Tue, 21-Oct-2025

Colombian candidate Miguel Uribe shot at rally

Colombian candidate Miguel Uribe shot at rally

Colombia:  Senator Miguel Uribe, a prominent right wing opposition figure and a leading candidate for next year’s presidential elections, was critically wounded after being shot three times during a public rally in Bogotá on Saturday, June 7, 2025. The shocking incident unfolded as Uribe addressed supporters in the Colombian capital, sending immediate tremors through the … Read more

US secret service Chief steps down after Trump Assassination attempt

US secret service Chief steps down after Trump Assassination attempt

Cheatle faced bipartisan condemnation during her appearance before the House of Representatives Oversight Committee. The gunman, identified as 20-year-old Thomas Crooks, was shot and killed by a Secret Service sniper. The incident led to investigations from multiple congressional committees and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. U.S. Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle resigned after the … Read more

Argentina thumps Colombia to clinch 16th Copa America title

Argentina thumps Colombia to clinch 16th Copa America title

Argentina won Copa America 2024. Martinez scored the winning goal. Di Maria played his last match for Argentina. In a dramatic extra-time victory, Lautaro Martinez scored the decisive goal, securing Argentina’s triumph over Colombia with a score of 1-0, marking their 16th Copa America championship at Hard Rock Stadium on Sunday. This win represents the … Read more

Spain detains four Colombians rescued from suspected drug-transporting submarine

Spain detains four Colombians rescued from suspected drug-transporting submarine

Spanish authorities intercepted a 20-meter submarine suspected of transporting drugs from South America to Europe. The Civil Guard believes the submarine transported cocaine due to its characteristics and crew’s behavior. The crew surfaced safely while the submarine flooded and sank with its cargo. Spanish authorities intercepted another submarine suspected of transporting drugs from South America … Read more

Colombia: Cable Car Collapse Incident claims 1 life and 12 injures

Colombia: Cable Car Collapse Incident claims 1 life and 12 injures

A cable car in Medellin, Colombia, failed and plunged onto a sidewalk, killing at least one person and injuring 12 others. The cause of the accident is unknown, but it’s part of the city’s public transportation system. The Metrocable operates six lines serving low-income neighborhoods on steep hills. In the Colombian city of Medellin, a … Read more

Colombia landslide killed 33 people, including children

Colombia landslide killed 33 people, including children

A landslide in northwest Colombia has killed at least 33 people, mostly children. Colombian President Gustavo Preto pledged “all available help” to the Choco region. The Choco province, bordering the Pacific Ocean, experienced significant rainfall on Friday and Saturday. The death toll from a landslide in north-west Colombia has risen to at least 33 people, … Read more

Liverpool Monitoring Ongoing Situation with Luis Diaz’s Family

Liverpool Monitoring Ongoing Situation with Luis Diaz's Family

Liverpool acknowledges situation with Luis Diaz’s family Diaz’s parents reportedly abducted in Colombia Colombian President reports mother’s location, father missing Liverpool has acknowledged being informed about a developing situation concerning the family of Luis Diaz, following reports of his parents’ abduction in Colombia. Colombian President Gustavo Petro shared on social media that Diaz’s mother was … Read more

Latest World Football Rankings: Argentina Holds the Top Spot

Latest Football Rankings

France holds onto second place. Portugal moves up to eighth place, while Italy drops to ninth. Croatia, the Netherlands, and Spain complete the top 10. Argentina, which took the top spot from Brazil in April, has maintained its position as the leader in the latest rankings after securing victories against Ecuador and Bolivia in their … Read more

Colombian capital Bagota rattled by strong 6.1-magnitude tremor

Colombian Bagota tremor

A powerful tremor rattled the Colombian capital, Bogota, on Thursday, triggering the activation of sirens and causing brief moments of panic on the streets. Fortunately, there were no reported injuries or significant damage to property. The Colombian Geological Survey (CGS) measured the earthquake’s magnitude as 6.1, while the US Geological Survey (USGS) recorded it as … Read more

Lauren James apologizes for stamp on Nigerian player

Lauren James

Lauren James apologizes for stamp on Nigerian player. She publicly apologized for her actions on a public platform. England will be without James due to his suspension. England’s striker, Lauren James, expressed remorse for her behavior in the recent FIFA Women’s World Cup match against Nigeria. In the round of 16 game, James accidentally stepped … Read more

Colombia reach Women’s World Cup quarter-finals for first time

Colombia

Colombia reach Women’s World Cup quarter-finals for first time. Usme’s goal scored in the 51st minute. Jamaica maintained their streak of not conceding any goals. Catalina Usme, the captain of Colombia’s team, secured a goal during the second half, leading her team to a 1-0 victory over Jamaica in the ongoing FIFA Women’s World Cup … Read more

Morocco stuns Colombia to reach last 16 of Women’s World Cup

Morocco

Morocco defeated Colombia 1-0 to secure their spot. Morocco’s goal came from Anissa Lahmari’s toe-poke. Morocco will face France in their next match. Morocco had a memorable debut in the FIFA Women’s World Cup by defeating Colombia 1-0, which secured their spot in the last 16 of the tournament. They scored the winning goal through … Read more

Colombia shocks Germany with 97th-minute winner

Colombia Stuns Germany in Last-Minute Win at Women’s World Cup 18-Year-Old Linda Caicedo Scores Stunning Goal to Help Colombia Beat Germany Manuela Vanegas Heads in Winner as Colombia Upsets Germany 2-1. In a thrilling match at the FIFA Women’s World Cup held at Australia’s Allianz Stadium, Colombia delivered a stunning upset to Germany with a … Read more

Colombia plans to send 70 “cocaine hippos” to Mexico and India, says governor

Colombia
  • Experts warn that hippos lack a natural predator in Colombia and are a possible threat to biodiversity.
  • The aim is to concentrate on the hippos that live in the rivers surrounding the Hacienda Napoles ranch.
  • A federal court determined in 2021 after the Colombian government was sued over its plan to sterilize or kill the animals.

Colombia is proposing to move at least 70 hippopotamuses living near Pablo Escobar’s former ranch – descendants of four illegally smuggled from Africa by the late drug lord in the 1980s – to India and Mexico as part of a population control strategy.

The “cocaine hippos,” which may weigh up to 3 tonnes, have expanded well beyond the Hacienda Napoles property, which is located approximately 125 miles from Bogota along the Magdalena River. According to environmental authorities, there are approximately 130 hippos in the Antioquia province area, and their population might reach 400 in eight years.

Escobar’s Hacienda Napoles — and the hippos — have become a sort of local tourist attraction in the years since the kingpin was killed by police in 1993. When his ranch was abandoned, the hippos survived and reproduced in local rivers and favorable climatic conditions.

Experts warn that hippos lack a natural predator in Colombia and are a possible threat to biodiversity because their excrement modifies the chemistry of rivers, threatening the habitat of manatees and capybaras. Colombia’s authorities labeled them a dangerous invasive species last year.

A federal court determined in 2021 after the Colombian government was sued over its plan to sterilize or kill the animals, that the hippos can be regarded as people or “interested persons” with legal rights in the United States. According to a legal expert, the ruling is meaningless in Colombia, where the hippos live.

Hippos kill more people in Africa than any other huge animal. Thus yet, no assaults have been reported in Colombia. But, David Echeverri, who works for the environmental organization in charge of tracking and controlling hippos in the area, told Bojorquez that it’s only a matter of time before someone is injured.

Lina Marcela de los Ros Morales, director of animal protection and welfare at Antioquia’s environment ministry, said the idea to transfer them to India and Mexico had been in the works for more than a year.

The hippos would be coaxed with food into enormous iron containers and transported by truck to Rionegro’s international airport, 150 kilometers distant. They would then be flown to India or Mexico, where there are sanctuaries and zoos that can take in and care for the creatures.

“It is possible to do, we already have experience relocating hippos in zoos nationwide,” said David Echeverri López, a spokesman for Cornare, the local environmental authority that would be in charge of the relocations.

The aim is to send 60 hippos to the Greens Zoological Rescue & Rehabilitation Kingdom in Gujarat, India, which will cover the cost of the containers and airlift, according to De los Ros Morales. Another ten hippos would be sent to Mexican zoos and sanctuaries, such as the Ostok in Sinaloa.

“We work with Ernesto Zazueta, who is the president of sanctuaries and zoos in Mexico, who is the one who liaisons with different countries and manages their rescues,” said the official.

The aim is to concentrate on the hippos that live in the rivers surrounding the Hacienda Napoles ranch, rather than those that live within the ranch because they are in a controlled habitat and do not pose a threat to the local ecosystem.

The relocations would help reduce the hippo population, and while the animals’ native home in Africa, they are more humane than exterminating them as an invasive species, according to De los Ros Morales.

According to the Antioquia Governor’s Office, Ecuador, the Philippines, and Botswana have all expressed interest in relocating Colombian hippos to their respective nations.

Alvaro Molina, 57, declared last year that he favours “cocaine hippos,” despite being one of the few Colombians who has been assaulted by one. He was fishing one day when he felt a disturbance beneath his canoe, causing him to fall into the water.

“The female attacked me once – the first pair to arrive – since she had just given birth,” he explained.

Locals claim that hippos occasionally emerge from the river and walk through the town’s streets. When this happens, traffic comes to a halt and people move out of the way.

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Colombian protests: 79 police men freed after being hostage

Colombian
  • Colombian President Gustavo Petro had called for the dismissal of the 79 cops and nine Emerald Energy employees.
  • Police officers and oilfield employees who were hostage during protests in Colombia.
  • During the unrest, a police officer and a civilian have already been killed

President Petro says a number of police officers and oilfield employees who were hostage during protests in Colombia’s southern Caquetá state have been released.

On Thursday, residents blockaded an oil exploration company’s compound, resulting in violence. They were requesting its assistance in constructing roads in the area.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro had called for the dismissal of the 79 cops and nine Emerald Energy employees.

During the unrest, a police officer and a civilian have already been killed

Mr. Petro called on detectives to locate those guilty of the two killings after announcing the release of the hostages, who were videotaped sitting in a cramped area on the floor.

They were killed by gunshots, according to Interior Minister Alfonso Prada.

More united than ever

Many of the demonstrators are indigenous and rural residents who want Emerald Energy to create new road infrastructure in the San Vicente del Caguan area.

Colombian police recognized the officer killed in the fight as Ricardo Monroy and paid respect to him on Twitter.

“Now we are more united than ever,” they wrote, adding that Mr. Monroy had “given his life in the line of duty”.

Colombia’s human rights ombudsman, Carlos Camargo, who was on the scene to mediate, said he spoke with demonstrators and prevented them from throwing petrol bombs at the oil complex.

Protests are prevalent in Colombian villages near energy and mining operations as residents demand that businesses develop infrastructure such as roads and schools.

According to police, a dissident section of Farc rebels who rejected the 2016 peace pact were present in the region and may have sparked the unrest.

Separately, Mr. Petro abruptly issued a message on Twitter on Thursday, requesting that the country’s prosecutor general launch a criminal inquiry into claims of corruption involving his own son and brother.

The message did not explain the claims against his eldest son, Nicolas Petro Burgos, and brother, Juan Fernando Petro Urrego, but it did say: “my government will not give out benefits to criminals in exchange for bribes”.

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Police officer died and 79 taken hostage in Colombia protests

Colombia protests

Protests in Caquetá have resulted in one police officer being killed. And 79 others being held prisoner. With indigenous and rural people supporting Emerald Energy’s construction of new roads. In the Caquetá province of southern Colombia, one police officer has died and 79 others have been held prisoner during demonstrations. Once residents surrounded the Emerald … Read more

Shakira discusses finding strength and being complete

Shakira
  • Shakira spoke in an interview about learning to feel complete on her own.
  • “I’ve always been very emotionally dependent (on men). I have to confess this. I was in love with love”.
  • In January, Piqué made his Instagram debut with girlfriend Clara Chia Mart.

Shakira is opening up about finding strength after heartbreak months after her divorce from Gerard Piqué.

LAS VEGAS, NV - MAY 18: Singer Shakira and Gerard Pique arrive at the 2014 Billboard Music Awards at the MGM Grand Hotel and Casino on May 18, 2014 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Jon Kopaloff/FilmMagic)

On Wednesday, the Colombian singer spoke with Enrique Acevedo of Canal Estrellas in an interview (conducted in Spanish) about learning to feel complete on her own.

“I’ve always been very emotionally dependent [on men] – I have to confess this. I was in love with love”, Shakira, 46, told the host that she used to believe a woman needed a man to feel complete.

“One way or another, I’ve managed to learn it from another perspective and feel that I’ll be fine on my own,” she said. “When a woman has to face [hardships] in life, she comes out stronger. When you come out stronger it means you’re learning to recognize your weaknesses and accept your vulnerability.”

Now, Shakira says that she’s “on the way the way up” and has “managed to feel that I am enough” — something she “never thought would happen.”

“I feel complete — because I feel like I can depend on myself and I have two kids who depend on me,” she said of sons Sasha, 8, and Milan, 10, whom she shares with Gerard Piqué, 36.

“I have to be stronger than a lion. That strength, in order for it to be real and not a façade… it needs to be the result of a great pain. Accepting that pain and tolerating the frustration because there are things in life that don’t turn out the way we want them to.”

The “Hips Don’t Lie” singer added, “There are dreams that shatter and we need to pick up the pieces and put them back together ourselves.”

Shakira and the soccer player announced their split in June, more than 11 years after they first confirmed their relationship.

“We regret to confirm that we are separating,” the couple said in a joint statement. “We ask for privacy at this moment for the well-being of our children, who are our maximum priority. Thank you in advance for your understanding and respect.”

In January, Piqué made his Instagram debut with girlfriend Clara Chia Mart, 23. Meanwhile, Shakira has released three songs that appear to address the split.

The most recent is a collaboration with fellow Colombian star Karol G called “TQG,” in which they sing about watching a former partner move on and how they’ve grown stronger as a result of the relationship.

“Seeing you with the new one hurt me / But I’m already set by myself,” Shakira sang on the track in lyrics translated from Spanish to English. “What we lived I forgot / And that’s what offended you / That even life improved me / You are no longer welcome here / I saw that your girlfriend threw at me / It doesn’t make me angry, I laugh.”

In January, she released “BZRP Music Session #53,” a hard-hitting collaboration with Argentine producer Bizarrap. During her interview with Acevedo, she stated that she “went into the studio one way and came out another” while working on the song.

“I wish you luck with my supposed replacement / I don’t even know what happened to you,” she sang. “I’m worth two of 22 [year old] / You traded a Ferrari for a Twingo / You traded a Rolex for a Casio / You’re going fast, slow down / Lots of time at the gym, but your brain needs a little work too.”

Shakira declares in the chorus, which is repeated several times throughout the song, “I’m too good for you, and that’s why you’re with someone just like you.”

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Ecuador banana shipment contains $330m worth of cocaine

Ecuador banana shipment

Ecuadorian police discovered 8.8 tones of cocaine. Police found it in a cargo of bananas headed for Belgium. Which is worth an estimated $330 million. About 8.8 tones of cocaine were discovered by Ecuadorian police in a cargo of bananas headed for Belgium. Police commander Fausto Salinas claimed the drugs would have been worth an … Read more

Colombia, Venezuela revive trade deal after 4-year suspension

Colombia Venezuela

The leaders of Colombia and Venezuela restored a trade agreement. Maduro pledged to create a shared “economic zone” with set trade restrictions. Diplomatic relations between the two nations were cut. As the most recent sign of peace between the neighbors, the leaders of Colombia and Venezuela on Thursday restored a trade agreement that had been … Read more

Colombia may need to increase rates more depending on inflation: IMF

IMF Colombia

Colombia’s central bank may need to consider more increases to its benchmark interest rate. Leonardo Villar issued a warning last week that the inflation rate was still rising. The IMF urged extra caution to be used in managing. Depending on how inflation behaves in Latin America’s fourth-largest economy, Colombia’s central bank may need to consider … Read more

Panama denies human rights violation allegations: Security ministry

Panama human rights

The security ministry of Panama has denied allegations about the human rights of migrants. The document newspaper cited was a “letter of allegations”. Panama has asked neighboring Latin American nations for assistance. According to the country’s security ministry, the administration of Panama has denied allegations that it has infringed the human rights of migrants headed … Read more

China spy balloon: US Navy has released photographs of debris

US
  • Navy’s elite explosives squad recovered the debris on Sunday.
  • The navy said the debris was dispersed across seven miles.
  • The item will now be analyzed to see whether or not it was surveillance equipment.

The US Navy released images of a possible Chinese spy balloon blown out of the sky on Saturday.

The US Fleet Forces Command shared many photographs on Facebook of the balloon’s debris being loaded into a boat.

According to the article, the sailors who recovered the debris on Sunday were members of the Navy’s elite explosives squad.

The item will now be analyzed to see whether or not it was surveillance equipment.

According to US officials, the balloon is around 200 feet (60 meters) tall, with the payload part equal in size to regional airliners and carrying hundreds, if not thousands, of pounds.

China has constantly stated that the “airship is for civilian use and entered the US due to force majeure – it was completely an accident”.

According to US authorities, the Pentagon attempted to organize a phone contact between Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and his Chinese counterpart after the balloon was shot down, but China refused.

“Lines between our militaries are particularly important in moments like this,” defense press secretary Brigadier General Patrick Ryder said in a statement. “Unfortunately, the PRC has declined our request.”

The discovery of the balloon set off a diplomatic crisis, with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken immediately calling off a weekend trip to China – the first such high-level US-China meeting there in years – over the “irresponsible act”.

A day after being shot down by a fighter jet, the balloon was recovered off the coast of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.

The navy said the debris was dispersed across seven miles (11 kilometers) of the Atlantic Ocean, and two naval ships, including one equipped with a big crane for retrieval, were dispatched to the region. However, the photographs show that the mounds of balloon material may be dragged aboard by hand.

As part of the hunt, the US Navy has also deployed unmanned underwater vehicles.

According to experts, the balloon’s wreckage might give the US with important insight into Chinese aerial surveillance equipment and procedures, allowing them to better understand what the balloon was capable of and how it relayed data.

Efforts to recover the balloon’s equipment, on the other hand, have been hindered by the necessity to protect US troops from potentially hazardous objects such as explosives or battery components.

On Thursday, US defense officials declared that they were tracking the unusual object and would shoot it down once it was safely over the sea.

Footage shown on US television networks showed the balloon crashing into the sea after a tiny explosion.

The Pentagon announced on Friday that a second Chinese surveillance balloon had been sighted over Latin America, with reports of sightings across Costa Rica and Venezuela.

Colombia’s Air Force reports that an identifiable object, thought to be a balloon, was discovered above 55,000 feet in the country’s airspace on 3 February.

It claims it followed the object until it departed the airspace and that it posed no threat to national security.

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US citizen charges over alleged murdering of Colombian DJ

Colombian DJ

John Poulos is accused of killing Valentina Trespalacios, age 23. Her body was found in a suitcase at the bottom of a trash can south-west of Bogota. The court heard that his arrest had been flawed and due process not followed. Authorities in Colombia have accused an American of killing a female DJ in that … Read more

Drug lord of Colombia Otoniel pleads guilty in US court

Otoniel

Dairo Antonio Suga, popularly known as Otoniel, entered a guilty plea to drug charges. 51-year-old consented to turn over $216 million (£173 million) in drug revenue. He now faces a mandatory minimum sentence of 20 years and up to life in prison. Dairo Antonio Suga, popularly known as Otoniel, a notorious Colombian cocaine trafficker, entered … Read more

Man survives on ketchup when stranded at sea for weeks

Man survives on ketchup

Eddie Francois, 47, found 120 nautical miles north-west of Colombia’s Puerto Bolvar. The word “help” was inscribed on the sailboat’s hull, which led a plane to spot him. He claims that bad weather caused his boat to drift out to sea in December. A man who was lost for 24 days in the Caribbean Sea … Read more

Colombia president backs defence minister accused by Guatemala

President
  • Rafael Curruchiche, the head of Guatemala’s Special Prosecutor will launch legal procedures against Defense Minister.
  • Velasquez will be held accountable for illegal, arbitrary, and abusive activities.
  • The Colombian President would not accept any arrest warrant for his defence minister.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro said Monday that he would not accept any “arrest warrant” for his defence minister after a Guatemalan prosecutor accused him of criminal behavior.

Earlier on Monday, Rafael Curruchiche, the head of Guatemala’s Special Prosecutor’s Office Against Impunity, announced his office will launch “legal procedures” against Defense Minister Ivan Velasquez, a former UN anti-corruption investigator in Guatemala.

While Curruchiche announced arrest warrants for several people, including Guatemala‘s former Attorney General Thelma Aldana, he did not include Velasquez.

Instead, the prosecutor stated that Velasquez will be held accountable for “illegal, arbitrary, and abusive activities” in connection with an investigation into alleged bribery involving the Brazilian construction company Odebrecht.

Velasquez, 67, oversaw Guatemala’s UN-backed International Commission Against Impunity from 2013 to 2019, attracting international notoriety in 2015 for the body’s investigations into a criminal network that involved Guatemala’s then-president, who resigned and was jailed.

Velasquez “showed how to fight corruption, and we will not allow corruption to come after him,” Petro said on Twitter, adding that he had summoned Colombia’s ambassador in Guatemala to discuss the situation.

Velasquez published a statement on the “supposed probe” on Monday, stating he had not been alerted of any requests from Guatemalan authorities regarding him.

“I have complete confidence that the work done in the Central American country was done in complete openness and within the legal framework that allowed CICIG’s operations,” Velasquez said in a statement.

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Amazon accused of ‘stealing’ delivery driver tips in US

amazon accused

Amazon is accused of violating local legislation involving deceptive trade practices. The District of Columbia announced that it will sue Amazon for allegedly taking gratuities from its drivers. Drivers are paid between $18 and $25 per hour, plus tips, for delivering groceries or packages. Wednesday, the District of Columbia announced that it will sue Amazon … Read more