Click on the Manage Content for adding and managing content.
Click on the Rotator Settings and choose what and how it will be displayed.

Chile anuncia una histórica alza de combustibles por la guerra en Irán y ya hay largas filas. Kast pide “responsabilidad”

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating

Por Gonzalo Zegarra, CNN Español

El presidente de Chile, José Antonio Kast, pidió “responsabilidad” y “solidaridad” a los chilenos y a los partidos de oposición luego de la histórica alza de los precios del combustible anunciada la noche del lunes, que generó largas filas en estaciones de recarga antes de que la medida entre en vigor.

Chile, como uno de los mayores importadores de petróleo en la región, quedó muy expuesto ante las recientes alzas de los precios internacionales fogoneadas por la guerra en Medio Oriente.

El Gobierno de Kast anunció que desde el jueves, la gasolina se elevará en torno al 32 % y el del diésel en un 62 %.

Tan solo unos minutos después del anuncio, se formaron largas filas de autos en estaciones de servicio en la capital, con clientes intentando abastecerse antes del cambio de precio.

Kast, quien asumió hace menos de dos semanas, dijo entender que las medidas son “un golpe al bolsillo” y que pueden generar manifestaciones, pero pidió mesura, en declaraciones a la prensa durante una visita a Puerto Montt. Afirmó que las eventuales protestas “tienen que ser pacíficas, que no dañen a otros ciudadanos que sí necesitan el transporte público para movilizarse”.

El Ministerio de Hacienda estimó que el costo de absorber la totalidad del aumento llegaría hasta los US$ 4.000 millones. La semana pasada, el ministro de la cartera, Jorge Quiroz, anunció recortes de gastos y aseguró que el Gobierno heredó finanzas tensionadas. “Estamos enfrentando un shock de los más grandes en el mercado del petróleo en décadas, en un contexto de estrechez fiscal muy severa. En esas circunstancias, tenemos que tomar decisiones duras para resguardar las finanzas públicas”, dijo Quiroz en un comunicado.

“Tenemos una crisis histórica (…) Probablemente es un shock de los más grandes al mercado global del petróleo que hemos visto”, dijo el ministro en entrevista con CNN Chile.

El Gobierno también presentó una serie de medidas paliativas, como el congelamiento de precios del transporte público en Santiago hasta fin de año y una subvención a la parafina para la calefacción durante el otoño y el invierno.

El anuncio del aumento fue rechazado por gremios del transporte, que advirtieron que la medida tendrá un efecto inflacionario. “Si el valor del litro de petróleo sube, los camioneros tenemos que tener tarifas proporcionales para poder seguir ejerciendo nuestras funciones que es transportar lo que Chile produce, importa y exporta”, apuntó el presidente de la Confederación Nacional de Transporte de Carga Terrestre de Chile, Sergio Pérez.

Kast reiteró que la administración del expresidente Gabriel Boric los dejó sin fondos de reserva y pidió colaboración para los proyectos de ley vinculados a la situación. La propuesta prevé reponer el Fondo de Estabilización del Precio del Petróleo desde US$ 5 millones actuales a US$ 60 millones.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Con información de EFE y Reuters

The post Chile anuncia una histórica alza de combustibles por la guerra en Irán y ya hay largas filas. Kast pide “responsabilidad” appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Trump says US talking with ‘respected’ figure in Iran. It may be a war veteran with a record of suppressing dissent

Kraig Pakulski 0 13 Article rating: No rating

By Tim Lister, Leila Gharagozlou, CNN

(CNN) — The Iranian official talked of as a potential interlocutor with the Trump administration once boasted that he personally beat protesters as a young police commander in the Islamic Republic.

Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, speaker of the Iranian parliament, has never been shy about his role in suppressing challenges to the Islamic Republic.

“Photographs of me are available showing me on back of a motor bike…beating (the protesters) with wooden sticks…I was among those carrying out beatings on the street level and I am proud of that,” Ghalibaf is heard saying in an audio recording from 2013 about protests years earlier.

In recent weeks, as the US-Israeli campaign has killed many of Iran’s top leaders, he has emerged as one of the most senior surviving civilian figures, part of a shrinking pool of officials now shaping the country’s response.

For the 64-year-old Ghalibaf, the security of the Islamic Republic has always been the overriding priority. His public remarks emphasize resistance, national strength, and the need to confront external pressure rather than compromise.

Little surprise then that he is now issuing declarations almost daily through social media in defiance of the United States and Israel.

President Donald Trump said Monday that the US was having “very strong talks” and was “dealing with the man who is most respected” in Iran, but declined to name him.

“We’re dealing with some people that I find to be very reasonable, very solid,” Trump told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins. “The people within know who they are, they’re very respected, and maybe one of them will be exactly what we’re looking for.”

Some reports said he was referring to Ghalibaf, who within hours denied there were any negotiations between Tehran and Washington.

He posted on X: “No negotiations have been held with the US, and fake news is used to manipulate the financial and oil markets and escape the quagmire in which the US and Israel are trapped.”

Throughout the conflict, he has regularly used social media to goad Trump and demonstrate a hard line on Iran’s conditions for ending the war.

“Certainly we aren’t seeking a ceasefire. We believe the aggressor must be punished and taught a lesson that will deter them from attacking Iran again,” he said on X on March 10.

Ghalibaf was also prominent before the war broke out, warning that such a conflict would spread across the region.

“Any war in the region would not be short-lived and would not be confined to a single party or a specific geography,” Ghalibaf told CNN’s Frederik Pleitgen in late January.

Experts say he has connections across the regime’s centers of influence that would afford him a critical role in any negotiated settlement.

“He is the guy running the show,” said Hamidreza Azizi at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs.

Ghalibaf is less interested in ideology than power and shows a Machiavellian touch at times, says Azizi added. “For him, the ends justify the means,” he told CNN, pointing to his shifting perspectives through the years on economic and other issues.

Across a lifetime of service to the Islamic Republic, Ghalibaf has become the consummate regime insider, unfailingly loyal to the Islamic Revolution of 1979 and supportive of its regional ambitions.

As a teenager, he joined the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s.

That marked

How the deadly collision at LaGuardia unfolded

Kraig Pakulski 0 15 Article rating: No rating
Debris hangs from an Air Canada jet Monday at New York's LaGuardia Airport.

By Chelsea Bailey, CNN

(CNN) — The Air Canada regional jet was scheduled to take off Sunday from Montreal Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport around 8 p.m.

Steering the one-hour flight were pilot Antoine Forest and a first officer, both “young men,” the top Federal Aviation Administration official would say, “at the start of their careers.”

They were bound for New York’s second-biggest airport, LaGuardia, where the crew of air traffic controllers was slightly smaller than its target of 37, with 33 employed and seven in training, the Transportation Secretary later would explain.

Such a setup wasn’t unfamiliar. Among factors the National Transportation Safety Board found led to last year’s midair collision of an Army Black Hawk helicopter and American Airlines regional jet that killed 67 near Washington, DC, was air traffic control’s “degraded performance,” with two positions combined in the tower.

That collision – the deadliest US commercial aviation accident in decades – had become the latest in a series of high-profile, fatal accidents renewing scrutiny of the airline industry.

On Sunday, US air travel also faced another significant strain: diminished Transportation Security Administration staffing owing to a lapse in funding for the Department of Homeland Security as federal leaders fought over immigration enforcement tactics.

As Air Canada flight 8646’s departure time approached, passenger Jack Cabot made his way to the gate. So did Rebecca Liquori, a mom heading back to her sons, 2 and 4, whose giggles she cherished.

But the flight was running late.

More than two hours late.

‘Truck One, stop, stop, stop!’

It was after 10 p.m. when the CRJ-900 took off, en route to an arrival gate in East Elmhurst, Queens.

About an hour later – shortly after 11 p.m. – LaGuardia’s Air Traffic Control Tower got a radio message from the pilot of another flight, this one run by United Airlines.

His plane had pushed away from the terminal but would head back to it, he said, because of a problem with its de-icing system and a “weird” odor onboard the aircraft, an audio recording indicates.

“We’re going to be going back to the gate,” the United flight 2384 pilot said. “Request fire, as well.”

As the controllers scrambled to find a gate for the United flight, its pilot declared an emergency, noting his flight attendants felt ill because of the odor.

“We will need to go into any available gate at this time,” the pilot said.

The tower confirmed the request and said the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates LaGuardia, would send a fire truck, in case the flight needed to evacuate.

Then, several events happened in quick succession, leading d

Change is ‘long overdue’ at Homeland Security. Can Markwayne Mullin bring it?

Kraig Pakulski 0 21 Article rating: No rating
White House border czar Tom Homan enters the US Senate on March 20.

By Priscilla Alvarez, CNN

(CNN) — Newly confirmed Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin told senators during his confirmation hearing that he wanted to keep the department out of the headlines. That won’t be easy.

The Department of Homeland Security is charged with one of President Donald Trump’s key domestic priorities: cracking down on immigration. Mullin, like his predecessors, will face immense pressure to execute on the administration’s agenda and fend off its critics, while also balancing Trump’s ever-shifting demands. The president is scheduled to swear Mullin in Tuesday afternoon after he was confirmed Monday night.

One of Mullin first moves is lining up the personnel to help him do it. He is bringing some of his Senate staff to the department; they already arrived at DHS as of Tuesday morning, according to a source familiar with the matter. Ahead of assuming the role, Mullin spoke with Trump about the people he wanted to bring on.

Troy Edgar, who previously served as deputy DHS secretary until being pulled to be ambassador to El Salvador, is expected back at the department, according to two sources familiar with the matter. Edgar’s nomination is still on the calendar for a Senate vote.

“We have no DHS personnel announcements at this time,” a White House official told CNN.

Mullin is expected to be in briefings with DHS officials throughout the day as he gets read in, according to a Homeland Security official.

While he sets up his team and gets up to speed on policies and contracts that have been placed on hold amid the transition, Mullin will also have to immediately grapple with the department shutdown that’s resulted in Transportation Security Agency personnel going unpaid and fueled hours-long lines at airports. At Trump’s behest and with little notice, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents deployed to several airports nationwide Monday to do line management.

On the heels of Kristi Noem’s splashy approach to the job as secretary — which yielded headlines, controversy and internal strife — DHS officials have been anxiously awaiting the type of change that they’ve described as “long overdue.” Noem, who was reassigned by Trump to serve as special envoy for the Shield of the Americas, is out of the country this week for a multi-country trip in Latin America. Noem’s lightning-rod top aide, Corey Lewandowski, is expected to work with her in her Shield of the Americas position.

Trump, for his part, has expressed complete confidence in Mullin. “He’s going to be fantastic. He’ll make his own change. He’s already given me a list of people he wants to bring,” Trump told reporters, describing him as a “friend of mine.”

On Monday night, soon after Mullin was confirmed to his

RSS
First22772278227922802282228422852286Last