Panamá confirma irregularidades en el buque con presunta bandera panameña incautado por EE.UU. en el Caribe

Kraig Pakulski 0 66 Article rating: No rating

Por Elizabeth González, Gonzalo Zegarra y Germán Padinger

El ministro de Relaciones Exteriores de Panamá, Javier Martinez-Acha, dijo este lunes que un buque petrolero de bandera panameña interceptado por Estados Unidos y otro buque —sin bandera reportada— que estaba siendo perseguido por fuerzas estadounidenses en el Caribe no habrían cumplido con la legislación del país ni con el derecho internacional en su navegación.

Durante una conferencia de prensa en el Palacio Bolívar en Ciudad de Panamá, el canciller declaró, ante una pregunta de CNN, que los “buques bajo sospecha desconectaron instrumentos de localización, cambiaron de nombre y presentaron inconvenientes con los nombres de la tripulación”. “Estas son llamadas de atención serias”, agregó.

“Todas estas variables nos hacen pensar que nuestro pabellón no está siendo utilizado de manera responsable. Nosotros hemos actuado en consecuencia a las costumbres de derecho marítimo. Seguimos investigando, exigimos respetar nuestras leyes y el derecho y las costumbres marítimas”, expresó Martinez-Acha.

El buque petrolero Centuries, incautado el sábado por la Guardia Costera de EE.UU. en aguas internacionales frente a la costa de Venezuela, “llevaba petróleo sancionado de PDVSA”, según dijo el domingo una portavoz de la Casa Blanca, aunque el barco en sí no aparecía en la lista de embarcaciones sancionadas. También afirmó que llevaba una bandera falsa.

Por su parte, el vicecanciller Carlos Guevara Mann, declaró este lunes que se informó de manera “equivocada que el barco que fue confiscado ayer (sábado) tenía bandera panameña, pero fue un error, el barco tiene bandera guyanesa”. El funcionario agregó que Panamá está al pendiente de la situación “delicada”.

Otro petrolero, el Bella 1, estaba siendo perseguido por Estados Unidos desde el domingo. Este buque sí está sancionado —a diferencia del Centuries—, ha sido vinculado con Irán y figura en una lista de la Organización Marítima Internacional como buque con bandera faltante.

CNN contactó a la Autoridad Marítima de Panamá para obtener más detalles sobre los buques y al momento no ha recibido respuesta.

El jueves, el presidente de EE.UU., Donald Trump, declaró un “bloqueo total y completo” a los buques petroleros sancionados que entran y salen de Venezuela.

La semana pasada, el presidente de Panamá, José Raúl Mulino, dijo que el país observa “con mucho cuidado” la escalada de tensiones entre Washington y Caracas.

“Estados Unidos tiene un reclamo con Venezuela por distintas cosas, entre ellas, desconocer la democracia y patrocinar el narcotráfico bajo el criterio que establece el Gobierno de Estados Unidos, ese es un problema entre ellos”, señaló.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

The post Panamá confirma irregularidades en el buque con presunta bandera panameña incautado por EE.UU. en el Caribe appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Judge presses Trump administration on its plans for Kilmar Abrego Garcia

Kraig Pakulski 0 66 Article rating: No rating
Kilmar Abrego Garcia leaves a check-in at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Baltimore Field Office the day after a federal judge ordered his release from a detention in Pennsylvania

By Devan Cole, Angelica Franganillo Diaz, CNN

(CNN) — An apparently frustrated federal judge pressed the Trump administration Monday to share what it was going to do next in the fast-moving saga over Kilmar Abrego Garcia days after she found he was being unlawfully held in immigration custody.

During an hour-long hearing that at times grew testy, US District Judge Paula Xinis repeatedly pressed an attorney for the government about its shifting plans for Abrego Garcia, an El Salvadoran national whose wrongful deportation to the Central American country in March kicked off a monthslong legal battle that has come to represent the administration’s hardline approach to immigration.

Abrego Garcia was brought back to the US earlier this year to face federal criminal charges and was later held for months at an immigration detention facility in Pennsylvania. He was released on December 11 after Xinis found that the government was unlawfully detaining him in part because there was no order of removal from an immigration judge during that period.

“I’m trying to get to the bottom of whether there is going to be any removal proceedings,” Xinis said at one point. “I’m just asking you what, basically, you’re going to do.”

“I need something to say, ‘OK, they’re not going to just pick Mr. Abrego Garcia up without lawful authority,’” she added later. “He was deported without lawful authority, he was detained without lawful authority.”

The hearing before Xinis, an appointee of former President Barack Obama, was the latest clash between the judge and the Trump administration in Abrego Garcia’s unwieldy case. It underscored the murky legal position he appeared to be in when an immigration judge – just after Xinis ordered Abrego Garcia to be released from detention – issued a non-final order of removal that his attorneys said put him at risk of being taken into custody again.

But Ernesto Molina, a Justice Department attorney, struggled on Monday to tell Xinis what could happen next to the father of three. He explained that the Department of Homeland Security would have the authority to detain Abrego Garcia had she not issued an order preventing that for now, and urged her to undo that temporary ruling.

When Xinis asked Molina specifically whether a final decision had been made to re-arrest Abrego Garcia, he said he didn’t have any information to provide her on that query.

“Well then, this is no harm, no foul,” the judge said, suggesting she would simply extend her order. In the end, she directed the government to submit to her over the next few days evidence of its intent to arrest him or a notice that it wasn’t planning to do so at this time.

The hearing marked the first time Abrego Garcia appeared in the courtroom, some eight months after the judge ordered the administration to work to bring him back to the US from a mega-prison in El Salvador.

He introduced himself to the judge at the start of the hearing, but otherwise sat silently in the courtroom as his legal team urged the judge to issue a more lasting block on the government’s ability to quickly re-arrest him.

“Mr. Abrego Garcia, you almost have a baseball team representing you today – almost,” the judge quipped at one point.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Co

UK man charged with repeatedly drugging and raping his ex-wife for years

Kraig Pakulski 0 51 Article rating: No rating
A police car is seen in Amesbury

By Lauren Said-Moorhouse, CNN

London (CNN) — A British man, along with five others, has been charged with carrying out 56 sexual offences against his now ex-wife over a 13-year period.

Philip Young has been remanded in custody in relation to the string of charges, which include multiple counts of rape and administering a substance with the intent to overpower to allow sexual activity, according to Wiltshire Police.

Young, 49, has also been charged with voyeurism, possession of indecent images of children and possession of extreme images.

Five other men, currently on bail, have also been charged with offences against 48-year-old Joanne Young, who waived her legal right to anonymity.

The alleged offences took place between 2010 and 2023.

The men were named by police as Norman Macksoni, 47, who has been charged with one count of rape and possession of extreme images; Dean Hamilton, also 47, who is facing one count of rape and sexual assault by penetration and two counts of sexual touching; 31-year-old Conner Sanderson Doyle, who has been charged with sexual assault by penetration and sexual touching; Richard Wilkins, 61, who faces one count of rape and sexual touching and Mohammed Hassan, 37, who has been charged with sexual touching.

All six men are due to appear at Swindon Magistrates’ Court in southwest England on Tuesday.

Geoff Smith, detective superintendent for Wiltshire police, described the charges as a “significant update” in a “complex and extensive investigation.”

He added that Joanne Young was being supported by specially trained officers and made the decision to waive her automatic legal right to anonymity “following multiple discussions with officers and support services.”

James Foster, a Crown Prosecution Service specialist prosecutor, added that the CPS had authorized the charges against the six men “following a police investigation into alleged serious sexual offences against Joanne Young over a period of 13 years.”

“Our prosecutors have worked to establish that there is sufficient evidence to charge and that it is in the public interest to pursue criminal proceedings,” he said in a statement.

“We have worked closely with Wiltshire Police as they carried out their investigation.”

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

The post UK man charged with repeatedly drugging and raping his ex-wife for years appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

RSS
First41664167416841694171417341744175Last