Santa Barbara County News and Events

Trump nomina a Francis Donovan como nuevo jefe del Comando Sur en medio de crecientes tensiones en el Caribe

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Por Mauricio Torres, CNN en Español

El presidente de Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, nominó este viernes al teniente general Francis L. Donovan como nuevo jefe del Comando Sur, el área de las Fuerzas Armadas estadounidenses que supervisa las operaciones en América Latina.

La nominación se produce en medio del despliegue militar de EE.UU. en el Caribe y el Pacífico y de sus ataques contra embarcaciones que supuestamente transportaban drogas, así como también tras el anuncio del “bloqueo total” de los buques petroleros sancionados que lleguen y salgan de Venezuela.

Además, ocurre una semana después de que el anterior jefe del Comando Sur, el almirante Alvin Holsey, se retiró de forma anticipada luego de tener diferencias con el secretario de Defensa, Pete Hegseth, por la legalidad de esos mismos ataques.

Trump propone que Donovan ascienda al grado de general y a partir de ahora tome las riendas del Comando Sur, de acuerdo con la lista de nominaciones difundida este viernes por el Departamento de Defensa.

Donovan actualmente se desempeña como vicejefe del Comando de Operaciones Especiales de Estados Unidos. Es especialista en infantería, reconocimiento y operaciones especiales y ha ocupado diversas posiciones de liderazgo en las Fuerzas Armadas, según su perfil publicado en la página web del Comando de Operaciones Especiales.

“Ha servido en operaciones de combate, contingencia y expedicionarias en el mar, desde el mar y en tierra”, dice la semblanza.

La nominación de Donovan debe ser aprobada por el Senado de EE.UU., donde el Comité de Servicios Armados revisa cada año unas 50.000 nominaciones para cargos militares y civiles en el Departamento de Defensa, el Ejército, la Marina y otras áreas, de acuerdo con su página web.

Si su nombramiento es aprobado, Donovan estará a cargo de las acciones militares de EE.UU. en aguas internacionales del Caribe y el Pacífico, donde, desde el 2 de septiembre, fuerzas estadounidenses han destruido hasta la fecha 29 botes que supuestamente transportaban drogas, según ha informado el propio Comando Sur. En estas acciones han muerto al menos 104 personas.

El despliegue de EE.UU. en el Caribe y el Pacífico incluye buques y aviones de guerra y unos 15.000 efectivos. Washington dice que con estas acciones busca combatir al narcotráfico y evitar que más drogas lleguen a territorio estadounidense, mientras Venezuela considera que estas maniobras en realidad buscan desestabilizar al Gobierno del presidente Nicolás Maduro e impulsar un cambio de régimen en el país sudamericano.

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The post Trump nomina a Francis Donovan como nuevo jefe del Comando Sur en medio de crecientes tensiones en el Caribe appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

The disaster-prone Philippines invested billions in flood control. Then officials looted the funds

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By Lex Harvey, CNN

(CNN) — Ace Aguirre was just two bites into his oatmeal on the morning of November 4 when he noticed something strange: mud had seeped onto the living room floor of his bungalow in Cotcot, a village in the Philippines’ Cebu province.

The moments that followed will be forever seared into Aguirre’s memory. His living room furniture floating; the terrifying few minutes when he wasn’t sure he’d be able to pry the front door open; his son praying to God as the water rose to their chests; his daughter, who can’t swim, perched high on a pillar as water and cars gushed by, inches from her feet.

“I don’t know how we were able to survive. One detail that didn’t go our way and many of us could have died,” Aguirre told CNN.

That morning Typhoon Kalmaegi dumped over a month’s worth of rain, causing rivers and waterways in Cebu to swell and unleashing catastrophic flash flooding that killed more than 230 people nationwide.

One of the dead was Aguirre’s neighbor, a mother of two, who drowned when she became trapped in her kitchen. He had tried to save her but couldn’t get her out in time.

Torrential downpours and deadly flooding in the tropical, disaster-prone Philippines are not new. But revelations in recent months that politicians, officials and contractors had looted billions of dollars from the nationwide program supposed to mitigate their effects have roiled the country.

Prior to the deadly flooding, a citizens’ group in Cebu had called for an audit of flood control projects along the Cotcot River, upstream from where Aguirre lives, according to local media.

The scandal has embroiled dozens of high-ranking lawmakers and officials who allegedly received kickbacks to award contracts. Those revelations have sparked huge youth-led anti-government protests against corruption and wealthy elites, similar to those seen this year in Indonesia and Nepal.

Aguirre had been watching the political drama unfold far away in Manila, the capital, for months, but he didn’t expect it to come to his doorstep.

“All of a sudden you become a direct victim,” he said. “It hits different.”

The flooding in November prompted Cebu’s governor Pamela Baricuatro to demand an investigation into the 26 billion pesos ($443 million) in flood-control projects in the province which officials in Manila admitted “should have been working” by the time disaster struck.

Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. later visited the region and promised to clear and clean the waterways, and de-clog drainage systems, in time for rainy season next year.

The previous July he had revealed a government flood control program worth more than 545 billion pesos ($9.2 billion) had been plagued by corruption.

He said an internal audit found many of the 10,000 projects his government had overseen since he came to power in 2022 had been built using substandard materials or not at all, he said, referring to the projects as “ghost projects.”

CNN has reached out to the Philippine government for comment.

When Marcos Jr exposed the fraud, he “opened a can of worms” that has since spun out of his control, said Sol Iglesias, associate professor of Political Science at the University of the Philippines.

Testimonies in the House and Senate have revealed “an entire system of plunder and corruption that has been facilitated by the very agencies that were responsible for budgeting, planning, implementing, monitoring and checking on the financial soundness of these infrastructures,” Iglesias said.

In September, Finance Secretary Raph Recto told a Senate hearing up to 118.5 billion pesos ($2 billion) in funding for flood control may have been lost to corruption in the past two years, Read more

Slight weekend rain chances, multi-day storm through Christmas

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SANTA BARBARA COUNTY, Calif. - Saturday will be dry and mild in the 60s and 70s before light northern Central Coast rain chances pick up Sunday into Monday.

Clouds will begin to fill our skies over the weekend with very light showers possible to bring under 1/10th of an inch.

An atmospheric river arrives Tuesday night through Christmas Eve. It is likely to bring 1 to 3 inches of rain near the coast, and 5 inches for mountain areas.

Another pulse of the storm will bring more rain on Christmas Day. An additional 1 to 2.5 inches near the coast and additional 4 inches in the mountain possible with showers lingering through Friday the 26th. Flooding, debris flow and mudslides are possible.

The post Slight weekend rain chances, multi-day storm through Christmas appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Former classmates describe accused Brown shooter as ‘brilliant’ but arrogant and difficult

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By Duarte Mendonca, Allison Gordon, Tim Elfrink, CNN

(CNN) — As investigators work to find a motive behind the mass shooting at Brown University and the slaying of an acclaimed MIT professor, former classmates of the accused killer described him as a brilliant but exceptionally difficult student.

Claudio Neves Valente, the 48-year-old suspect who police say was found dead Thursday of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, was a top student but a disruptive personality in his native Portugal, recalled classmates on Friday.

Neves Valente studied at Instituto Superior Técnico along with Nuno Loureiro, the MIT professor he is now accused of shooting to death. The school confirmed to CNN that both men were students there between 1995 and 2000, and that Neves Valente studied for a degree in Technological Physics Engineering.

That engineering course was full of gifted students, recalled classmate Felipe Moura – but Neves Valente stood out, for good and bad reasons.

“Claudio was obviously one of the best, but in class he had a great need to stand out and show that he was better than the rest,” Moura wrote in Portuguese in a Facebook post.

“Claudio’s attitude was unpleasant,” he continued, often arguing with “colleagues he didn’t consider as brilliant as him (and who probably weren’t),” he wrote. “They were totally unnecessary quarrels, which did not help the class at all.”

Moura, who now teaches at a Lisbon university, did not respond to messages from CNN. A former classmate, who asked not to be quoted by name, confirmed that Moura’s Facebook account was authentic.

In an interview with Público, a newspaper in Portugal, Moura echoed his impressions of Neves Valente as an aggressive classmate.

“He had a confrontational personality in class. In other words, the other good students would intervene, ask questions, [but] Claudio liked to say that he was the one who knew,” Moura told the paper.

Nuno Morais, another classmate, told Público that Neves Valente and Loureiro were among the top students at the school – but their personalities were starkly different.

“Claudio was one of the students with the best grades in the course. He was much more theoretical,” Morais told the paper. “Nuno was also a good student, he stood out less in terms of grades, but he was a more relaxed person—and seemed to have a knack for slightly more applied subjects.”

After graduating in Portugal, Neves Valente enrolled at Brown University in 2000 as a graduate student in physics but did not finish the program. Moura said he stayed in touch with Neves Valente at the time and found that he was once again clashing with other students.

“I exchanged many emails with him at the time and saw that he maintained the same attitude — as he told me —of maintaining unnecessary conflicts with PhD colleagues in class, which he again considered far less capable than he was,” Moura wrote on Facebook. “I could tell that he wasn’t enjoying being at Brown University.”

Scott Watson, a classmate at Brown, said Valente was “socially awkward” and that he became his only friend at the university. He struggled in the US, complaining bitterly that classes weren’t challenging and that the food was poor, Watson recalled.

“He would say the classes were too easy—honestly, for him they were. He already knew most of the material and was genuinely impressive,” Watson, who is now a professor at Syracuse University, said in a statement shared with CNN.

Watson said Valente could be “kind and gentle” but that he was also volatile as well.

“He often became frustrated—sometimes angry—about courses, professors, and l

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