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Latest Latin America News 2026 | Daily Headlines & Updates

📰 Latest Latin America News

Shakira, aclamada reina de la música latina por dos millones de personas en la playa de Copacabana

May 3, 2026 04:38 | El País LATAM

“Si el planeta Tierra tuviese un altar capaz de hablar por sí mismo, ese altar sería Copacabana”.

Lo decía la propia Shakira hace unos días y desde ese altar, la playa más famosa de Río de Janeiro y del mundo, fue aclamada reina de la música latina por un mar de gente.

Según el balance oficial de las autoridades, dos millones de personas.

El concierto más multitudinario de su carrera y el mayor de un artista latino en la historia.

Seguir leyendo

El Cauca, la región de Colombia en la que el Estado está bajo ataque: “No hay a quién reclamarle por nuestros muertos”

May 3, 2026 04:00 | El País LATAM

Los adultos en la casa de María Zenaida Puliche se esfuerzan por no llorar frente a Sofía, que cumple nueve años.

Se turnan para acercarse a ella y tomarse una foto con la torta de fresas.

La niña sonríe y abraza a su papá, a sus tías, a sus primos.

Pero no a su mamá.

Daniela Valencia fue una de las 22 víctimas mortales de un atentado que las disidencias de las extintas FARC perpetraron el sábado 25 de abril en el Cauca, una región del suroccidente colombiano donde los grupos armados han acorralado al Estado y la violencia acecha a cada hora del día.

Fue el ataque terrorista con más víctimas civiles en Colombia desde el 2003, a solo un mes de las elecciones presidenciales.

Seguir leyendo

Estancados

May 3, 2026 04:00 | El País LATAM

El jueves pasado llegaron dos datos que, puestos uno al lado del otro, cuentan la historia con una precisión incómoda.

En Washington, el Buró de Análisis Económico informó que la economía de Estados Unidos avanzó 0,5% frente al trimestre previo y 2,66% -a tasa anual para facilitar la comparación con los datos mexicanos- durante el primer trimestre del año.

En México, el Inegi confirmó que la economía mexicana hizo exactamente lo contrario: se contrajo 0,8% trimestral, su primer retroceso en cinco trimestres.

En la comparación anual, la producción mexicana creció solo 0,2%.

El país con el que compartimos frontera, tratado comercial y más del 80% de nuestras exportaciones y que además es la economía más grande del mundo creció.

Nosotros, no.

Seguir leyendo

Sí está solo

May 3, 2026 04:00 | El País LATAM

La suerte de Rubén Rocha Moya es incierta en el mejor de los casos.

Desde que fue señalado por tender una emboscada y participar en el asesinato de su enemigo político, todo indica que su futuro no es tranquilo ni halagador.

Convertido en la personificación de la narcopolítica a nivel internacional, será difícil que encuentre con quien tomarse un café.

En política la soledad llega de la mano de la mala reputación.

Seguir leyendo

El hijo de Maduro habla de su padre preso en Estados Unidos: lee la Biblia, intercambia libros y se enfada por el Barça

May 3, 2026 03:30 | El País LATAM

La madrugada del 3 de enero, cuando el primer bombardeo sacudió Caracas, Nicolás Maduro alcanzó a grabarle un audio a su hijo.

Él todavía no quiere hacerlo público —“en algún momento va a salir”, promete—, pero adelanta algunas frases: “Nico, están bombardeando.

Que la patria siga luchando, vamos para adelante”.

Era una despedida.

“Él pensaba que ese día moría”, cuenta su hijo a EL PAÍS cuatro meses después del ataque que cambió abruptamente la historia de Venezuela.

“Todos pensábamos que ese día iba a morir”.

Seguir leyendo

Trump threatens to take Cuba 'almost immediately' after tightening sanctions on the regime

May 3, 2026 03:27 | MercoPress

US President Donald Trump said on Friday that his country would take Cuba "almost immediately," in remarks made during a private event at the Forum Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, hours after signing an executive order substantially expanding economic sanctions against the Havana regime.

The president's words, though framed in colloquial tone, considerably escalate bilateral tensions and open a new chapter in US policy toward Miguel Díaz-Canel's government.

Sixty Percent Isn’t Security: What The 2026 Antigua And Barbuda Election Results Really Means

May 2, 2026 20:44 | News Americas Now

By Dr.

Isaac Newton News Americas, NEW YORK, NY, Sat.

May 2, 2026: The 2026 Antigua and Barbuda election gives us clear numbers.

But numbers do not speak unless we listen carefully to what they mean.

The Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party won about 60 percent of the vote.

The United Progressive Party secured about 37 percent.

At first glance, that looks like a strong and settled victory.

It is not the full story.

Only 62 percent of eligible voters came out to vote.

When we look at the full population, the picture becomes sharper and more honest.

The ABLP’s 60 percent becomes 37.2 percent of all eligible voters.

The UPP’s 37 percent becomes 22.9 percent of all eligible voters.

This means the government holds power with the direct support of just over one third (1/3) of the country.

That is enough to lead.

It is not enough to feel secure.

Elections are not just about who wins.

They reveal how power really works.

In a small country like Antigua and Barbuda, power does not spread evenly.

It concentrates in constituencies.

It moves through communities where small changes in voter behavior can reshape the entire nation.

A few hundred votes can decide a seat.

A single seat can shift the balance of power.

That is how fragile political strength can be, even when it looks strong on paper.

Then there is the group that did not vote.

38 percent of eligible voters stayed home.

That is not a small number.

That is a silent force waiting to be activated.

If even part of that group chooses to vote in the next election, they will not just influence the result.

They can transform it.

But people do not participate just because they can.

They participate when they believe their voice matters.

They participate when they trust leaders.

They participate when they feel seen and included in the future being promised.

Without that belief, democracy becomes smaller than it should be.

This is where the real contest begins.

For the United Progressive Party, 37 percent is a base of support.

But it is also a boundary.

Growth will not come from speaking louder to the same people.

Growth will come from reaching new communities, building new trust, and showing clearly that more citizens belong in the vision they offer.

People move when they feel recognized.

They commit when they feel included.

They support what they believe reflects their lives.

For the Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party, 60 percent is not protection.

It is pressure.

Every promise will be measured.

Every decision will be judged.

Every community will expect results that improve daily life.

Winning an election raises expectations.

It does not lower them.

Power must now prove itself through performance.

This is the balance that defines the moment.

One party holds authority.

The other holds opportunity.

Neither position is permanent.

The system itself is always moving.

Trust can grow.

Trust can break.

Support can expand.

Support can disappear.

Momentum can shift quietly and then all at once.

In this kind of environment, small changes create big consequences.

A conversation can change a mind.

A message can shift a community.

A few votes can change a constituency.

A constituency can change a country.

That is the nature of politics in a small state.

Nothing is too small to matter.

Sixty percent gives the right to govern.

37 percent keeps competition alive.

But the future will not be decided by those numbers alone.

It will be decided by those who are not yet engaged and by those who find a way to reach them.

The side that listens more deeply, connects more widely, and earns trust more consistently will shape what comes next.

Because in the end, power is not held by numbers alone.

It is held by people.

And people can change their minds.

Power moves.

Power shifts.

Power responds.

And in Antigua and Barbuda, it is always closer to change than it appears.

Editor’s Note: Dr.

Isaac Newton is a leadership strategist and change management expert who specializes in promoting effective governance and ethical, accountable leadership.

Educated at Harvard, Princeton, and Columbia, he is co author of Steps to Good Governance and advises boards, educators, and public leaders across the Caribbean and internationally.

His work integrates policy, psychology, and ethics to strengthen institutional performance and build credible, accountable leadership.

RELATED: Church And Politics In The Caribbean And Africa: Prophetic Voice, Public Trust, And The Moral Future Of Nations

US Supreme Court weighs ending Haitian migrants’ protected status

May 1, 2026 22:48 | Latin America Reports

Buenos Aires, Argentina – The Supreme Court of the United States heard arguments on Wednesday regarding the Trump administration’s attempts to end Haitians’ Temporary Protected Status (TPS), which defends Haitian migrants from deportations.  The Supreme Court’s ruling, which is likely to be made in the coming months, could affect around 350,000 Haitians who are currently living in the United States.  The Department of Homeland Security, then headed by Kristi Noem, justified February’s decision saying that Noem “determined that there are no extraordinary or temporary conditions in Haiti that prevent Haitian nationals […] from returning to safety,” and that “it is contrary to the national interests of the United States to permit Haitian nationals […] to remain.” Immigrant rights advocates, however, paint a different picture.

Daniel Berlin, policy director for protection pathways at the International Rescue Committee (IRC), told Latin America Reports that “Haiti continues to face a compounding crisis marked by food insecurity, displacement, deadly disease outbreaks, and surging gang violence, making it dangerous for anyone forced to return.”  “There are groups of people at particularly high risk, notably women and children as gangs increasingly use sexual violence to strike fear in communities and forced child recruitment has risen 200%,” he added.

Haitians were first granted TPS in 2010 following a devastating earthquake and have seen their protections extended multiple times since, including after the assassination of Jovenel Moise, the Caribbean country’s last elected president.

Since Moise’s assassination in 2021, Haiti has suffered from institutional collapse and rife gang violence.

More than 8,100 killings were documented nationwide between January and November last year, whilst up to half of the members making up these deadly armed groups are children, according to the UN.

As a result, the IRC reports that 73% of households feel unsafe where they sleep and 60% of households do not have their children in school due to fears of kidnapping, recruitment, and crossfire.

Berlin warns that “if TPS is ended, the administration could begin the legal process to remove people without other status immediately.”  The reality on the ground has led the plaintiffs to argue that the Trump administration did not follow due process in evaluating the conditions in Haiti.

The New York Times reported earlier this week that government officials had distorted evidence in order to justify removing Haitians’ TPS.

Internal emails show that data that did not support the administration’s argument was removed from research reports.  Moreover, the lawyers also referenced President Trump’s frequent usage of inflammatory language against Haitian people to contend that the administration was racially motivated in its decision, which would violate the constitutional prohibitions of discriminatory government actions.

Trump has previously described Haitian immigrants as undesirable because they come from a “filthy, dirty, disgusting” country and claimed that they had been eating their neighbors’ pets in Springfield, Ohio.  Lower court judges who dealt with the case found that Noem’s decisions were in fact predetermined and not informed by meaningful analysis, thus postponing the terminations of Haitians’ TPS.  The government’s lawyers asked the conservative-dominated Supreme Court to intervene as a result, arguing that the courts have no right to review Noem’s decisionmaking.

In the same session, the Supreme Court also heard arguments regarding the TPS of 6,100 Syrians in the US.

Featured image description: Protest at the US Capitol against the removal of Haitian migrants’ Temporary Protected Status, March 6th 2026.

Featured image credit: @MarioNawfal via X.

The post US Supreme Court weighs ending Haitian migrants’ protected status appeared first on Latin America Reports.

From Georgetown To Nasdaq: How One Guyana Born Immigrant Is Solving The Caribbean’s Capital Access Crisis

May 1, 2026 19:00 | News Americas Now

By News Americas Business News Writer News Americas, NEW YORK, NY, Fri.

May 1, 2026:  When Felicia J.

Persaud left Georgetown, Guyana, in 1996 to build a new life in the United States, she carried with her something no immigration officer could stamp out – an unwavering belief that the Caribbean deserved better access to the global economy.

Nearly three decades later, that belief has become a platform, a portfolio of companies, and now, a Nasdaq graduation.

On April 30, 2026, Persaud – founder and CEO of ICN Group and the newly launched AI Capital Exchange – graduated with honors from the Nasdaq Entrepreneurial Center’s Milestone Circles program, an intensive 12-week initiative that has supported over 6,300 entrepreneurs since its founding five years ago.

“This program pushed me into answering my why, and my why remains solving the problem of lack of access to capital in emerging markets like the Caribbean and Latin America,” Persaud said.

Persaud was part of Cohort Group 32: Circles 513, 514 & 515, alongside 28 fellow entrepreneurs from across the United States.

The program, run by the Nasdaq Entrepreneurial Center – which has accelerated resilient growth for under-resourced founders worldwide since 2015 – focuses on helping founders build, scale, and lead with purpose.

Building a Bridge to $5.7 Trillion During the 12-week program, Persaud used the mentorship and structure to sharpen her investor pitch for AI Capital Exchange – a platform she built herself, as a non-technical founder, in just over four months, using artificial intelligence.

The platform is already live.

AI Capital Exchange pre-qualifies borrowers and connects them to institutional investors, lenders, and investment agencies globally.

To date, it has filtered over $200 million in deals – what Persaud calls “whale filtering” – serving as a bridge to the U.S.

$5.7 trillion capital market.

It is, by her own description, the world’s first AI-powered debt capital platform of its kind.

Persaud is now seeking a minimum seed round of USD $500,000 to fuel the platform’s next phase of growth.

The platform has already gained international recognition, having been accepted into the HICool competition after participating in the India AI Challenge in January 2026.

Paying It Forward to the Caribbean True to her roots as an advocate for Caribbean communities, Persaud is not keeping the lessons of Nasdaq’s Milestone Circles to herself.

In conjunction with her graduation, she is releasing a free list of Caribbean accelerators currently open for Caribbean entrepreneurs – available at investcaribbeannow.com/caribbean-accelerators.

“I am now paying it forward,” she said.

Decade Plus Journey Built On The Caribbean Persaud’s journey from Georgetown to Nasdaq is the kind of immigrant story that defines Caribbean America.

A former journalist and advocate, she went on to found NewsAmericasNow.com – the Caribbean diaspora’s leading daily news source- along with CaribPR Wire, Hard Beat Communications, and Invest Caribbean, all under her ICN Group umbrella.

She is listed in the U.S.

State Department Speakers Database as a Caribbean expert, has been quoted by AP, CNN, BBC, the New York Times, Reuters, the Washington Post, Forbes, and dozens of other global outlets, and holds a weekly immigration column in the New York Amsterdam News – one of America’s oldest African American newspapers.

She is also the founder of the Hard to Beat podcast.

For a woman who arrived in the United States 30 years ago with a journalist’s instinct and an entrepreneur’s hunger, the Nasdaq milestone is not an endpoint.

It is, as her platform suggests, a pre-qualification for what comes next.

Caribbean entrepreneurs can access the free Caribbean accelerator list at investcaribbeannow.com/caribbean-accelerators.

Learn more about AI Capital Exchange at aicapitalexchange.c

Bolivia's agro-environmental court judge shot dead amid wave of drug-related violence

May 1, 2026 14:54 | MercoPress

Víctor Hugo Claure, dean of Bolivia's Agro-Environmental Court, was shot dead late Thursday in the eastern city of Santa Cruz de la Sierra, in what authorities describe as an attack carried out by hitmen and which falls within a sequence of violent events linked to the growing influence of drug trafficking in the country's main city.

The killing has prompted unanimous condemnation from the judicial system and from opposition politicians, and poses a direct challenge to the administration of President Rodrigo Paz, in office since November.

Mexico’s Sheinbaum calls for proof after US authorities accuse senior politicians of narco ties

April 30, 2026 22:48 | Latin America Reports

Bogotá, Colombia – Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has demanded that United States authorities provide evidence for their claims that several senior politicians have ties to drug cartels.

Yesterday, the U.S.

Justice Department indicted Sinaloa Governor Ruben Rocha, Senator Enrique Inzunza, and eight other current and former officials for drug trafficking and weapons offenses.

Sheinbaum said that without proof, the charges would be treated as politically motivated, marking the latest flashpoint in tense relations between the two neighbors.  “If there isn’t clear evidence, it ⁠is obvious that the objective of these indictments by the Department of Justice is political,” said Sheinbaum at a press conference this morning.

Her statement came a day after the U.S.

Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York announced the indictments against the ten officials from Sinaloa.

In addition to the governor and senator, justice officials charged Sinaloa’s deputy attorney general, several former police officials, and the current Mayor of Culiacán – the state capital.  “These politicians and law enforcement officials have abused their ​authority in ⁠support of the cartel, exposed and subjected victims to threats and violence, and sold out their offices in exchange for massive bribes,” read the indictment.

Rocha was charged with narcotics importation conspiracy and weapons possession, which carry a minimum sentence of 40 years and up to life in prison.

In the indictment, authorities accused the governor of receiving help from a faction of the Sinaloa cartel in his 2021 election campaign.

They alleged that “Los Chapitos”, a group run by the sons of jailed kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, had kidnapped and threatened Rocha’s political rivals in exchange for guarantees of impunity.

But Rocha denied the charges, writing on X, “They lack any truth or foundation whatsoever.” Both the governor and Senator Inzunza are members of Sheinbaum’s ruling Morena party, threatening to embarrass the president as she leads a crackdown on organized crime.  In February, authorities killed “El Mencho”, the head of the powerful Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), in an operation with U.S.

intelligence assistance.

Last week, they took out a possible successor to lead the CJNG, alias “El Jardinero”.  The Mexican government’s offensive comes amid U.S.

pressure to deliver results on drug trafficking as the Donald Trump administration takes a renewed interest in tackling hemispheric organized crime.

During his election campaign, Trump pledged to stop the flow of illegal drugs, primarily Fentanyl, which contributed to the nearly 80,000 deaths from overdose in the U.S.

in 2024.

In addition to pressuring regional governments to take firmer action against organized crime, Washington has overseen a boat bombing campaign in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific aimed at stopping drug trafficking.

But drug experts note that the use of military force has failed to stem the illegal narcotics trade during the decades-long U.S.-led ‘war on drugs’.

Featured image description: Claudia Sheinbaum pictured at her desk on April 30, 2026.

Featured image credit: @Claudiashein via X.

The post Mexico’s Sheinbaum calls for proof after US authorities accuse senior politicians of narco ties appeared first on Latin America Reports.

King Charles III Makes History With Sovereign Visit To Bermuda

April 30, 2026 22:44 | News Americas Now

By Staff Reporter | NewsAmericasNow.com News Americas, HAMILTON, Bermuda, Fri.

May 1, 2026: King Charles III has made history as the first Sovereign to visit Bermuda from May 1st to 2nd.

The landmark two-day Royal Visit will take him from St.

George’s in the East to the Royal Naval Dockyard in the West.

The visit comes days after His Majesty’s US state visit and marks his first official trip to a British Overseas Territory as Sovereign – a milestone moment for the island nation and its people.

Governor His Excellency Andrew Murdoch, CMG, has invited Bermudians to join in welcoming The King at multiple public viewing points across the island.

 While some anti-monarchy sentiment exists, the visit is largely framed as a routine, diplomatic engagement to a British Overseas Territory.

Friday May 1st – East To West The Royal Visit begins today at King’s Square in St.

George’s, where His Majesty will be received by the Royal Bermuda Regiment and dignitaries before proceeding to the historic St.

Peter’s Church.

The King will then travel to the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo – which celebrates its 100th anniversary this year – and to Trunk Island in Harrington Sound, where he will learn about local wildlife conservation efforts.

In the afternoon, His Majesty moves to City Hall and Arts Centre in Hamilton, where he will meet dignitaries and some of Bermuda’s most celebrated artists and artisans.

He will then proceed to Albuoy’s Point before heading to the Royal Naval Dockyard.

At The Keep at the National Museum of Bermuda, The King will be greeted by the National Gombey Troupe – one of Bermuda’s most iconic cultural traditions – before visiting the Queen’s Exhibition Hall and 1850 Ordinance House.

His Majesty will close the day by meeting Commonwealth athletes preparing for the upcoming 2026 Glasgow Commonwealth Games, as well as members of youth organizations from across the island.

Saturday May 2nd – Closing With History On Saturday morning The King returns East to formally open the Great Bay Coast Guard Station in St.

David’s before concluding his visit at Cooper’s Island, where he will learn about a groundbreaking new telescope project aimed at mitigating space debris.

What Bermudians Need To Know Members of the public are encouraged to come out and welcome The King at three key public locations — King’s Square in St.

George’s, City Hall in Hamilton, and the Royal Naval Dockyard.

Road restrictions and temporary traffic controls are expected across parts of Hamilton, St.

George’s, and Dockyard during the visit.

King’s Square will be closed from 7am to noon on Friday.

Residents are advised to allow extra travel time and follow the instructions of police and traffic marshals.

Parking for the BAMZ visit is available at Flatts Cricket Field, with a public viewing area in the parking lot across from the aquarium.

The BAMZ will be closed for part of Friday during the Royal Visit and will reopen to the public at 2pm.

A Special Commemorative Stamp The Bermuda Post Office has released a limited-edition commemorative overprint stamp to mark the occasion – available for $35 and functioning as both a postal item and collector’s keepsake.

Orders may be prepaid for collection or mailing at the BPO and all sub-post offices.

Details are available at the Bermuda Philatelic Bureau online.

King’s Baton Relay The Royal Visit also coincides with a significant cultural moment – the unveiling of Bermuda’s King’s Baton as part of the King’s Baton Relay ahead of the 2026 Commonwealth Games.

The baton, designed by local artist Chyna Talbot, reflects Bermuda’s culture, natural beauty, and sporting spirit and will ultimately be presented at the Opening Ceremony this July.

Minister of Tourism and Transport Owen Darrell called the moment a proud milestone for the island.

The baton forms part of a global relay connecting Commonwealth nations in the lead-up to the Games.

A Visit That Celebrates Bermuda’s People Beyond the ceremonial, the visit is designed to highlight the contributions Bermudians make to their communities, the wider British family, and beyond – with a particular focus on connecting The King with younger generations and their creativity in tackling both local and global challenges.

For a small island nation with an outsized place in the Commonwealth, the visit represents a moment of genuine historic significance – one Bermudians are being encouraged to witness firsthand.

Full details on viewing locations and road restrictions are available through the Government of Bermuda.

RELATED: Caribbean Nationals Honored On King Charles New Year Honors List 2026

Haitian TPS – 350,000 Haitian Immigrants Face Uncertain Future As Supreme Court Weighs Case

April 29, 2026 22:03 | News Americas Now

By Staff Reporter | NewsAmericasNow.com News Americas, WASHINGTON, D.C., Weds.

April 29, 2026: The future of more than 350,000 Haitian immigrants in the United States is hanging in the balance as the U.S.

Supreme Court considers a case that could fundamentally reshape Temporary Protected Status protections nationwide – and send shockwaves through Caribbean diaspora communities from South Florida to New York.

At issue is whether the federal government can end TPS without judicial review – a move that could eliminate legal challenges and strip protections from more than one million immigrants currently covered under the humanitarian program.

During oral arguments, several conservative justices signaled support for the administration’s position, raising serious concerns among advocates that long-standing protections could be weakened or eliminated entirely before a decision expected by June.

“We are here because we know what is at stake,” said Viles Dorsainvil, a Haitian TPS holder and community advocate quoted by the Haitian Bridge Alliance.

“The question before the court is not only legal, but moral.” What’s At Stake For The Caribbean Diaspora For South Florida – home to the largest Haitian diaspora community in the United States – the ruling carries enormous personal and economic consequences.

Many Haitian TPS holders have lived and worked legally in the US for more than a decade, building businesses, raising American-born children, and sending critical remittances back to Haiti.

Haitian immigrants and supporters gathered outside the court during arguments, warning that the stakes extend far beyond legal technicalities.

Advocates pointed to worsening conditions in Haiti – including escalating gang violence, political instability, and mass displacement – as evidence that returning TPS holders would face immediate danger.

The case also has implications for Caribbean nationals beyond Haiti.

TPS protections currently cover immigrants from Venezuela, El Salvador, and several other nations, meaning a ruling against TPS could affect the broader Caribbean and Latin American diaspora across the US.

What TPS Holders Should Know Right Now Advocacy groups are urging calm, stressing that all protections remain fully in effect while the court deliberates.

The Haitian Bridge Alliance was direct in its guidance to the community: “Haitian TPS holders should know that if they are stopped in the street by ICE, they have protected status still.

Employers should know their Haitian TPS holders are STILL authorized to live and work.” Immigration attorneys are advising TPS holders to take the following steps immediately: Ensure all TPS documentation is current and accessible Consult an immigration attorney to understand individual options Do not travel internationally without confirming re-entry authorization Know your rights if approached by immigration enforcement A Decision By June The Supreme Court is expected to issue its ruling by June — the same month the nation celebrates Caribbean Heritage Month.

Advocates warn that depending on the outcome, the decision could trigger immediate uncertainty for hundreds of thousands of Caribbean families across the United States.

For now, the Haitian Bridge Alliance and other organizations are urging TPS holders to stay informed, stay calm, and stay connected to legal resources.

NewsAmericasNow.com will continue tracking this case through the Supreme Court’s June decision.

For immigration legal resources, contact the Haitian Bridge Alliance at haitianbridge.org.

RELATED: Haiti TPS Update 2026: What Haitians In The U.S.

Should Know

Brooch Diplomacy And Strained Unity: How U.S. Pressure Is Seeding Fractures In CARICOM

April 29, 2026 21:49 | News Americas Now

By Ron Cheong News Americas, TORONTO, Canada, Weds.

April 29, 2026: CARICOM’s founding promise can be characterized as: One Region, One People, One Future – something it would be helpful to refocus on in moments like this.

The bloc began as a regional integration project grounded in shared history, collective resilience, and a unified diplomatic voice – that is now being tested by a sharper, more transactional global order.

At the center of that strain lies a consequential shift: The United States has moved away from partnership toward influence through pressure.

That shift is no longer abstract – it is playing out in symbols, alliances, and fractures across the globe including the Caribbean, which is our focus.

Few episodes capture this better than the recent “brooch diplomacy” controversy involving Delcy Rodríguez.

Her decision to wear a brooch depicting Venezuela’s claim over Guyana’s Essequibo region during engagements with CARICOM leaders in Barbados and Grenada was more than a symbolic gesture – it was a calculated assertion of territorial ambition in a regional diplomatic space that is supposed to prioritize neutrality and cohesion.

For Guyana, the implications are stark.

In the midst of navigating a volatile border controversy with Venezuela, this uncomfortable foray raises the possibility that elements within the CARICOM community could be somewhat open, directly or indirectly, to Venezuelan influence.

But to understand how CARICOM arrived at this moment, one must look beyond the region to Washington.

Pressure Over Partnership For decades, U.S.

– Caribbean relations were built on a mix of development assistance, trade access, and institutional cooperation.

While never perfectly balanced, the relationship carried some sense of predictability.

That is no longer the case.

Today, U.S.

policy toward the Caribbean increasingly emphasizes sanctions, geopolitical alignment, and strategic compliance.

Whether through its hardline stance on Cuba, military action in Venezuela, or sweeping tariff regimes, Washington’s posture has become more conditional and less collaborative.

The consequences are cumulative.

The long-running embargo on Cuba, now intensified into a de facto oil blockade, has forced Caribbean states into agonising choices between principle and survival.

Cuban medical missions, long a backbone of regional healthcare systems, are now being unwound or restructured under pressure.

Even Guyana, once deeply aligned with Havana, had been forced by imperatives of its security and survival to recalibrate this alignment and historical friendship.

In addition, rather than contributing to Guyana’s security, the recent U.S.

military intervention in Venezuela, and arrest of Nicolas Maduro, culminated in an unstable paradox.

Instead of ushering in a democratic transition led by opposition figures – and greater regional stability, the US chose to let power effectively remain within the existing governing structure, now fronted more prominently by Rodríguez herself.

If anything, this outcome has strengthened a figure who is arguably more diplomatically agile and legally sophisticated than Maduro, enabling Venezuela to engage the region with renewed effectiveness.

Oil, Influence, And Divergence Energy politics further complicate the picture.

Venezuela’s oil industry remains state-controlled, giving Caracas a powerful tool of foreign policy: the ability to cultivate alliances through preferential energy arrangements.

Historically, initiatives like Petrocaribe allowed Venezuela to build goodwill across the Caribbean by supplying oil on concessional terms.

Guyana, by contrast, sits on vast high quality oil reserves but operates within a very different model.

Its sector is dominated by foreign firms, most notably ExxonMobil.

While this has accelerated production and revenues, it limits Georgetown’s ability to deploy oil as a direct instrument of regional diplomacy.

This divergence matters.

Where Venezuela can translate energy into influence, Guyana must rely more heavily on formal alliances – chief among them, its alignment with the United States for security backing against Venezuelan territorial claims.

That alignment, however, comes at a cost.

A Hornet’s Nest of Contradictions Guyana faces tough strategic options.

There was little choice other than leaning toward Washington for protection in the face of the Venezuelan threat.

But the U.S.

influence in the region has not lead to more stabilization as would have been hoped.  Their approach, marked by coercion rather than consensus, has heightened tensions, disrupted economic flows, and placed CARICOM states under competing pressures.

It also undermined the ties between some longstanding regional and ideological partners, and Cuba in particular.   This weakens the very CARICOM unity that Guyana seeks to champion.

The “broochgate” episode underscores the dilemma.

Georgetown has protested that CARICOM members should not entertain Venezuelan symbolism which challenges its sovereignty.  But even as it did so – the political opposition in Guyana chimed in that: Guyana itself has shown selective solidarity in its actions.

The claim was that Although Cuba is not a CARICOM member it has long had ties with its members.  When Cuba faced intensified U.S.

pressure, Guyana’s response was measured, even muted.

And when regional states were forced to reconsider Cuban medical cooperation, Georgetown adjusted its position rather than seeking a unified defense.

Notwithstanding Guyana has since sent humanitarian rice shipments to Cuba, the point was that these the actions are not consistent with mutual support.

CARICOM At A Crossroads The deeper issue is not any single incident, but the fragmentation of strategic alignment within CARICOM.

External powers are no longer offering partnership frameworks – they are presenting choices, often framed as zero-sum.

The United States demands alignment on security and geopolitics.

China offers targeted economic engagement.

Venezuela leverages energy diplomacy and regional familiarity.

Cuba, despite its constraints, remains a vital social partner.

Each relationship pulls CARICOM states in different directions.

Without a coordinated regional strategy, these pressures risk turning CARICOM from a unified bloc into a collection of individually managed relationships – precisely the kind of fragmentation its founders sought to avoid.

The Path Forward For Guyana, the immediate priority is clear: defend its territorial integrity.

But doing so effectively requires more than bilateral security guarantees – it requires regional legitimacy.

That, in turn, demands consistency.

Guyana’s call for unwavering CARICOM support on Essequibo, should be supported by the same level of commitment on issues that matter to its community, whether related to Cuba, economic sovereignty, or external pressure.

More broadly, CARICOM must confront a hard truth: the era of comfortable alignment is over.

The region is operating in a fluid, contested geopolitical space where influence is increasingly exercised through leverage rather than loyalty.

In that environment, unity is not just an aspiration – it is a necessity.

Because if the Caribbean cannot hold a coherent center, others will define it from the outside.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Ron Cheong is a frequent political commentator and columnist whose recent work focuses on international relations, economic resilience, and Caribbean-American affairs.

He is a community activist and dedicated volunteer with extensive international banking experience.

Now residing in Toronto, Canada, he is a fellow of the Institute of Canadian Bankers and holds a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Toronto.

RELATED: CARICOM News: How U.S.

And China Are Shaping Caribbean Energy The Long Siege Of Cuba: CARICOM At Last Begins Pooling Cash For Cuba Relief Supplies The Long Siege Of Cuba & Caribbean Geopolitics: The Prequel To King Kong And The Island King Kong And The Island: America’s Moral Collapse And Cuba

Chihuahua state attorney general resigns after CIA agents die in Mexico

April 29, 2026 16:37 | Latin America Reports

Medellín, Colombia – Chihuahua state Attorney General César Jáuregui, resigned on Monday following the death of two CIA agents in a car crash in Mexico on April 19.

In a press conference announcing his resignation on Monday, Jáuregui admitted that there had been “omissions” in relation to the presence of the American agents in the country.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum earlier ordered an investigation into why the U.S.

agents – who were apparently working with local authorities – were in the country.

The two spies were returning from a drug raid in the El Pinal area of Chihuahua alongside Mexican security forces when the fatal crash occurred.  Following the crash, Sheinbaum said, “neither had formal accreditation to participate in operational activities” and one had entered the country as a tourist.

Attorney General Jáuregui had initially claimed that the U.S.

operatives had been giving drone lessons in the mountains of Chihuahua, and had coincidentally got a ride with the police convoy..

U.S.

President Donald Trump has long advocated for Washington’s involvement in Mexican anti-drug operations, but Sheinbaum has been opposed to U.S.

forces or agents participating in domestic security operations, though she welcomes intelligence sharing.  Trump has threatened that the U.S.

could “go it alone” in the case that Washington deems Mexico’s anti-cartel efforts insufficient.

Jáuregui is not the only Mexican official facing scrutiny for his involvement in covering up the unregulated presence of the CIA agents.

The Governor of the state of Chihuahua, Maru Campos, was supposed to meet with the Senate of the Republic on Tuesday to clear up unknown details regarding the presence of the CIA agents in Mexico.  She was expected to explain the level of their participation in the operations, whether there were formal or informal agreements with U.S.

agencies, the extent of the knowledge of the Mexican federal government, and if there was a potential exchange of sensitive information.

However, on Tuesday, Campos announced that she would not be attending the meeting, in order to “ensure the proper development of the ongoing proceedings, avoiding at all times the compromising of information of a confidential or classified nature.” She also reiterated that her conduct has “always been under the principles of legality and transparency.” The deaths of the two agents and the circumstances surrounding it have raised tensions between Mexico and Washington, but Sheinbaum highlighted on Tuesday in her daily press conference that she does not desire “conflict” between the two nations.

Featured image description: Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua Features image credits: On^ste82 via Wikimedia Commons The post Chihuahua state attorney general resigns after CIA agents die in Mexico appeared first on Latin America Reports.

Mexican authorities arrest top cartel leader ‘El Jardinero’

April 28, 2026 22:48 | Latin America Reports

The Mexican military captured Audias Flores Silva, alias ‘El Jardinero’, on Monday – one of the top leaders of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG).

Flores Silva was considered to be one of the key candidates to succeed alias ‘El Mencho’, the former leader of the CJNG who was killed by authorities in February.

The drug lord’s arrest comes amid a wider crackdown by Mexican security forces against organized crime, driven partly by pressure from Washington.

According to authorities, Monday’s operation did not involve any shooting, injuries, or collateral damage.

The military deployment included 120 direct action troops, four close air support helicopters, four fixed-wing aircraft, and two troop transport helicopters, with 400 naval personnel providing support.

The CJNG leader’s more than 60-strong escort group dispersed in different directions upon the arrival of security forces, attempting a tactical distraction maneuver, but the target was located through air and ground tracking.

Official footage of the operation shared by Omar García Harfuch, Secretary of Security and Citizen Protection of Mexico, shows the moment of the capture, with Flores Silva extracted from a roadside drainage conduit, where he was hiding.

The arrest happened near El Mirador, a rural community in the western state of Nayarit.

Hours after the news became public, several stores and vehicles were set on fire across Nayarit.

While the unrest fell short of the level of retaliation following the killing of ‘El Mencho’ in February 2026, the Government of Nayarit urged citizens to stay in their homes as a preventative measure.

A major blow to CJNG The arrest was praised by the U.S.

Ambassador to Mexico, Ronald Johnson, who congratulated Mexico’s Security Cabinet and Secretary of the Navy.

In 2021, the U.S.

Drug Enforcement Agency offered a US$5 million reward for information leading to Audias Flores Silva’s arrest or conviction.

Flores Silva was defined as “closely aligned” with former CJNG leader ‘El Mencho’, whose real name is Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes.

In June 2025, the U.S.

Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned Flores Silva, identifying him as a CJNG regional commander in charge of significant portions of territory in the states of Zacatecas, Guerrero, Nayarit, Jalisco, and Michoacán.  According to U.S.

authorities, Flores Silva was in control of clandestine laboratories producing methamphetamine and other illicit drugs in central Jalisco and southern Zacatecas.

In addition, Silva managed the logistics of cocaine trafficking operations from Central America through Mexico to the United States, including the supervision of several clandestine airstrips.‘El Jardinero’ was also believed to have coordinated a deadly 2015 attack against Mexican police forces in Jalisco that left 15 agents dead.Flores Silva’s arrest is a hard hit to CJNG, as security analysts considered him a potential successor to the group’s command after the death of ‘El Mencho’ last February.

“Flores Silva was the closest thing the CJNG had to a chief operating officer, the man who once ran Mencho’s personal security, managed the Pacific corridor’s labs and airstrips, oversaw a timeshare fraud network and U.S.

money-laundering pipeline, and brokered the alliance with Los Chapitos after the Sinaloa civil war,” Chris Dalby, director of World of Crime and senior analyst at Dyami Security Intelligence, told Latin America Reports.

Authorities dealt a second blow to CJNG yesterday when the Special Forces of the Mexican Army and the National Guard detained César Alejandro N, alias “El Güero Conta”.

He was identified as the main financial operator for ‘El Jardinero’ and accused of laundering money through companies and frontmen.

“Losing Silva alongside his financier on the same day hits the CJNG operationally and financially simultaneously.

It doesn’t spell an end to the CJNG, however, and may actually help Juan Carlos Gonzalez Valencia secure leadership by removing a rival,” said Dalby.

Featured image description: Wanted poster for Audias Flores Silva, alias ‘El Jardinero’.

Featured image credit: Omar García Harfuch via Facebook.

The post Mexican authorities arrest top cartel leader ‘El Jardinero’ appeared first on Latin America Reports.

What is behind growing disunity in the Caribbean Community bloc? (Opinion)

April 28, 2026 13:43 | Latin America Reports

Saint Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago — The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) is grappling with a protracted period of regional tensions, tied to the new normal in international politics.

In some respects, this moment is the bloc’s toughest test yet.  At a time when the unity of CARICOM is under growing strain, marked by a discernible shift in respect of interactional norms and diplomatic coherence pertaining to the foreign policy realm, St.

Kitts and Nevis took up the mantle of Chair of the bloc.   Arguably, the impacts of that strain on the regional grouping have had a profound effect on how Prime Minister of St.

Kitts and Nevis Terrance Drew has approached his leadership role in CARICOM — on behalf of his country.  Drew is the Chairman of the Conference of Heads of Government of CARICOM — for a six-month term that got underway this past January.

As the bloc’s constituent treaty notes: “The Conference shall be the supreme Organ of the Community.” In this framing, regional priorities are the rotating chairmanship’s main focus. Perhaps most consequentially, Drew is discharging his regional leadership responsibilities at a juncture when CARICOM member states are facing up to emergent geopolitical dynamics that have driven a wedge between them.          A wide (foreign policy) gap    CARICOM member states’ duelling perspectives on the high-stakes “Trump Corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine became a consequential, foreign policy-related sticking point that placed the bloc in a months-long diplomatic rut.

This situation has weighed down the regional grouping, making its members’ efforts to cohesively contend with an international order that is undergoing a seismic change that much more difficult.

(The international system last experienced change on such a scale at the Cold War’s end, which also precipitated the demise of bipolarity and ushered in the now erstwhile unipolar moment.)  While most CARICOM member states have responded to that Doctrine with suspicion and trepidation, some have offered full-throated support.

The former subset of member states are standing their ground in respect of long-established CARICOM foreign policy-related principles, which hinge on the shared desire of such small states to respect processes of international cooperation and multilateralism.    In contrast, Trinidad and Tobago has controversially thrown its support behind Washington in respect of the spiralling U.S.-Israeli war with Iran — which has been quelled by a tenuous cease-fire for now.

Instructively, early on in that conflict, Barbados called for “restraint as Middle East tensions intensify.”  United Nations (UN) Secretary-General António Guterres has raised serious concerns about the conflict, too, as have many other stakeholders.

Of note, legal experts have been sounding the alarm about what has transpired in the Middle East.       At the core of such concerns are breaches of the UN Charter — a document whose normative and legal standards are the traditional bedrock of the conduct of CARICOM member states’ international relations as small states.

This is precisely why breaches of this Charter endanger these states in respect of the anarchic international system.  Few dynamics in this system undercut the UN Charter more than great powers behaving as if they have a license to do what they want without fear of the consequences.

This is why the U.S.

military campaign that, according to the U.S.

administration, sought to target illegal drug trafficking in the Caribbean by going after alleged “narco-trafficking” boats raised so many eyebrows within the CARICOM fold.

(All along, of course, Venezuela’s Maduro regime was in Washington’s crosshairs.)      US Air Force special missions aviators display a US flag on a helicopter flying over the Caribbean Sea near Puerto Rico, Jan.

23, 2026.

Image credit: U.S.

Southern Command via X.

Trinidad and Tobago did not share those concerns, unequivocally supporting the U.S.

military action that laid the groundwork for and resulted in the capture of Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro.

The U.S.

administration has rewarded Port-of-Spain for its foreign policy positioning, deepening security cooperation.

This was a priority area of the most recent bilateral engagement between Trinidad and Tobago’s Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar and U.S.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio — convened on the margins of the Fiftieth Regular Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of CARICOM.          What also stands out is Trinidad and Tobago’s inclusion in the Shield of the Americas initiative.

Indeed, Port-of-Spain is over the moon with its participation in the recently held Shield of the Americas summit.

Guyana is the only other CARICOM member state that the U.S.

has included in this high-profile initiative.

With the two camps of CARICOM member states being far apart on key demands of the U.S., the status quo has fuelled mutual mistrust among members of the now five-plus-decade old grouping.

It did not help that Washington operationalized the aforesaid Doctrine in invasive, heavy-handed security and foreign policy-related terms.   It is also the case that regional politics have focused intently on seeing the way forward, amidst widespread dissatisfaction with this difficult situation.

Notably, upon the start of his term as CARICOM Chair, Drew sought to shift the situation in a positive direction.

With an eye to preparing the ground for the success of the Fiftieth Regular Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of CARICOM, held under his chairmanship this past February, he piloted “a series of high-level engagements with regional leaders.”   Drew’s intent was to build goodwill among his fellow regional leaders, with a view to creating the conditions for them to all gather at this summit.

In effect, those high-profile, face-to-face bilateral meetings held the promise of building “trust” and “shared purpose” in respect of the region’s leaders.

He said as much.  Beyond ensuring that all CARICOM members’ respective leaders were at ‘the (summit) table’, Drew was also committed to having them primed for a productive exchange on key issues on the regional agenda.

Drew got his wish — at least in part.

All his regional counterparts took part in the said summit; although, leaders of three of the bloc’s 14 sovereign member states departed early.

Consequently, closed-door deliberations that took the form of the leaders’ Retreat did not benefit from a full house.   The Retreat was a key component of the summit’s proceedings.

This one-day, all-important session partly focused on geopolitical developments.  CARICOM member states did close ranks on some of the issues arising, which include Cuba policy.

Their respective long-standing and wide-ranging bilateral relations with the Communist island have emerged as a diplomatic pressure point.

In fact, several hold outs in the CARICOM fold have little choice but to accept Washington’s foreign policy line on how they should treat Havana vis-à-vis facets of those relations.  One day prior to that leaders’ Retreat, and as part of the summit’s proceedings, Rubio met in-person with CARICOM leaders.

One important take away from these talks is that they resulted in an agreement on a contemporary Cooperation Framework, which is now earnestly in the works.  These developments had a direct bearing on regional leaders’ subsequent consideration of geopolitical developments — a priority matter at the summit — warranting the issuance of the ‘Joint Statement on CARICOM’s Engagement with Secretary Rubio’.

    The pre-eminence of the ‘sovereignty narrative’ Signals emanating from the summit in question also called attention to the limits of CARICOM-based regionalism, with member states reaffirming their pragmatic approach to integration.   It is important to note that, with a nod to the Rose Hall Declaration on ‘Regional Governance and Integrated Development’, Prime Minister of Jamaica Andrew Holness drove this point home at the formal start of that very summit.

Regarding regional governance, the so-called Rose Hall Declaration states (in part): “The reaffirmation that CARICOM is a Community of Sovereign States, and of Territories able and willing to exercise the rights and assume the obligations of membership of the Community, and that the deepening of regional integration will proceed in this political and juridical context.” Put differently, and as Terri-Ann Gilbert-Roberts notes in a 2013 scholarly work, there is a “strong aversion among political elites to delegating authority to supranational institutions — a legacy of the Federal Experiment.” Prime Minister of Jamaica Andrew Holness addresses the 50th Regular Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of CARICOM.

Image credit: Office of the Prime Minister of Jamaica.

In his address to the Opening Ceremony of the summit under reference, Holness underscored the following: “For decades, an idealised narrative around Caribbean integration, while well-intentioned, has framed perhaps unrealistic expectations within our respective populations.

It has also perhaps unintentionally diminished the genuine strengths of our existing arrangement, an association of independent states bound not by uniformity, but by shared purpose, mutual regard, and a deep history of collaboration.” Yet it is equally important to recognize the tremendous achievements of a cohesively functioning CARICOM, as advanced (in large part) by regional summitry.

Such summitry has long played a key role in member states’ broader efforts to coordinate with each other and partners, enabling dialogue that has paid off in spades over several decades.

Meetings of this kind are crucial for strengthening bilateral and multilateral ties and contributing to diplomatic solutions, now more than ever.  Holness himself seemed to signal as much, conveying the following perspective at the opening of the 50th Regular Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of CARICOM: “We meet at a time when the speed of global change is outpacing the speed of regional coordination.”  This summit, per its communiqué, represents an important win for St.

Kitts and Nevis and CARICOM as a whole.     Unity hopes suffer another blow Yet what brought opportunity for coordination at a time of sharp tensions that are the cause of a foreign policy-related rift in CARICOM has also created yet another point of contention: The much-publicized controversy that has arisen surrounding the reappointment of the Secretary-General of CARICOM during the leaders’ Retreat.   This controversy has been brewing ever since Drew’s initial statement — issued on March 25th — regarding the reappointment of incumbent Secretary-General of CARICOM Carla Barnett for a second term of office beginning in August 2026.

The impasse runs deeper than procedural concerns over the reappointment of the Secretary-General and attendant matters, with CARICOM’s governance and operations having also come under the spotlight.  The headlines create the impression that there is little sign yet that a resolution is imminent.  The parties out-front on the matter have apparently doubled down on their respective positions, which have only hardened.

In this regard, the latest missives (as of this writing) penned by Trinidad and Tobago Foreign Minister Sean Sobers (dated April 9th) and Drew (dated April 11th), respectively, come to mind.

Although dispatched via diplomatic channels, the correspondence in question is now in the public domain.  While some political leaders are clashing publicly, others in the CARICOM fold are walking a tightrope on this issue.   High-level diplomatic efforts to see a way forward on what has become a significant bone of contention — with the potential to stymie CARICOM regionalism — will no doubt continue.

Opening Ceremony of the 50th Conference of Heads of Government of CARICOM, St Kitts and Nevis.

Image credit: CARICOM via Flickr Rising to the challenge And yet, CARICOM has not a moment to lose in effectively marshalling member states to contend with the resurgence of great-power politics.

This spheres of influence-related development carries serious risks, which undercut a cornerstone of the postwar international order: multilateral cooperation.   These dynamics of contemporary international politics continue to turn the screws on CARICOM — and fast.   We are already seeing a key consequence of this turn of events: A new reality now shapes CARICOM diplomacy — already under strain from the aforementioned foreign policy-related rift in the bloc.    In short, the shift within the grouping in respect of interactional norms and diplomatic coherence pertaining to the foreign policy realm exposes seemingly deep divisions in relation to worldviews.    History shows that such moments do not augur well for the bloc.

One could draw a historical parallel with the U.S.

invasion of Grenada in 1983, which stoked tensions within and had far-reaching impacts on the region.       Clearly, key foreign policy-related setbacks within today’s CARICOM fit a longer pattern.

Even so, their ever-widening rifts ought not to become a fixture in the scheme of things either.  While there was much-needed discussion at the summit under reference about geopolitical developments, along with a nod to the rationale qua nature of the bloc itself, CARICOM needs to work through how it can better rise to the challenge of navigating the return of great-power politics.  In years ahead, the new normal in international politics will likely continue to undermine the UN Charter.

The stakes are high for such small states at this moment, and all concerned need to take a long, hard look at the issues arising.

There is increasing recognition in CARICOM foreign policy circles that, facing rising risks, the bloc needs to get a handle on the current state of affairs.  When CARICOM foreign ministers meet next month, they will likely continue to try to work things through.  Featured image: 50th Conference of Heads of Government of CARICOM.

Photo of CARICOM Leaders with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

Image credit: CARICOM The post What is behind growing disunity in the Caribbean Community bloc?

(Opinion) appeared first on Latin America Reports.

Poll projects dead heat between Fujimori and Sánchez in Peru runoff as count nears completion

April 27, 2026 12:36 | MercoPress

Right-wing candidate Keiko Fujimori and left-wing candidate Roberto Sánchez would tie at 38% of the vote in the Peruvian presidential runoff scheduled for June 7, according to the first opinion poll published after the April 12 election, against a backdrop of an inconclusive count and an ongoing dispute over second place.

The Ipsos Peru survey, conducted between April 23 and 24 and published by daily Perú.21, points to a scenario of absolute parity with a margin of error of +/- 2.8 percentage points.

Kast–Paz rapprochement opens door to potential restoration of Bolivia–Chile relations

April 24, 2026 19:49 | MercoPress

The foreign ministers of Bolivia, Fernando Aramayo, and Chile, Francisco Pérez Mackenna, agreed on Friday to deepen bilateral ties and advance a joint economic agenda, amid a decisive diplomatic rapprochement between the two countries after nearly five decades without ambassador-level relations.

The meeting, held at an event organized by the Chamber of Industry, Commerce, Services, and Tourism (Cainco) in Santa Cruz, concluded a two-day official visit by the Chilean minister.

Petro travels to Caracas to meet Delcy Rodríguez following failed Cúcuta summit

April 24, 2026 11:31 | MercoPress

Colombian President Gustavo Petro will meet at midday on Friday in Caracas with Venezuela's acting President Delcy Rodríguez, in what marks the first official meeting between a head of state and the Venezuelan leader since she took office on January 5, following the capture of former president Nicolás Maduro in a US military operation on January 3 of this year.

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