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The Government of Javier Milei reduces by decree the minimum age for the possession of weapons to 18 years

The Government of Argentina modified this Tuesday through a decree the regulation for the acquisition and possession of weapons and reduced from 21 to 18 years the minimum age to obtain the legitimate user credential.

“It is necessary to modify the aforementioned article 55 of the Regulation of Law No. 20,429 approved by the aforementioned Decree No. 395/75 and its amendments, in order to harmonize the current legislation, recognizing the ability of citizens to be legitimate users of weapons from the age of eighteen (18),” established decree 1081/2024, published this Tuesday in the Official Gazette.

The text, signed by the president, Javier Milei, the Minister of Security, Patricia Bullrich, and the Chief of Staff, Guillermo Francos, argues that the minimum age for the acquisition and possession of weapons must coincide with the age of majority, which is currently reached in Argentina at 18 years.

In 1975, when Law 20,429, which regulates the possession of weapons in the country, was regulated, the age of majority was still 21 years old, and in 2009 it became 18.

The decree published today does not modify, however, the other two requirements: “Do not present psychic or physical abnormalities that incapacitate the petitioner for the possession of firearms” and “accredit before the police agency with jurisdiction at the home of the interested party, identity, real address and lawful livelihoods.”

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International

Colombian President Gustavo Petro announces talks with clan del Golfo outside country

Colombian President Gustavo Petro stated on Friday that his government has begun talks outside the country with the Clan del Golfo, Colombia’s main criminal group also known as the Gaitanist Army.

“We have started conversations outside Colombia with the self-called Gaitanist Army,” the president said during the handover of 6,500 hectares of land to farmers in the Caribbean department of Córdoba.

The president noted that his administration “has seized more cocaine than any other government” because it seeks to “cut off the finances (of criminal groups) that fuel violence in many regions of Colombia.”

“A bill has been introduced that I hope the Congress studies thoroughly, because it essentially elevates restorative justice even for serious crimes,” Petro said.

The initiative he referred to was presented by his Minister of Justice, Eduardo Montealegre, aimed at “the consolidation of total peace.”

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According to the Ministry of Justice, the bill seeks to provide the government with clear regulations to achieve the disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration of illegal armed groups.

For groups such as the Clan del Golfo, a judicial submission process will be applied, which could bring possible legal benefits if they genuinely cooperate, surrender weapons, and dismantle their groups.

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International

María Corina Machado thanks OAS allies for condemning Venezuela’s growing repression

Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado expressed her gratitude on Thursday to the “allied” countries that spoke out at the Permanent Council of the Organization of American States (OAS) regarding the increasing repression in Venezuela. Through her X account, she highlighted that “our regional allies took a firm stand in favor of democracy and the freedom of Venezuelans.”

The statement came a day after Gloria de Mees, rapporteur of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) for Venezuela, presented before the OAS the worsening situation in the country, just over a year after the elections in which President Nicolás Maduro was declared the winner over opposition candidate Edmundo González Urrutia, who denounced electoral fraud.

Machado, who shared videos of speeches by representatives from Canada, the United States, Paraguay, Chile, and Panama, insisted that “Venezuela is the most urgent conflict in the Western Hemisphere and its definitive resolution is everyone’s responsibility.” She affirmed that “silence and inaction” are forms of “complicity” and urged international justice to act with “greater speed and firmness.”

Before her participation at the OAS, De Mees told EFE that the repression “is not new, but now it is systematic” and has intensified, affecting not only human rights defenders, journalists, and dissidents but “everyone, because there is fear of retaliation.”

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Over 240 guatemalans detained at Florida’s Alligator Alcatraz await deportation

At least 249 Guatemalans are currently detained at the Alligator Alcatraz detention center in Florida, United States, awaiting deportation, the Guatemalan government reported this Friday.

The Guatemalan Ministry of Foreign Affairs detailed that the figure was confirmed by U.S. authorities to Guatemalan diplomats in Miami, Florida, during a visit to the center where they had the opportunity to interview 37 of their compatriots.

“The Guatemalans we spoke with said they have been at the detention center for only a few days and have been able to communicate with family members and lawyers. Most of them were detained due to their irregular immigration status,” the Ministry stated.

According to the same source, another visit by Guatemalan diplomats has been authorized soon to meet with other nationals held at the detention center in Florida.

Alligator Alcatraz, opened just over a month ago, was built in only one week on an abandoned airport in the Everglades, a natural area west of Miami, surrounded by alligators and swamps. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis sees it as a model for other centers, while activists consider it a symbol of human rights violations.

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Democratic lawmakers reported the presence of 750 migrants “in cages” after entering the site on July 12. The facility currently has a capacity for 2,000 people, which could increase to 4,000, according to the Florida Division of Emergency Management (FDEM), which manages the site.

Every year, thousands of Guatemalans leave the Central American country to migrate irregularly to the United States in search of better living conditions and to escape the poverty and violence that plague Guatemala.

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