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Labour’s Foreign Affairs Spokesman rules out negotiating with Milei the sovereignty of the Falklands

The Foreign Affairs spokesman of the British Labour Party, David Lammy, answered with a resounding “no” to the question of whether a government led by his formation would be willing to negotiate with the Argentine president, the libertarian Javier Milei, the sovereignty of the Falkland Islands.

In a meeting with the foreign press in London, Lammy, who will presumably be the next head of British diplomacy, addressed the foreign policy of Labour if his formation wins the British general elections on July 4, as all the polls anticipate.

Despite the refusal to dialogue about the sovereignty of the islands, which Argentina has been demanding since 1833, the Labour spokesman said that he wants a “dialogue” with Argentina on matters of bilateral interest.

Lammy, whose parents are of Guyanese origin, highlighted the interest of a government eventually presided over by Keir Starmer to promote a greater link with the countries of the Caribbean and South America.

The spokesman did not develop his idea about the relationship with the countries of Latin America or the Malvinian contentious, but he highlighted that Labour foreign policy will have “constancy,” unlike, he said, the continuous changes of prime minister and ministers under the last conservative governments.

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After assuming power last December, the Argentine president highlighted his desire to promote a better relationship with the United Kingdom and to try to address the issue of the sovereignty of the Falklands as former British Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher did with the former colony of Hong Kong.

After intense negotiations, Thatcher agreed to return Hong Kong to China in July 1997.

The claim of the sovereignty of the South Atlantic islands is always a pending issue for Argentina.

The United Kingdom and Argentina clashed in a war for the sovereignty of the Falklands in 1982 after the military junta of the South American country occupied them on April 2 of that year, but ended two months later with the victory of the British.

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Austrian man arrested in Croatia with deceased woman as passenger in his car

A 65-year-old Austrian citizen was arrested at a border checkpoint in Croatia after attempting to enter the country in his car with a deceased woman sitting as a passenger, police announced on Tuesday.

The man was detained in a routine check in late November in Gunja, a border area separating Bosnia from Croatia, the police told AFP. Suspicious because they saw “no consciousness or movement” from the passenger, Croatian officers called a doctor, who confirmed the death of the 83-year-old woman, also Austrian, according to her identification.

The woman’s relationship to the suspect is unknown. She had died in Bosnia, and the man intended to repatriate her body to Austria to “avoid the formalities related to transporting a corpse,” according to the police. Croatian media reported that the man was her legal guardian.

Once her death was confirmed, a funeral service took charge of the body.

 

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Colombian nationals arrested for human trafficking and disappearance of migrant boat

 

Colombian authorities arrested two nationals accused of the illegal trafficking of migrants to the United States and of endangering lives due to the disappearance of a boat with 40 people aboard, U.S. Department of Justice officials reported on Tuesday.

Hernando Manuel de la Cruz Rivera Orjuela, 52, and Luis Enrique Linero Pinto, 40, both Colombian citizens, were arrested on December 13 in Colombia at the request of the United States for their alleged involvement in a “transnational human trafficking operation,” the department said in a statement.

According to the charges, the detainees were transporting migrants to San Andrés Island in the Caribbean, where they would then be taken by boat to Nicaragua. The goal was to reach the United States through Central America and Mexico.

The accused are said to have advised the migrants on how to reach San Andrés Island, where they personally received them, arranged accommodations, and “took them to the boats that transported them to Nicaragua so they could enter the United States illegally,” the statement reads.

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“These defendants put several migrants on the boat that disappeared off the coast of Nicaragua in 2023,” said Deputy Attorney General Nicole M. Argentieri, head of the U.S. Department of Justice’s Criminal Division, as cited in the statement.

Both men are “directly and personally responsible for the illicit trafficking of migrants on that vessel,” according to the indictment dated October 23.

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Homemade landmine explosion in Michoacán kills two soldiers, injures five

Two soldiers were killed and five others were injured by the explosion of homemade landmines planted by a criminal group in a mountainous area of the Mexican state of Michoacán (west), the Secretary of Defense reported on Tuesday.

The attack occurred on Monday morning in the municipality of Cotija, a border area between Michoacán and the state of Jalisco, when the military was conducting a reconnaissance mission after receiving information about an armed camp in the area, explained Secretary General Ricardo Trevilla.

“At that moment, an improvised explosive device detonated. Unfortunately, two soldiers lost their lives, and five others were injured,” the military leader detailed. The affected soldiers were airlifted to hospitals in the region by a military helicopter, while the rest of the team continued with the reconnaissance of the area.

Trevilla stated that before the explosion, the military unit had located the dismembered bodies of three people, and upon continuing the mission, they confirmed the camp was abandoned.

Asked about the individuals responsible for placing the explosives, the general suggested they could be criminals linked to the local group Cárteles Unidos, which operates in Michoacán and uses these tactics in their territorial dispute with the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, one of the most powerful criminal organizations in the country.

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