International
Peruvian authorities demand trial of those responsible for repression and massacres against the people
April 2 |
Participants in the First National Citizen Meeting of Victims of the Dina Boluarte Regime, held this Saturday in the city of Juliaca, in the department of Puno (south), agreed to continue demanding that those responsible for the massacres perpetrated in that South American country during the mobilizations against the Boluarte government be brought to trial.
Delegates and relatives of victims of repression, coming from the departments of Apurímac, Cusco, Ayacucho and Puno, denounced the impunity that prevails around the murders of protesters and demanded the resignation of the appointed president.
They stressed that while dozens of people remain in prison for participating in the demonstrations, so far no one directly responsible or politically responsible for the murders of demonstrators has been tried.
Among other agreements, the families of the victims of the military and police repression announced that they will organize a march to the capital, Lima, to demand progress in the investigations into the repression, which to date has caused the death of more than 60 demonstrators.
They also rejected the maneuvers of the Government and the hegemonic press to silence the meeting held in Juliaca and to prevent the participation of human rights organizations.
The participants held a sit-in in the Plaza de Armas of Juliaca, another moment in which they remembered the 19 victims of the repression in that city, who lost their lives last January 15, and those who were murdered on December 10 in Ayacucho.
This Friday another mortal victim of the repression was registered, Manuel Quilla Ticona, 36 years old, who died after several weeks of hospitalization due to police violence. Relatives denounce that he was arrested during the marches in Lima and tortured in a police station, and demand justice.
Quilla Ticona’s body was held a wake this Saturday in the Plaza de Armas of Juliaca and will be buried this Sunday in the province of Huancané, where he was born.
International
Hiroshima survivor who embraced Obama dies at 88
The emotional embrace between Barack Obama and Hiroshima survivor Mori—who was eight years old when the United States dropped the atomic bomb in 1945—resonated around the world.
According to Asahi Shimbun and other local media, Mori died on Saturday at a hospital in Hiroshima.
Mori, known for his research on the fate of American prisoners of war in Hiroshima, was thrown into a river by the force of the explosion on August 6, 1945, during the atomic bombing of the city.
In a past interview with AFP, ahead of his meeting with Obama at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial in 2016, Mori recalled the chaos and desperation that followed the blast.
He described how, after emerging from the water, he encountered injured civilians seeking help amid the devastation, an experience that stayed with him throughout his life.
In 2016, Obama became the first sitting U.S. president to visit Hiroshima, where he paid tribute to the victims of the first atomic bomb used in warfare. During the visit, Mori was visibly moved as he met the president, sharing a brief but powerful moment that symbolized remembrance and reconciliation.
The bombing of Hiroshima resulted in the deaths of approximately 140,000 people, including those who succumbed to radiation exposure in the aftermath.
Three days later, a second atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki, killing an estimated 74,000 people and contributing to the end of World War II.
International
Colombia seeks ‘total suffocation’ of armed groups with regional support
Colombia is advancing a strategy aimed at the “total suffocation” of illegal armed groups, seeking to corner them in border regions with the support of Ecuador and Venezuela, Defense Minister Pedro Sánchez said in an interview with AFP.
According to the minister, coordinated pressure from neighboring countries—backed by United States—aims to dismantle criminal networks that use cross-border routes to traffic Colombian cocaine toward North America and Europe.
For decades, armed groups involved in Colombia’s internal conflict have relied on border territories as strategic rear bases to evade military operations and maintain logistical support.
However, Sánchez said that dynamic is beginning to change.
“We expect a total suffocation between both nations so they have no spaces where they can live or feel safe […] to close off any room they might have,” he stated during the interview in Bogotá, less than five months before the end of President Gustavo Petro’s term.
Regional developments have reinforced this strategy. Following the capture of Nicolás Maduro in a U.S. military operation, Washington has increased its influence in Caracas, where interim leader Delcy Rodríguez has implemented a renewed anti-narcotics policy.
Meanwhile, in Ecuador, President Daniel Noboa—a key U.S. ally in the region—has launched a two-week security plan under strict curfews to combat criminal gangs, with U.S. support.
Sánchez argued that these combined efforts leave illegal organizations with fewer escape routes and operational spaces, effectively placing them in a “dead end.”
International
Two killed in shooting at restaurant near Frankfurt Airport
Two people were shot dead early Tuesday at a restaurant in Raunheim, near Frankfurt Airport, according to local police.
Preliminary findings indicate that an armed individual entered the establishment at around 03:45 local time (02:45 GMT) and opened fire on the victims, who died at the scene from their injuries.
The suspect fled and remains at large, while the motive behind the shooting is still unclear, German media reported. Authorities have launched a large-scale search operation.
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