International
US, ‘deeply concerned,’ calls for Bolivia to free jailed ex-president
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AFP/Editor
The United States said Saturday it was “deeply concerned by growing signs of anti-democratic behavior” in Bolivia and urged La Paz to release former interim president Jeanine Anez and other ex-officials jailed over an alleged coup attempt.
A statement from Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Washington was adding its voice to those of the European Union, Bolivian Catholic bishops and several rights groups “who have publicly raised serious questions regarding the legality of these arrests… apparent violations of due process in their execution, and the highly politicized nature of the Bolivian government’s prosecution.”
Blinken called on the Bolivian government “to make clear its support for peace, democracy and national reconciliation, including by releasing the detained former officials pending an independent and transparent inquiry.”
The statement came only days after Bolivia had cautioned diplomats from the United States and Brazil to “not interfere” in its internal affairs over the Anez case.
Conservative politician Anez was arrested this month on charges of terrorism, sedition and conspiracy over what her predecessor and political rival Evo Morales claims was a coup attempt against him, but which her allies called a political attack. Anez came to power in November 2019 after Morales and several senior allies in his Movement for Socialism (MAS) party resigned amid widespread protests over his controversial re-election to an unconstitutional fourth term.
International
Concerns persist as Pope Francis faces complications amid hospitalization
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Pope Francis, who remains hospitalized in critical condition due to pneumonia affecting both lungs, had a good night and is “resting,” the Vatican reported on Monday morning as concerns over the 88-year-old pontiff continue to grow.
“The night went well; the pope slept and is resting,” stated a Vatican communiqué on the 11th day of his hospitalization, the longest since his election in 2013. “The complexity of his clinical condition and the time required for pharmaceutical treatments to take effect necessitate caution regarding his prognosis,” the report added.
While his anemia has improved and his thrombocytopenia—a decrease in blood platelet count—has remained stable thanks to blood transfusions received on Saturday, “some blood tests indicate a mild initial kidney insufficiency, which is currently under control,” according to his medical team.
International
Armed group kills eight in Mexico’s most violent state, Guanajuato
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An armed group shot and killed eight people in the state of Guanajuato, the most violent region in Mexico, authorities reported on Sunday.
The victims—five women and three men—were in the street when they were gunned down on Saturday night, according to the state prosecutor’s office. The attack took place in the municipality of Cortázar, where in 2023, armed men stormed a water park and killed seven people, including a child.
Also in Guanajuato, on Sunday, authorities arrested Christian Alejandro “N,” known as “Cholo,” whose last name has been withheld due to ongoing legal proceedings.
The suspect, captured by the National Guard, has been identified by local media as a top hitman leader for the Santa Rosa de Lima Cartel.
Guanajuato accounted for the highest percentage of homicides in Mexico in January, making up 13.3% of the total, according to official figures.
The state, home to major industrial and tourist hubs—including manufacturing plants for Mazda and Toyota—has become a battleground between the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, recently designated as a terrorist organization by the U.S. government, and the Santa Rosa de Lima gang.
International
Newborn dies after being thrown from hotel window in Paris
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A newborn died on Monday in Paris after being thrown from a hotel window by its mother, an 18-year-old American student, with the umbilical cord still attached, according to the prosecutor’s office and a police source.
The young woman threw the baby from the second floor of a hotel in eastern Paris, the prosecutor’s office stated. “The newborn received emergency medical care but did not survive,” it confirmed, as first reported by Paris Match. The infant was pronounced dead at 7:45 AM (6:45 AM GMT) at the Robert Debré Hospital in Paris, a police source told AFP.
Authorities were alerted after the baby was discovered wrapped in a cloth, with the umbilical cord still attached, according to the police source. The mother had given birth in a second-floor hotel room before throwing the baby out of the window, the source added.
Officials have launched a homicide investigation and have taken the mother into custody. She was reportedly part of a group of young adults traveling through Europe.
The young woman was transported to the hospital for surgery following the childbirth, the police source said.
According to Paris Match, the mother was in Paris on a study trip with other American students.
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