International
New Advisor to the Commissioner for Peace takes office in Colombia
December 7 |
The Presidency of Colombia and the High Commissioner for Peace informed on Wednesday that political scientist José Otty Patiño took office as Advisor to the Commissioner in the Casa Nariño.
“This is not a phase of rectification, but of development of what has been done. Let’s not think that we are going to wipe the slate clean, but rather we are going to work on what has already been built and above all with the accumulated knowledge, with the commitments and expectations that have been generated,” said Otty Patiño, High Commissioner for Peace.
José Otty Patiño Hormaza was appointed as Peace Commissioner Advisor by the President of the Republic, Gustavo Petro, through Decree 2095 of 2023.
This announcement, which ratified Patiño, head of the Government’s negotiating team, as replacement for Danilo Rueda, was made last November 22 from the Colombian dignitary’s X account.
In 1974 he founded, together with other guerrilla commanders, the April 19 Movement (M-19).
Otty Patiño assumes in the context in which the Commissioner for Peace informed that, in the most recent report of the Investigation and Accusation Unit of the Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP), highlights that between January and October 2023 there was a reduction of the armed conflict, in addition to other important advances in the construction of Total Peace in Colombia.
However, Indepaz reports confirm that in 2023, more than 150 social leaders, 40 peace signatories and 90 massacres have been assassinated in Colombia.
Likewise, the Colombian Government and the National Liberation Army (ELN) began the fifth round of Peace Dialogues in Mexico on Monday, amid tensions.
International
Suspect Armed With Shotgun and Knives Detained at White House Correspondents Dinner
U.S. authorities confirmed Saturday that the suspect who stormed into the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner while President Donald Trump was attending acted alone, adding that there is no ongoing threat to the public following the incident, which left one Secret Service agent injured.
Acting Metropolitan Police Department chief Jeff Carroll said during a press conference that the suspect was carrying “a shotgun, a handgun, and multiple knives” when he attempted to pass through a Secret Service security checkpoint inside the hotel lobby at approximately 8:36 p.m. local time.
“At this point, everything indicates that this was a lone actor, a lone gunman,” Carroll stated, adding that investigators have found no preliminary evidence suggesting the involvement of additional suspects.
During the exchange of gunfire inside the hotel corridors, the suspect was not struck by bullets but was subdued by law enforcement officers and later transported to a hospital for medical evaluation.
A member of the United States Secret Service Uniformed Division was shot during the incident, though the bullet was stopped by the officer’s ballistic vest, preventing serious injuries. The agent was taken to a hospital and is reportedly “in good spirits,” according to Carroll.
The shooting prompted the immediate evacuation of President Trump, Melania Trump, and several senior officials attending the event after multiple gunshots were heard outside the hotel’s main ballroom.
International
U.S. allows Venezuela to fund Maduro and Cilia Flores’ legal defense
International
U.S. Sanctions Network Linked to Fentanyl Trafficking Across India, Guatemala and Mexico
The United States Department of State announced sanctions on Thursday against 23 individuals and companies allegedly linked to an international fentanyl production and smuggling network operating in India, Guatemala and Mexico.
According to the State Department, the network supplied precursor chemicals to the Sinaloa Cartel, which the United States has designated as a Foreign Terrorist Organization.
Washington declared fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid, a weapon of mass destruction last year due to its role in the ongoing overdose crisis in the United States.
“By targeting the entire supply chain — from chemical suppliers in Asia to logistical intermediaries in Central America and cartel-linked networks in Mexico — the Trump Administration is dismantling networks that destabilize governance across our hemisphere and threaten U.S. security,” the State Department said.
In a separate statement, the Office of Foreign Assets Control detailed sanctions against three Indian chemical and pharmaceutical companies: Sutaria, Agrat and SR Chemicals, along with a sales executive accused of supplying precursor chemicals to contacts in Guatemala and Mexico.
In Guatemala, authorities sanctioned J and C Import and Central Logística de Servicios, as well as intermediary Jaime Augusto Barrientos.
The OFAC also designated several intermediaries and import companies operating in the Mexican state of Sinaloa.
As part of the investigation, U.S. authorities identified Ramiro Baltazar Félix as a member of Los Mayos, a faction of the Sinaloa Cartel, and Alejandro Reynoso, accused of operating clandestine drug laboratories in Guadalajara.
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