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Milei warns by “veting” Parliament’s rules that “attack” the fiscal balance

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The Government of the president of Argentina, Javier Milei, warned on Tuesday the deputies who are debating a new retirement system and changes in university budgets that any decision that “contrasts the fiscal balance” will be “vetoed” by the Government.

“What we don’t want are magical solutions (…) We are not going to issue (local currency) nor are we going to get into debt,” said the spokesman, Manuel Adorni, at the usual morning press conference at the Casa Rosada (government headquarters).

Adorni admitted that “any improvement will be accepted and discussed as soon as it has a correlation with the corresponding resource (for it),” but said that, otherwise, the Government will not value it “viable.”

Members of the Chamber of Deputies debate a bill presented by the opposition Radical Civic Union that proposes a new integrated system of pensions and pensions.

In addition, parliamentarians evaluate another proposal related to the budgetary emergency that exists in several public universities in Argentina and the recomposition of the National Teaching Incentive Fund (Fonid), one of the main claims of the unions that today and tomorrow carry out stops and protests.

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As a minority force in the Lower House, the far-right faction led by Milei have already faced several problems to carry out its reforms.

Teachers and university students are two of the sectors most critical of the policies of the Milei Executive since he took power.

On April 23, unions and university organizations carried out a mobilization in Buenos Aires and other cities in the country.

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Marco Rubio warns Venezuela against military action against Guyana

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned Venezuela on Thursday that a military attack on Guyana would be “a big mistake” and “a very bad day for them,” expressing his support for Georgetown in its territorial dispute with Caracas.

“It would be a very bad day for the Venezuelan regime if they attacked Guyana or ExxonMobil. It would be a very bad day, a very bad week for them, and it would not end well,” Rubio emphasized during a press conference in Georgetown alongside Guyanese President Irfaan Ali.

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Ecuador oil spill worsens as containment dam collapses

The collapse of a containment dam holding back part of the 25,000+ barrels of oil spilled from a pipeline rupture nearly two weeks ago has worsened the environmental crisis in northwestern Ecuador, contaminating rivers and Pacific beaches.

The Ecuadorian government attributed the March 13 pipeline rupture—which led to the spill of 25,116 barrels of crude—to an act of sabotage. The spill affected three rivers and disrupted water supplies for several communities, according to authorities.

On Tuesday, due to heavy rains that have been falling since January, a containment dam on the Caple River collapsed. The Caple connects to other waterways in Esmeraldas Province, a coastal region bordering Colombia, state-owned Petroecuador said in a statement on Wednesday.

Seven containment barriers were installed in the Viche River, where crews worked to remove oil-contaminated debris. Additional absorbent materials were deployed in Caple, Viche, and Esmeraldas Rivers, which flow into the Pacific Ocean.

Authorities are also working to protect a wildlife refuge home to more than 250 species, including otters, howler monkeys, armadillos, frigatebirds, and pelicans.

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“This has been a total disaster,” said Ronald Ruiz, a leader in the Cube community, where the dam was located. He explained that the harsh winter rains caused river levels to rise, bringing debris that broke the containment barriersthat were holding the accumulated oil for extraction.

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Federal court blocks Trump’s use of Enemy Alien Act for deportations

A federal appeals court upheld the block on former President Donald Trump’s use of the Enemy Alien Act on Wednesday, preventing him from using the law to expedite deportations of alleged members of the transnational criminal group Tren de Aragua.

With a 2-1 ruling, a panel from the Washington, D.C. Court of Appeals affirmed previous decisions by two lower court judges, maintaining the legal standoff between the White House and the judiciary.

On March 14, Trump invoked the 1798 Enemy Alien Act, a law traditionally used during wartime, to deport hundreds of Venezuelans whom he accused of belonging to Tren de Aragua, a criminal organization that originated in Venezuelan prisons.

The centuries-old law grants the president the power to detain, restrict, and expel foreign nationals from a country engaged in a “declared war” or an “invasion or predatory incursion” against the United States, following a public proclamation.

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