International
AMLO urges Biden to create a labor visa program for Mexico and Central America
Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador on Friday urged his U.S. counterpart Joe Biden to create a special visa program for Mexican and Central American workers, whose workforce, he argued, is essential to the U.S. economy. He also praised the initiatives already announced by Biden, such as the end of the construction of the border wall and the cancellation of the “Stay in Mexico” immigration program.
However, the Mexican President suggests the US government should create a “legal migration channel” to welcome Mexicans and Central Americans because “their workforce” is required, considering that some 6,000 migrants from different countries are still in Mexico waiting for their legal status to be resolved, he said.
Among other aspects, López Obrador, whose government has agreed to receive migrants from other countries seeking to reach the United States, celebrated Biden’s commitment to stop the construction of the wall which the Trump administration started.
International
The Court of the IADH rules out measures in favor of Gustavo Petro amid investigations into his campaign
The Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IDHR) considered it “inappropriate” to grant provisional measures in favor of the President of Colombia, Gustavo Petro, which his representatives requested in the midst of investigations for apparent irregular financing of his political campaign.
The IADH Court explained that Petro’s legal team requested the measures as part of the process of supervising the sentence issued in 2020, in which the court condemned Colombia for the dismissal of Petro from his position as mayor of Bogotá in 2013.
The resolution, published on the website of the IADH Court, determined that the case resolved in 2020 is not related to the provisional measures and therefore rejected them.
“The Court considers that the aforementioned request is not related to the subject of the case (resolved in 2020) or to the implementation of any of the three guarantees of non-repetition of regulatory adequacy ordered in the judgment, which makes it inappropriate,” the resolution indicates.
A “factual” and “legal” situation different from that of 2020
The text adds that the request of Petro’s representatives “is based on a factual and legal situation different from that known to this Court in the Petro Urrego case judgment issued in 2020.”
“On that occasion, the Court considered it unconventional for an administrative authority to order the cessation and eventual disqualification of popularly elected officials. From the information provided in this request for provisional measures, it does not appear that the administrative body in question has the power to disqualify or restrict the political rights of a popularly elected official,” the Court of Human Rights determined.
Last October, the National Electoral Council (CNE) filed charges for alleged irregularities to the campaign that led Petro to the Presidency of Colombia in 2022.
The investigation found an alleged violation of spending caps of 5.3 billion pesos (about 1.19 million dollars).
In the request for provisional measures before the Inter-American Court, Petro’s representatives affirmed that there is an “irregular attribution of powers to the CNE to investigate President Gustavo Petro Urrego, which contravenes the conventional and constitutional guarantees of the integral jurisdiction enjoyed by the dignity of the office of President of the Republic.”
They added that the responsibility for investigating belongs to the Legal Committee of Investigation and Prosecutions of the Senate House of Representatives.
International
The Constitutional Court of Peru annuls the sentence against the leader of Dina Boluarte’s former party
The Peruvian Constitutional Court (TC) annulled this Thursday the sentence for corruption against the politician Vladimir Cerrón, leader of the Marxist party Free Peru in which President Dina Boluarte campaigned until 2022, after remaining on the run for more than a year, a time in which time the president began to be investigated for her alleged cover-up.
The TC declared the appeal of habeas corpus presented by Cerrón’s defense against the sentence, issued last year, which sentenced him to 3 and a half years in prison for the crime of collusion, for the concession of the Wanka Aerodrome when he was a regional authority of Junín, according to the judicial decision published by local media.
Boluarte was linked to Cerrón’s escape, after his official car was discovered by the press in a spa south of Lima, where the police searched days before for the leader of his former political party.
The Court claimed that the Junín Appeals Chamber violated the right to due motivation of judicial decisions by not specifying whether the crime of simple collusion was an instant, continuous and permanent crime.
The nullity of the sentence
The magistrates pointed out that this information is important to define the prescription of the crime, as Cerrón’sdefense maintains.
In that sense, the TC has ordered the Junín Appeals Chamber to issue a new pronouncement, in which it responds on the limitation periods of the crime to determine whether the criminal proceedings are still in force or are being filed.
Once the resolution was released in the media, Cerrón himself celebrated the news on the social network X and said that the TC is, in recent times, “the moral reserve” of Peruvian justice.
He added that the Constitutional Court declared the sentence against him null and void for being “arbitrary”, by declaring his appeal of habeas corpus in the Wanka Aerodrome case well-founded.
Cerrón is currently being prosecuted for other cases of alleged corruption when he was a regional authority and for the last electoral campaign in which his party presented the formula headed by Pedro Castillo, the dismissed former president for his failed coup d’état in 2022, and Boluarte as vice president.
International
Guterres calls for “avoiding at all costs” the integration of AI into nuclear weapons
UN Secretary-General António Guterres advocated on Thursday in the UN Security Council to “avoid at all costs” the integration of artificial intelligence (AI) in nuclear weapons, something that could have “potentially disastrous consequences”.
“AI without human supervision would leave the world blind, and would put world peace and security in a dangerous and reckless place,” Guterres told the Security Council, where a ministerial session is being held today, chaired by US Secretary of State, Anthony Blinken, on the progress of this tool and its implications in global security.
The Secretary General stressed that, while AI is making “a positive difference” in countries suffering from conflicts, food insecurity or the effects of climate change, it has also entered “the battlefield in a more problematic way.”
In this sense, he indicated that recent conflicts have become a testing ground for military applications of AI, which “creates a fertile ground for misunderstandings, miscalculations and mistakes.”
Humans and the algorithm
Thus, he recalled that this tool has already been used to select targets and make “life or death” decisions, and pointed out that cyberattacks made possible by AI “could paralyze the critical infrastructures of a country and its essential services.”
“Let’s be clear: the fate of humanity should never be left in the hands of the ‘black box’ of an algorithm. Humans must always have control in decision-making guided by international law, including international humanitarian and human rights laws and ethical principles,” he added.
In addition to its effects on international security, Guterres focused on the danger posed by the AI creating “very realistic content” that is then spread on the Internet and “manipulates public opinion, threatens the integrity of information and makes the truth indistinguishable from lies.”
The Portuguese politician brought up the UN Global Digital Compact, which was approved last September and addresses the rapid advance of AI, and shared his intention to finance innovative opportunities for this tool “where it is most needed.”
“A world of rich and poor in AI would be a world of perpetual instability. We must never allow (this technology) to lead to an advance of inequality,” he stressed, and said that technology must be “at the service of all humanity.”
-
Central America3 days ago
El Salvador’s $9.663 billion budget for 2025 focuses on key sectors with no new debt issuance
-
International4 days ago
France will send a diplomatic delegation to Syria after 12 years without official representation
-
International3 days ago
Chrystia Freeland resigns as Canada’s deputy PM over dispute with Trudeau on U.S. Tariff Threats
-
International3 days ago
Venezuela announces 179 new releases in post-election violence cases
-
Sports1 day ago
Real Madrid clinches fourth Intercontinental Cup with 3-0 victory over Pachuca
-
Central America1 day ago
Amnesty International condemns Nicaragua’s unprecedented repression of dissent
-
International3 days ago
Trinidad and Tobago Education Minister Lisa Morris-Julian dies in house fire with her children
-
International3 days ago
At least 12 injured in shooting at abundant life christian school in Wisconsin
-
Central America1 day ago
El Salvador’s MARN monitors ongoing seismic activity in La Unión department
-
International3 days ago
El Salvador’s bitcoin reserves soar in value as cryptocurrency’s bullish surge continues
-
International1 day ago
Mexico requests extradition of ‘Mini Lic’ for murder of journalist Javier Valdez
-
International1 day ago
Mexican government to use church atriums for gun surrender program to combat violence
-
International1 day ago
Cuba’s government stresses openness to serious, respectful U.S. relations
-
International1 day ago
NASA delays return of two astronauts stranded on ISS until at least March
-
International6 hours ago
Trump links Mike Johnson’s re-election to meeting his budget requirements
-
International1 day ago
Begoña Gómez defends her actions as investigations into her role at Complutense University continue
-
International3 days ago
Milan’s Via MonteNapoleone overtakes Fifth Avenue as world’s most expensive retail destination
-
International6 hours ago
The Court of the IADH rules out measures in favor of Gustavo Petro amid investigations into his campaign
-
International2 days ago
Homemade landmine explosion in Michoacán kills two soldiers, injures five
-
International6 hours ago
Guterres calls for “avoiding at all costs” the integration of AI into nuclear weapons
-
International2 days ago
Austrian man arrested in Croatia with deceased woman as passenger in his car
-
International2 days ago
Colombian nationals arrested for human trafficking and disappearance of migrant boat
-
International3 days ago
Nearly 40 dead in Istanbul after consuming contaminated alcohol in six weeks
-
International4 days ago
María Corina Machado says that Nicolás Maduro is “cornered” inside and outside Venezuela
-
International4 days ago
Netanyahu: “Israel’s policy in Syria will depend on the emerging reality”
-
International6 hours ago
The Constitutional Court of Peru annuls the sentence against the leader of Dina Boluarte’s former party
-
International4 days ago
Lula asks for severe sanction if the guilt of general arrested for coup is proven
-
International4 days ago
The new Syrian authorities plan to end compulsory military service
-
International4 days ago
The Constitution of Venezuela, a quarter of a century later
-
International1 day ago
Ukraine’s security a priority as NATO discusses future of conflict with Russia
-
International1 day ago
Patient hospitalized with severe avian flu case in Louisiana, CDC reports
-
International6 hours ago
An appeals court disqualifies the prosecutor in the election case against Trump in Georgia
-
International6 hours ago
The new French prime minister launches an ultimatum to the moderate parties and the left rejects his offer
-
International2 days ago
Ecuador announces debt swap of $1.527 billion to protect Amazon rainforest