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The United States: Barrett confirmed as Supreme Court Justice

Yesterday, Amy Coney Barrett was sworn in as a judge of the United States Supreme Court. In a split Senate, Republicans outnumbered Democrats. Thus, President Donald Trump’s nominee was successfully sworn in days before the election.

Barrett will replace the recently deceased liberal Ruth Bader Ginsburg. She is expected to usher in a new era of rulings on abortion, the Affordable Care Act, and even her own election.

Barrett is 48 years old. Her lifelong appointment will solidify the court’s rightward leanings. Yesterday’s vote was the closest confirmation of a presidential election ever given. It was also the first in modern times without minority party support.

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International

The pope suffers from “bilateral pneumonia” and his clinical picture remains “complex”

Pope Francis suffers from bilateral pneumonia that requires additional pharmacological treatment to that used for polymicrobial infection and his clinical picture remains “complex”, the Vatican reported on Tuesday.

“The chest computed tomography that the Holy Father underwent this afternoon, prescribed by the Vatican health team and by the medical team of the Polyclinic Foundation “A. Gemelli,” demonstrated the appearance of bilateral pneumonia that requires additional pharmacological therapy.”

Pope Francis will not attend the jubilee hearing scheduled for this Saturday, while at the mass on the occasion of the Jubilee of the Deacons on Sunday he will be replaced by the head of the dicastery for Evangelization, Rino Fisichella, the Vatican reported on Tuesday.

Pope Francis spent a quiet night and during the morning he has dedicated himself to reading the press, on the fifth day of hospitalization at the Gemelli Polyclinic in Rome.

The medical reports released this Monday explained that the pope’s clinical picture is “complex”, so his hospitalization will be prolonged at the Gemelli Polyclinic in Rome, where he is admitted for “a polymicrobial infection of the respiratory tract”, which forced him to change the therapy he receives.

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Despite his hospitalization, Francisco spoke again last night with the parish of the Sagrada Familia, the only Catholic church in Gaza, his parish priest, the Argentine priest Gabriel Romanelli, explained to the Italian media.

For the moment, it has only transpired that the pontiff has spent his fourth night quietly at the Gemelli and today an update of the report on his health conditions and on whether the treatment is working is expected.

“The Holy Father continues without fever and with the prescribed treatment. The clinical conditions are stable,” said the latest statement issued on Monday afternoon, the Holy See, about the state of health of the 88-year-old pontiff.

Previously, the Vatican had explained that the latest tests carried out showed “a polymicrobial infection of the respiratory tract that has forced to further modify the therapy” of Francis, whose treatment had already been modified on Saturday, after the first tests.

The Vatican added that the “complex clinical picture will require adequate hospitalization”, which suggests that the pope will remain in the hospital for several days and that he will probably miss some of the many acts of the Holy Year, as has already happened with this Monday for the Jubilee of the artists in the Cinecittà studios or the Jubilee of the deacons this weekend.

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The Sudanese government accuses the paramilitaries of killing more than 430 civilians in the south-central part of the country

The Government of Sudan accused on Tuesday the paramilitaries of the Rapid Support Forces (FAR) of murdering 433 civilians, including several babies, in attacks perpetrated “in recent days” in villages in the state of the White Nile, in the south-central part of the country.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs denounced, in a statement, that this “brutal massacre is the worst” committed by the FAR against civilians since the beginning of the war in the country, in April 2023, after other “criminal massacres” in other regions, including the Zamzam displaced camp, in North Darfur (west).

“The terrorist militia has committed in recent days a horrible massacre in the villages of the Al Gitaina region, in the state of the White Nile. Its (fatal) victims are so far 433 people, including babies,” says the note.

However, he took the opportunity to implicitly accuse the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and African countries, such as Kenya, of “complicity”, as well as to warn against the intention of the FAR and other opposition groups to sign a document for the creation of a parallel government in the regions controlled by the paramilitaries.

“This atrocious massacre confirms that the war of the militia (of the FAR) is directed against the entire people of Sudan (…) and makes it clear that every person who participates in or supports the militia or its political document, supervised by its regional sponsor (…) is complicit in its crimes and atrocities against the Sudanese people,” the statement said.

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For his part, the Sudanese Minister of Information, Jaled al Eayser, demanded that the international community classify the FAR as a “terrorist organization” for “the crimes committed by these mercenaries supported by foreigners.”

Both the Army and the FAR have been accused of “war crimes,” but several local and international NGOs have accused paramilitaries in recent weeks of killing hundreds of civilians during their withdrawal from villages in the east and south of Sudan in the face of the advance of government troops in those regions.

The FARs were also accused of murdering dozens of civilians in their attempts to control Al Fasher, capital of North Darfur, even in refugee camps, such as Zamzam, which is home to more than half a million people displaced by the war.

The war in Sudan has resulted in tens of thousands of deaths and forced some 12 million people to leave their homes, more than 3 million of them to other nations, which has made the country the scene of the worst displaced crisis on the planet, according to the United Nations.

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Migrants, more vulnerable to organized crime in southern Mexico after Trump’s return

Migrants have become more vulnerable to organized crime and violence by remaining stranded on the southern border of Mexico about a month after Donald Trump’s return to the White House, denounce civil organizations in the area.

Luis Alonso Abarca, coordinator of the Digna Ochoa Human Rights Committee, told EFE that who is winning with Trump’s restrictions is organized crime, since they have detected that it is charging thousands of dollars, especially to women and minors, with the promise of taking them to the United States.

“The closure of the borders, the fact that the state policy of the Mexican Government and the United States prevents them from doing so (migrate) on a regular basis and by a safe means, what will cause organized crime groups to benefit,” said the activist in Tapachula, the largest city on the southern border.

Migrants have been facing since January 20, when Trump returned to the White House, the policies of mass deportations, the “closing” of the border with thousands of deployed soldiers and the elimination of the ‘CBP One’ application from the Office of Customs and Border Protection that allowed to apply for asylum in the United States from Mexico.

In this scenario, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) warned in a report that “groups of migrants are trying to advance through Mexican territory by train or walking together in caravans, especially in the state of Chiapas (border with Central America), to demand attention and seek protection against the violence perpetrated by various armed actors.”

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“While on the northern border with the United States, Mexican state authorities are preparing for possible mass deportations by building large facilities to house potential deportees and enabling transport to take them to other parts of Mexico, uncertainty invades hundreds of thousands of migrants throughout the country,” the organization said.

The Government of Mexico has received 13,455 people deported since the new United States Government began on January 20, including 2,970 foreigners, said President Claudia Sheinbaum last Friday, who indicated that migrants can stay in the country or return to their own.

Sheinbaum has asked migrants in the country “not to be fooled” by traffickers who charge thousands of dollars with the promise of transferring them to the United States because the Trump Administration “closed all asylum applications.”

The panorama has encouraged migrants to return to their countries, such as Israel Lujando, from Ecuador.

“The truth is that I do (I want to return) because it no longer makes sense to be here, our goal was to reach the United States, since we have not achieved that, it is my turn to return,” he told EFE.

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Meanwhile, Luis Rey García Villagrán, director of the Center for Human Dignity (CDH), explained that Mexico has also tightened its policy, denouncing that the authorities have implemented railies in Tapachula to search for people without documents and deport them to the border of Honduras and Guatemala.

“The migrants have been detained for a month, those who could advance to (the states of) Veracruz and Oaxaca were returning them to Villermosa, (capital of) Tabasco, and to Tapachula, taking them to Central America,” he accused.

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