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Ecuador looks to El Salvador as model for new high-security prisons

The Ecuadorian government is exploring new prison infrastructure projects inspired by models in El Salvador and other countries, as it nears completion of the first of two prisons initiated under the administration of President Daniel Noboa, according to Interior Minister John Reimberg in an interview with EFE.

“We are already looking at additional prison projects,” said Reimberg, who visited El Salvador in late April alongside Defense Minister Gian Carlo Loffredo to learn about that country’s security and prison policies under President Nayib Bukele.

The two ministers toured multiple correctional facilities, including Bukele’s “mega-prison” for gang members, officially known as the Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT), which, according to the Salvadoran government, has a capacity of around 40,000 inmates.

“We were well received there. They shared all the necessary information with us, and we were able to observe not only CECOT but several other prisons and their processes. It was very helpful,” Reimberg explained. “When we move forward with new prison projects, we’ll be incorporating those ideas, among others, here in Ecuador.”

The minister added that the first of Ecuador’s two new prison facilities is expected to be completed within the next two months.

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“Corruption is betrayal”: Sheinbaum defends armed corces’ values in Veracruz

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum stated on Saturday that defending the country’s sovereignty requires values rooted in both individuals and institutions—values she said the Armed Forces possess. Her remarks came amid an ongoing investigation involving senior Navy officials accused of participating in a fuel smuggling network known as “huachicol fiscal.”

Sheinbaum delivered her speech in the port city of Veracruz, during a ceremony marking the 204th anniversary of the founding of the Mexican Navy and the 201st anniversary of the 1824 Federal Constitution, the first republican charter that established the nation’s three branches of government.

“The Mexican Armed Forces uphold honor, which demands integrity and reminds us that every action represents our nation; loyalty, which means absolute faithfulness to the people and the homeland; duty, which drives us to fulfill our mission without hesitation; patriotism, which is love for the nation expressed through dedication and sacrifice; and honesty, the foundation that gives meaning and strength to all other values—because without it, nothing endures,” Sheinbaum said.

She emphasized that corruption is the opposite of honesty, describing it as “a betrayal of all values and an act of disloyalty.” She insisted it “must have no place in our institutions and must be firmly punished.”

Her statements come after revelations of a corruption network allegedly led by Vice Admiral Manuel Roberto Farías Laguna, the detained nephew-in-law of former Navy Secretary Rafael Ojeda Durán (2018–2024), a close ally of former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador. The case also involves ten naval officers and customs officials.

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“The loyalty we owe to the homeland also means loyalty to our values and to the truth,” Sheinbaum concluded, calling for honesty to be upheld as a core principle of public service.

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Supreme Court backs Trump move to end TPS for over 300,000 venezuelans

The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday upheld the Trump administration’s decision to revoke Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for more than 300,000 Venezuelan migrants living in the country.

In a 6–3 ruling, the high court sided with the Department of Homeland Security, overturning a previous federal court decision in California that had blocked the suspension of protections for about 600,000 immigrants, including Venezuelans and Haitians. While the ruling paves the way for the potential deportation of hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans, it is not expected to immediately affect Haitian beneficiaries under the program.

“Although the positions in the case have shifted, the legal arguments and the relative harms have not. The same outcome reached in May remains appropriate,” wrote the conservative majority, which had already ruled in a similar direction through emergency measures.

Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented. In her opinion, Justice Jackson warned: “I cannot agree with this repetitive, gratuitous, and harmful interference in cases still pending in lower courts while lives hang in the balance.”

President Trump had asked the Supreme Court in late September to authorize the termination of deportation protections that, since 2021, had shielded roughly 300,000 Venezuelans. Lower courts had repeatedly blocked the move.

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The ruling marks a temporary conclusion to a legal battle spanning more than two years and grants the administration the green light to move forward with revoking TPS for Venezuelans, despite the possibility of further appeals in lower courts.

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U.S. government shutdown likely to continue into next week amid Senate deadlock

A U.S. government shutdown is now almost certain to extend into next week, despite another scheduled Senate vote this Friday, as divisions between Democrats and Republicans show no sign of easing.

This will mark the fourth Senate vote since the Republican-led House of Representatives passed a temporary funding bill extending government operations until September 21.

Republicans hold a majority in the Senate with 53 out of 100 seats, but they need at least 60 votes to pass the budget package. Analysts widely expect Friday’s attempt to fall short.

Federal agencies, along with some 750,000 employees, have been left without official funding since Wednesday, when the U.S. fiscal year expired and Congress failed to approve a stopgap measure.

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