Santa Barbara County News and Events

Muere la madre de Víctor Quero días después de enterrar a su hijo, preso político en Venezuela

Kraig Pakulski 0 11 Article rating: No rating

Por CNN Español

Carmen Teresa Navas, madre del preso político venezolano Víctor Hugo Quero Navas, murió este domingo, apenas unos días después de haber enterrado a su hijo, cuya muerte bajo custodia del Estado fue confirmada oficialmente la semana pasada tras meses de denuncias por su desaparición. La muerte de Navas fue confirmada a CNN por la persona que la cuidaba.

La organización no gubernamental Foro Penal, que acompañó a la familia durante su búsqueda, expresó su pesar por el fallecimiento de Navas y la describió como una madre “incansable” en la exigencia de verdad y justicia. “Su entereza, su dignidad y su perseverancia frente al silencio y la incertidumbre fueron ejemplo de la fuerza de las madres y familiares de las víctimas en Venezuela”, señaló la organización en un comunicado en su cuenta de Instagram.

Víctor Quero, de 50 años, estaba detenido desde el 3 de enero de 2025 en el Centro Penitenciario Rodeo I, bajo custodia del Estado venezolano. El 7 de mayo de este año, el Ministerio del Poder Popular para el Servicio Penitenciario confirmó su muerte mediante un comunicado. Falleció el 24 de julio de 2025, poco más de seis meses de su en encarcelamiento, dijeron las autoridades.

La policía científica exhumó el cuerpo el viernes 8 de mayo, tal como lo había adelantado el Ministerio Público en un comunicado. Ese mismo día, fue sepultado en un cementerio distinto a aquel donde se encontraba y donde su familia ahora podrá recordarlo.

El entierro de Quero se produjo pocos días antes del Día de la Madre, tras la confirmación oficial de su fallecimiento a la familia, y puso fin a meses de búsqueda en los que su madre exigió insistentemente información sobre su paradero.

“Que me den fe de mi hijo, ¿dónde me lo tienen? Si está vivo… porque desde que lo apresaron no lo he visto una sola vez”, pedía Navas a la prensa el 4 de mayo en la Plaza Altamira de Caracas, durante una de las últimas veces que habló públicamente sobre el caso, mientras sostenía una fotografía de su hijo.

Navas, de 82 años, fue parte de manifestaciones, visitó cárceles y contactó a las autoridades, pero decía que solo recibía negativas y silencio. Nadie le podía dar certeza sobre el paradero de su hijo.

La mujer insistía en que no tenía detalles sobre la aprehensión de su hijo, que se dedicaba al comercio y era su sostén económico. Él, asegura, fue acusado de terrorismo y ella afirma que era inocente.

“Así que he tenido esta, vamos a decir, el viacrucis… Para una madre es demasiado difícil que le nieguen dónde se encuentra su hijo”, decía la mujer sobre la búsqueda que había emprendido.

Tras la confirmación de la muerte de Quero, Navas exigió la realización de una prueba de ADN para verificar la identidad del cuerpo y esclarecer plenamente las circunstancias del caso.

Las autoridades venezolanas han informado que se abrió una investigación penal para determinar las causas de la muerte. La Fiscalía General aseguró que realizará las diligencias necesarias para esclarecer los hechos, mientras la Defensoría del Pueblo pidió revisar posibles responsabilidades y garantizar el debido proceso.

Varios activistas por los derechos humanos y figuras de la oposición lamentaron la muerte de Navas. El exdiputado y líder opositor venezolano Juan Pablo Guanipa expresó su pesar en su cuenta de X.

“Por un año se burlaron cínicamente del dolor de una madre que buscaba a su hijo en las cárceles de la dictadura”, escribió Guanipa.

“Ya está nuevamente con su amado hijo”, añadió Foro Penal en su comunicado.

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

The post Muere la madre de Víctor Quero días después de e

El crucero afectado por el hantavirus atraca en Roterdam como destino final

Kraig Pakulski 0 12 Article rating: No rating

Por Christian Edwards, CNN

El crucero de lujo afectado por un brote de hantavirus llegó al puerto neerlandés de Roterdam este lunes por la mañana, según mostraron los sitios de seguimiento marítimo, para ser desinfectado por las autoridades.

Los 25 miembros de la tripulación y los dos miembros del personal médico a bordo del MV Hondius, de bandera neerlandesa, serán puestos en cuarentena tras desembarcar de forma escalonada, según informó previamente el operador turístico Oceanwide Expeditions. Posteriormente, el barco será desinfectado.

Tras su atraque en Roterdam, se observaron trabajadores que vestían trajes de protección contra materiales peligrosos y mascarillas a bordo del barco. No estaba claro si todos los miembros restantes a bordo serían puestos en cuarentena durante el periodo completo recomendado de 42 días.

El atraque del barco en Roterdam marca el final de su largo viaje desde Sudamérica, durante el cual fallecieron tres pasajeros a consecuencia del brote de hantavirus, un virus que habitualmente se transmite por contacto con las heces de roedores.

El barco había quedado varado frente a Cabo Verde —su destino final previsto— después de que las autoridades impidieran a los pasajeros desembarcar en las islas africanas debido al brote de hantavirus. En su lugar, los pasajeros fueron evacuados la semana pasada, en las islas Canarias, España, permaneciendo a bordo una tripulación mínima para el trayecto final del barco hacia los Países Bajos.

La Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS) ha evaluado que el riesgo que este brote representa para el público en general sigue siendo bajo. Dado que el hantavirus tiene un periodo de incubación de varias semanas, la OMS advirtió que podrían surgir más casos en las próximas semanas.

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

The post El crucero afectado por el hantavirus atraca en Roterdam como destino final appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Tracking a mid-week warming trend & Santa Ana winds

Kraig Pakulski 0 17 Article rating: No rating

Happy Monday! We begin the morning with a mix of sun and marine clouds. Expect partial clearing this afternoon as winds will help mix out the clouds. Highs rise into the 60s and 70s for most beaches, 80s for the interior. A Wind Advisory in in place through the Ventura County Mountains through 3pm where gusts will near 40mph. Santa Ana winds will peak in the morning and keep humidity levels low. Beach Hazard Statement and High Surf Advisories remain in place through midday. Use caution when heading into the coastal waters.

Temperatures rise Tuesday. A few clouds will greet the beaches in the early morning before a quicker clearing trend. We get rid of most High Surf Advisories and Beach Hazard Statements, so head out into the beaches and get into the waters to stay cool! Maximum temperatures

Peak heating occurs Wednesday as most areas draw close to 80s. Head out to the beaches and enjoy! We watch temperatures fade back to average as the weekend approaches. Minimal day to day differences on board.

The post Tracking a mid-week warming trend & Santa Ana winds appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

‘It’s not just sunsets and cocktails:’ They sold their home in Colorado to live on a sailboat

Kraig Pakulski 0 22 Article rating: No rating
The couple recently bought a motorboat and plan to sell Rascal.

By Silvia Marchetti

(CNN) — Not long after Charly Oliver and Michelle Denton met in the 1990s, they found they had the same dream — to live on a sailboat and explore the world.

It took many years for that goal to be realized, but the couple were finally able to sell their home in Boulder, Colorado, a decade ago and buy a sailboat named “Rascal.”

Since then, they’ve spent November through April each year sailing across the clear waters of the Bahamas, admiring striking sunsets and tropical shores from their 41-foot floating winter house.

The summer months are spent globetrotting — the couple have so far visited 36 countries across Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas.

Freeing lifestyle

“What pretty much sums up the sailing lifestyle is the freedom and just working and living with nature,” says Denton, who couldn’t be happier to be living the life she first imagined when she learned to sail as a child.

Their lifestyle at sea didn’t come easily. Back when she was a law student, Denton had put together a 40-year plan that involved living frugally and saving as much as possible so that she could retire early.

When she and Oliver married in 2004, Denton laid out her plan to him and found he was willing to pursue it with her.

“For me, retirement has always been about traveling and doing the things I want to do like climbing, motorcycling, sailing,” he says. “Settling down in one place and not going anywhere is not in the cards for me.”

Life on land felt fast-moving and uninspiring at times, adds Denton, who explains that they’d traveled all around the US, visiting most of their bucket-list places, and the prospect of exploring new shores and hard-to-reach spots was hugely appealing to both of them.

After 33 years of saving they were finally able to retire in 2016, three years earlier than they’d initially projected.

That same year, they took their first sea trip, from Galveston Bay in Texas, where they bought the vessel, along the Gulf Coast to Florida and then from the Florida Keys to the Bahamas.

For the past 10 years, their winters have been spent exploring the more than 700 islands of the Bahamas, such as the Abacos, the Berry Islands )a 30-island chain), Conception Island, and Mayaguana, its most remote isle.

Challenging times

During the summer months, they usually leave the vessel behind to continue their travels on land.

While they say there are many pros to life at sea — such as the freedom, the affordability, and the boating community — there are also many cons.

“It’s not just sunsets and cocktails,” says Oliver, who previously worked in the industrial safety sector.

Maintaining a sailboat can be hard work and constantly being at the mercy of sea conditions requires a lot of preparation, forward planning and patience, they say. Anything that goes wrong with the boat, they have to fix themselves.

“You don’t go anywhere fast,” says Oliver. “Dealing with weather can be problematic both at sea and when anchored.”

The couple have had many challenging days at sea, including a bad-weather crossing of the Gulf Stream, an ocean current that flows through the Straits of Florida and up the eastern coastline of the United States.

They live simply onboard. The kitchen contains only a small oven and all digital comms are via a limited satellite internet link. However, th

‘It’s not just sunsets and cocktails:’ They sold their home in Colorado to live on a sailboat

Kraig Pakulski 0 19 Article rating: No rating
The couple recently bought a motorboat and plan to sell Rascal.

By Silvia Marchetti

(CNN) — Not long after Charly Oliver and Michelle Denton met in the 1990s, they found they had the same dream — to live on a sailboat and explore the world.

It took many years for that goal to be realized, but the couple were finally able to sell their home in Boulder, Colorado, a decade ago and buy a sailboat named “Rascal.”

Since then, they’ve spent November through April each year sailing across the clear waters of the Bahamas, admiring striking sunsets and tropical shores from their 41-foot floating winter house.

The summer months are spent globetrotting — the couple have so far visited 36 countries across Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas.

Freeing lifestyle

“What pretty much sums up the sailing lifestyle is the freedom and just working and living with nature,” says Denton, who couldn’t be happier to be living the life she first imagined when she learned to sail as a child.

Their lifestyle at sea didn’t come easily. Back when she was a law student, Denton had put together a 40-year plan that involved living frugally and saving as much as possible so that she could retire early.

When she and Oliver married in 2004, Denton laid out her plan to him and found he was willing to pursue it with her.

“For me, retirement has always been about traveling and doing the things I want to do like climbing, motorcycling, sailing,” he says. “Settling down in one place and not going anywhere is not in the cards for me.”

Life on land felt fast-moving and uninspiring at times, adds Denton, who explains that they’d traveled all around the US, visiting most of their bucket-list places, and the prospect of exploring new shores and hard-to-reach spots was hugely appealing to both of them.

After 33 years of saving they were finally able to retire in 2016, three years earlier than they’d initially projected.

That same year, they took their first sea trip, from Galveston Bay in Texas, where they bought the vessel, along the Gulf Coast to Florida and then from the Florida Keys to the Bahamas.

For the past 10 years, their winters have been spent exploring the more than 700 islands of the Bahamas, such as the Abacos, the Berry Islands )a 30-island chain), Conception Island, and Mayaguana, its most remote isle.

Challenging times

During the summer months, they usually leave the vessel behind to continue their travels on land.

While they say there are many pros to life at sea — such as the freedom, the affordability, and the boating community — there are also many cons.

“It’s not just sunsets and cocktails,” says Oliver, who previously worked in the industrial safety sector.

Maintaining a sailboat can be hard work and constantly being at the mercy of sea conditions requires a lot of preparation, forward planning and patience, they say. Anything that goes wrong with the boat, they have to fix themselves.

“You don’t go anywhere fast,” says Oliver. “Dealing with weather can be problematic both at sea and when anchored.”

The couple have had many challenging days at sea, including a bad-weather crossing of the Gulf Stream, an ocean current that flows through the Straits of Florida and up the eastern coastline of the United States.

They live simply onboard. The kitchen contains only a small oven and all digital comms are via a limited satellite internet link. However, th

RSS
First859860861862864866867868Last