US is such that it can threaten punitive tariffs on all the constituent countries and impose unilateral coercive measures on roughly 35% of the states in the Western Hemisphere. These sanctions, which are collective punishment, are illegal under international law. This is done with relative impunity and little prospect for relief for the victims. And victims there are of the so-called sanctions – especially those imposed on Venezuela and Cuba, which are under country-level embargoes or sectoral restrictions that constitute blockades because the measures are enforced against third countries.  

What Pax Americana looks likeHaiti represents the ultimate outcome of neoliberal whittling down of the state: a hollowed-out government, near-total loss of sovereignty to the US and its allies, and a vacuum in which criminal gangs operate with impunity. This is the logical outcome of enforced submission to empire. 

The US seeks to impose a similar subjugation on Venezuela precisely because Venezuela represents the hope of an alternative socio-economic order. Michelle Ellner rightly argues that Venezuela is a test case: 

“What is being refined now—economic siege without formal war, maritime coercion without declared blockade, starvation without bombs—is a blueprint. Any country that refuses compliance with Washington’s political and economic demands should be paying attention. This will be the map for 21st century regime change.”

Even if Venezuela had not a drop of oil to be exploited, it still would be in the crosshairs of imperialism as are Marco Rubio’s other two “enemies of humanity” – resource poor Cuba and Nicaragua. Havana, made more vulnerable by the blockade on Venezuela, is now teetering on the brink of a disaster not of its own making. Nicaragua, so far treated lightly, faces attacks on its tourism industry and the likelihood of punishing tariffs. Also in line for regime-change is Colombia, whose President Gustavo Petro has emerged as a continental conscience through his criticism of Washington’s deportation policies and his outspoken support for Palestine. 

Nonetheless, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro faces the hardest test, likely with worse to come. He embodies a nation and more broadly a region bravely resisting imperial domination with remarkable resolve. Anti-imperialists hope and believe that such resistance by Latin America’s progressive governments will sustain them during 2026 and beyond.

RDH/JP/OT


From Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond via This RSS Feed.

2014
 
 

Attacks on Southern Transitional Council forces kill at least seven people.

On Friday, Saudi Arabia carried out airstrikes against positions of the UAE-backed Southern Transitional Council (STC) in Yemen’s Hadramaut province, marking a direct military escalation against the separatist group.

RELATED:

Why is Yemen’s Anti-Houthi Coalition Facing Instability?

The bombings took place in the Al-Khasah area near the Saudi border, killing at least seven people and wounding more than twenty.  Local media also reported ground clashes between STC forces and militias of the “National Shield,” which remain loyal to Hadramaut Governor Salem al-Khanbashi, a Saudi ally.

Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to Yemen’s Presidential Leadership Council, Mohammad Al Jaber, publicly accused STC President Aidarous al-Zubaidi of ordering a full closure of Aden International Airport, blocking the landing of a plane carrying an official Saudi delegation.

“We face persistent refusal,” Al Jaber said, referring to Riyadh’s efforts to resolve the crisis. The airport closure was decreed by Transport Minister Abdel Salam Humaid of the Aden-based Yemeni government, an STC ally.

In response, Governor al-Khanbashi – whom the Saudi-backed government recently granted full military powers in Hadramaut – announced the start of a “peaceful operation” to reclaim STC-held camps and military bases in the province.  “The operation is not a declaration of war or an escalation,” he stated, although his forces are already engaged with separatists on the ground.

🇾🇪🇸🇦 Clashes intensify in Hadhramaut: after #Saudi airstrikes on Khasha‘a, STC forces pulled back and National Shield units took control. Saudi jets also hit STC sites in Seiyun and Wadi Hadhramaut, as National Shield aims to push toward Al-Qatn, Shibam and eventually Seiyun. pic.twitter.com/YHZzeWTQ6o

— IWN (@A7_Mirza) January 2, 2026

A Split Between Former Allies

The conflict reveals a sharp divide within the former Saudi-led coalition that fought against the Ansar Allah movement, led by the Al Houthi family and supported by much of Yemen’s population.

While Riyadh backs the internationally recognized Presidential Leadership Council (PLC) government, the United Arab Emirates has militarily and politically strengthened the STC, which seeks the secession of southern Yemen.

Saudi Arabia views the STC’s growing presence in Hadramaut and Al-Mahra provinces – which border Saudi territory – as a threat to its national security.

In late December, Saudi coalition aircraft bombed a shipment of weapons from the UAE at Mukalla port in Hadramaut intended for the separatist group.

Yemeni government leader Rashad al-Alimi supported the decision to “end the Emirati military presence,” calling it an effort to “correct the course” of the coalition and “halt any support for elements outside the state.”

With active fighting in the south and Saudi airpower directly targeting a former ally, the Yemeni conflict grows more complex, further diminishing prospects for a unified peace and deepening the country’s divisions.

The United States bombed Yemen, Iran, Nigeria, Venezuela, Somalia, and Syria in 2025.
Will there be more war in 2026? pic.twitter.com/z5xUoqfdmQ

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 31, 2025

Sources:

Al Mayadeen – Al Jazeera


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

2015
 
 

“Our deepest condolences for the human losses caused by the fire,” said the Cuban Foreign Affairs Minister on the social network X.

Then, Rodriguez displayed “solidarity with the people and government of Switzerland and with the families of the victims”. At the same time, he wished prompt recovery to the wounded.

The fire in the ski resort of Crans-Montana killed about 40 people and about 115 injuries of various nationalities, according to the latest confirmations.

According to reports, there are between 80 and 100 seriously injured people, so the number of deaths could increase.

The accident happened in a crowded bar at 01:30 local time in a bar called Le Constellation on New Year’s Eve in the Valais canton, in southwest Switzerland.

So far there is no certainty of the cause of the fire.

ro/jqo

The post Cuban FM expresses grief after fire in Crans-Montana, Switzerland first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

2016
 
 

His Decree 941 creates a ‘Gestapo for Everyone’ and allows for arrests without a warrant.

On Friday, Argentine President Javier Milei reformed the National Intelligence Law through Decree 941, which that redefines responsibilities, reorganizes structures, and grants greater powers to the State Intelligence Secretariat (SIDE).

RELATED:

Buenos Aires Power Outage Hits Tens of Thousands Amid Heat Wave

The decree authorizes intelligence agencies to request support from security forces and allows for the arrest of individuals in cases of flagrant offenses or upon judicial request.

However, intelligence officers must immediately inform the competent police forces, without assuming repressive or judicial functions. The system’s objective is to “produce strategic intelligence” for decisions by the Executive Branch.

Additionally, Milei created the National Intelligence Community to coordinate intelligence production among state agencies, which integrates capabilities in defense, security, and foreign relations.

The National Information Community is also established. It comprises public agencies that generate relevant information for strategic analysis in areas such as cybersecurity and critical infrastructure.

The SIDE will operate entirely undercover, and its agents will be authorized to detain individuals. The measure was criticized by parties such as Fuerza Patria, the Socialist Party, the Civic Coalition, and the Left and Workers’ Front (FIT), which denounced the risk of political espionage.

El gobierno argentino de Javier Milei insistió en criminalizar la protesta social y presentó una apelación para mantener vigente su esquema de represión ante la Justicia, enfrentando críticas por limitar derechos constitucionales.#Argentina #Milei #ProtestaSocial #Represión pic.twitter.com/E37kMsy3Sn

— Jesus_z (@JesusTv476272) December 31, 2025

The text reads, “The Argentine government of Javier Milei insisted on criminalizing social protest and filed an appeal to maintain his repressive policies before the Court. He faces criticism for limiting constitutional rights.”

The restructuring comes after the promotion of accountant Cristian Auguadra as head of the SIDE, replacing Sergio Neiffert, who “lost the confidence” of presidential advisor Santiago Caputo.

Decree 941 establishes that all intelligence activities will be covert, also authorizing actions in response to leaks of classified information, which raises concerns about potential persecution of journalists.

Leopoldo Moreau, former president of the Bicameral Intelligence Commission (CBI), and Agustin Rossi, former head of the Federal Intelligence Agency (AFI), warn that a “secret police” with serious powers is being created, and that the military will negotiate the budget.

While Socialist Deputy Esteban Paulon announced that he will introduce a law project to repeal the emergency decree (DNU) championed by Milei, Civic Coalition Maximiliano Ferraro denounced that the changes turn the SIDE into a “Gestapo for everyone.”

AFI’s former Head, Agustin Rossi, argued that the reform allows for arrests without a warrant. He listed five critical points: arbitrary arrests, militarization of intelligence, budgetary subordination to the SIDE, weakening of the Ministry of Defense, and persecution of journalists for leaks.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | Argentina: The Senate approved a budget that cuts funding for key sectors such as education and science. pic.twitter.com/6luXKU9IiO

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 30, 2025

teleSUR: JP

Source: EFE – Pagina 12


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

2017
 
 

Legra was rushed to the provincial hospital, where she died in the early morning, the president of the Cuban Film Institute (ICAIC), Alexis Triana, informed.

Adelaida Lopez Legra, known by her stage name Adela Legra, was born in 1939 in Guantanamo, where years later her talent was discovered by the multi-award-winning filmmaker Humberto Solas.

With this director, she landed her first film role, the lead in the medium-length film Manuela (1965), followed by the films Lucia (1968), Miel para Oshun (2001), and Barrio Cuba (2005).

Her name also appears in productions like Rancheador (1976), by Sergio Giral; El Brigadista (1977), by Octavio Cortazar; Aquella noche larga (1979), by Enrique Pineda; Vals de la Habana Vieja (1988), by Luis Felipe Bernaza; and Nada (2001), by Juan Carlos Cremata.

For her contributions to Cuban cinema, she received the Heredia Plaque, was honored at Havana Film Festival New York (2002) and at the 1st Gibara International Low-budget Film Festival (2003), and had the documentaries Adela un nombre de mujer (1999) and Quien me quita lo bailao (2000) dedicated to her.

The renowned actress will be laid to rest in the coming hours at El Calvario funeral home in the eastern province of Santiago de Cuba.

jdt/ro/vnl

The post Cuban actress Adela Legra passes away first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

2018
 
 

In a statement issued by the Foreign Ministry, the Spanish government condemned the regulations for registering humanitarian NGOs operating in the occupied Palestinian territory, only to then revoke their licenses, expel them, and prevent them from carrying out their work.

With these measures, which have affected well-known Spanish and international NGOs, Israel is thus limiting their work and the ability of other actors to address the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza and meet the most basic needs of the Palestinian population, the statement said.

“This decision comes on top of the recent Knesset approval of the law that mandates cutting off the electricity and water supply to UNRWA facilities in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory, in addition to removing its immunities and privileges,” it noted.

Elsewhere in the statement, the Spanish government reiterated its “deepest concern about the severe impact these decisions will have on the already catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza and the Occupied Palestinian Territory.”

At the same time, it urged Israel to reverse “these unacceptable decisions that prevent essential humanitarian actors from working to save lives and address the urgent basic needs of the Palestinian civilian population and refugees in Gaza, the West Bank, and throughout the Middle East region.”

jdt/arm/ga/ft

The post Spain rejects Israel’s intention to expel NGOs first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

2019
 
 

Since the beginning of 2025, the “Here is Brazil” program has carried out 37 operations, guaranteeing the return of that number of vulnerable Brazilian nationals, mostly from the United States.

This represents almost double the 1,600 repatriations of 2024.

Such mass deportations were one of the campaign promises of US President Donald Trump, with repercussions also for Brazilians, who had already witnessed the increase in these measures.

In the case of the latest repatriation, after initial reception at the international airport of Belo Horizonte, capital of the state of Minas Gerais (southeast), part of the group was transferred to a hotel with a special assistance structure.

There they received food, hygiene kits, psychosocial support, medical and psychological assistance, as well as guidance and help for their journey to their cities of origin.

According to the MDCH, those who already had family in the area or decided to travel directly were also received at the airport terminal itself.

jdt/arm/ga/ocs

The post More than 3,000 Brazilians repatriated or deported in 2025 first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

2020
 
 

In the video message, Congolese Foreign Minister Therese Kayikwamba Wagner emphasized that the country is assuming an important responsibility in the service of international peace and security, describing the moment as one of dignity and commitment.

The DRC joins the Security Council as a non-permanent member after more than 30 years, and at a time when it is facing a situation of insecurity and aggression. Kayikwamba Wagner thanked all UN member states for the trust placed in the country.

She added that the country intends to carry out its term in a spirit of dialogue, committed to multilateralism and respect for international obligations.

VBased primarily on the principles of peace and security, and the prevention and resolution of conflicts, particularly on the African continent.

“It is not a reward, but a mission,” the minister stated, referring to their participation in this body, where she affirmed they will defend international law, sovereignty, and the territorial integrity of states.

The DRC was a member of the UN Security Council for two previous terms: 1982-1983 and 1990-1991.

jdt/arm/ga/kmg

The post DRC begins two-year term on UN Security Council first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

2021
 
 

In the letter commemorating the 67th anniversary of the triumph of the Cuban Revolution, the Maldivian Foreign Minister expressed his desire to work closely with his Cuban counterpart to strengthen bilateral and multilateral ties in the coming years.

“On behalf of the Government and people of the Republic of Maldives, and on my own behalf, I wish to extend my warmest greetings to Your Excellency and the people of Cuba on the occasion of your Liberation Day,” he added.

Khalel took the opportunity to reiterate to Rodriguez the assurance of his highest regard.

Cuba and the Maldives established diplomatic relations on January 29, 1977, and the relationship between the two countries is characterized by a strong diplomatic partnership and mutual support in various areas.

jdt/arm/ga/lrd

The post Maldives expresses interest in strengthening ties with Cuba first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

2022
 
 

Washington alliance with Maria Corina Machado has strengthened Venezuelan national unity.

During an interview with Ignacio Ramonet on Thursday, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro assessed the impact on his country of the relationship between the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump and far-right activist Maria Corina Machado.

RELATED:

“To the People of the United States, I Say That Here in Venezuela, You Have a Friendly People”

The Bolivarian leader emphasized that the link between the United States and the traditional oligarchy has generated growing rejection of Machado among Venezuelans, leaving her politically isolated and without domestic backing.

“Currently, the United States has no allied political force in Venezuela because Machado – whom Venezuelans call ‘Sayona,’ in reference to a legend about a vengeful, malevolent female spirit – has an 85 percent disapproval rating,” Maduro said.

“Never, neither Machado nor what she represents would have the capacity to govern this country,” the Venezuelan leader stressed.

Maduro also commented on the U.S. military deployment in the Caribbean, stating that threats against his country have fostered a sense of national sovereignty among his compatriots.

“The world and U.S. public opinion must understand that the Global South peoples have a right to exist… They must understand that they cannot try to impose the Monroe Doctrine or any other doctrine,” the Bolivarian leader stated.

US TO KEEP STOLEN VENEZUELAN OIL

US president Donald Trump told a room full of journalists that the US will keep Venezuela's oil as well as the ships.

This brazen theft comes after US forces forcefully boarded a Venezuelan oil tanker seizing 1.9 million barrels of oil on… pic.twitter.com/4DxRGPzwj2

— Sovereign Media (@sov_media) January 2, 2026

“They cannot impose a new colonialist, hegemonistic and interventionist model. They cannot impose a model in which countries would have to resign themselves to being colonies of a foreign power, and we the people slaves of new masters,” he emphasized.

The Bolivarian leader also highlighted that Venezuelans have shown resilience in the face of U.S. aggression, which is currently expressed through a “cognitive warfare.”

“As an immunological reaction, 95 percent of Venezuelan society rejects the military threats against their country and the assault and theft of their oil,” he stressed.

In Venezuela, a feeling of national unity has been reinforced each time the United States kills fishermen in the Caribbean Sea or lends legitimacy to Maria Corina Machado, a far-right opposition politician who has not hesitated to call for foreign military intervention against her own nation.

“The struggle I am waging in defense of national sovereignty and peace has the support of more than 70 percent of the population,” Maduro said, noting that this sentiment extends far beyond traditionally patriotic citizens or militants of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV).

“The union among the people, police and military now encompasses all sectors. We are experiencing a national union like we have never had before,” the Bolivarian leader said.

“That is the natural immunological response of Venezuelan society to the illegal, disproportionate, threatening and warlike aggression we have suffered for 28 consecutive weeks,” he concluded.

During his New Year's interview with writer and journalist Ignacio Ramonet, the president of the Bolivarian Republic of #Venezuela Nicolas Maduro, let the people of the #US know that they have a friendly government and a friendly people in Venezuela. pic.twitter.com/LxQfSJio3N

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) January 2, 2026

teleSUR/ JF

Source: teleSUR


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

2023
 
 

The agency reported that sexual violence is deeply rooted in the DRC and is systemic, with more than 35,000 cases registered in the first nine months of 2025.

Preliminary data from last year also suggest that, in conflict zones, the cases reported in the first half of the year could represent more than 80% of the total documented in 2024.

UNICEF warned that the actual number of victims may be higher, due to a lack of reporting, primarily due to fear, stigmatization, insecurity, and limited access to services, particularly in areas of armed conflict.

UNICEF warned that the actual number of victims may be higher, due to a lack of reporting, mainly due to fear, stigmatization, insecurity, and limited access to services, particularly in areas of armed conflict.

The most affected provinces are precisely those in the east of the country: North Kivu, South Kivu, and Ituri, where violence, displacement, and the weakening of protection systems increase the risks, the report noted.

Teen girls are currently the most affected nationwide, but boys are also victims of sexual violence, although they remain significantly underrepresented in reported cases.

jdt/arm/mem/kmg

The post UNICEF reports worsening sexual violence against children in DRC first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

2024
 
 

  Since its inception in 1959, the text adds, the triumphant Cuban Revolution has been a victim of US pressure to conform to the White House’s policies.

The US has never forgiven Cuba for making the recovered wealth, which was being plundered by American companies, available for national development.

  The policy of sanctions, sabotage, terrorism, and blockade—economic, commercial, financial, and even cultural—has become the daily reality of the empire against the largest of the Antilles, the statement underscores.

  In this regard, the document adds, the solidarity of the peoples of Latin America, the Caribbean, and the world with the island has been the cornerstone for overcoming the coercive measures resulting from Washington’s genocidal imperial policy of dispossession, measures which, due to their magnitude, can only be confronted by peoples with a spirit of sacrifice and resilience.

  The US blockade on Cuban only shows the erratic policy of using force, terrorism, and intolerance, the document states. Furthermore, Washington’s hostile policy of militarizing the region endangers peace, particularly with the threats of invading Venezuela and Colombia, the text warns.

jdt/arc/ga

The post Solidarity with Cuba in Panama condemns US blockade first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

2025
 
 

Through his account on the social network X, the island’s foreign minister reciprocated the messages of congratulations, solidarity, and good wishes received from Heads of State and Government, colleagues, and friends from all over the world.

In the post, Rodriguez highlighted the recognition of the Caribbean nation for its humanitarian, internationalist, and solidarity-based work.

He also emphasized that the messages received highlight “#APuebloEnRevolución” (A People in Revolution) that advocates for peace, for a new democratic, just, and inclusive international order; for a world without wars, the use of force, or unilateral coercive measures.

The head of the Caribbean nation’s foreign ministry reaffirmed the message commemorating the 67th anniversary of the Cuban Revolution’s triumph, emphasizing the importance of continuing to strengthen ties of friendship and cooperation between the two countries.

jdt/ro/jqo

The post Cuba expresses gratitude for messages on the anniversary of the Revol first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

view more: ‹ prev next ›