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Napoli will name its stadium after Maradona

Yesterday, the Mayor of Naples began a formal process to rename the San Paolo stadium. The idea is to name it after Diego Maradona. The city continues to mourn the Argentinean star, who died of a heart attack at the age of 60.

 

“We are already putting everything together, taking the first steps to dedicate Naples’ stadium to Maradona,” said Luigi de Magistris. “It’s a process but it will be a quick process, because when there is such a strong desire there’s nothing that will hold us up,” he added.

 

The city operates the San Paolo stadium. It was there that where Maradona led Napoli to its only two Serie A titles in 1987 and 1990. “I think it’s fair to name San Paolo after you, to have you still with us as a witness to the sublime path that this squad has undertaken,” Napoli’s president, Aurelio De Laurentiis, said.

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International

Bogotá residents line up for yellow fever vaccine amid national alert

David Suárez went to a public health center in Bogotá on Wednesday to get vaccinated against yellow fever. It wasn’t originally in his plans, but he responded to a call made just hours earlier by President Gustavo Petro, who announced he will declare a health and economic emergency due to a new outbreak of the disease that has already left more than 30 people dead, mostly in the central-western region of the country.

“I got vaccinated for two reasons: first, for my own health because I’m traveling, and second, for a social reason — simply to follow the president’s guidance and be aware that this is a problem for all of us,” said Suárez, a 39-year-old teacher, to The Associated Press.

Like Suárez, dozens of people were waiting in line for the vaccine at Bogotá’s main intercity bus terminal, a key transportation hub especially crowded during travel seasons like Holy Week.

The teacher is traveling with his family to the department of Huila, which has activated a contingency plan due to its proximity to Tolima — the epicenter of the yellow fever outbreak — where a state of public calamity has been declared.

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International

Mexico refuses to restore ties with Ecuador while Noboa remains in office

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum reaffirmed during her morning press conference that her government will not restore diplomatic relations with Ecuador as long as Daniel Noboa remains in office.

“We have no relations with Ecuador, and we will not resume them while Noboa is president, because he was responsible for the invasion of the Mexican embassy—an attack on our sovereignty,” Sheinbaum stated.

The Mexican leader emphasized that Noboa is “responsible for the embassy invasion,” referring to the incident on April 5, 2024, when Ecuadorian police entered the Mexican embassy in Quito and detained former Ecuadorian Vice President Jorge Glas, who had been granted asylum there.

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International

Colombia: Search continues for missing limb of italian scientist found dismembered

Rescue teams and Colombian authorities continued their search on Tuesday for the missing left leg of Italian biologist Alessandro Coatti, whose dismembered body was found in the Caribbean city of Santa Marta.

Coatti, 42, was a molecular biologist who had been traveling through South America after working for eight years at the Royal Society of Biology (RSB) in London.

He had been staying in a hotel in Santa Marta since April 3 and was later reported missing. His dismembered body began to be discovered on April 6, when parts were found inside a suitcase abandoned near a football stadium in an area known as Bureche.

“We’re conducting the search along the riverbanks and in the water to identify possible spots where, due to the river’s current, the missing left leg might be located,” Karlotz Omaña García, director of the Magdalena Civil Defense, told The Associated Press. Despite covering a 500-meter radius, the limb was not found.

Authorities have not named any suspects or shared possible motives. A reward of more than $11,000 has been offered for information leading to those responsible for the foreign scientist’s murder.

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Police continue to reconstruct Coatti’s final movements. According to Colonel Jaime Ríos, head of the Santa Marta Metropolitan Police, the Italian biologist arrived in Colombia in January and had visited several locations, including Medellín, before traveling to Santa Marta.

Security footage shows Coatti was in downtown Santa Marta the night before his body was found, the colonel added.

Santa Marta, a popular Caribbean tourist destination, is known for its clear beaches. Police believe Coatti may also have visited Tayrona Park, a protected coastal area located about 34 kilometers (21 miles) from the city center.

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