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Seventy-nine police officers freed after being taken hostage

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Police officers taken hostage in Colombia's southern Caquetá province were freed (pic BBC)

BBC reported that Colombian President Gustavo Petro had said that a group of police officers and oilfield workers taken hostage during protests in Colombia’s southern Caquetá province have been freed.

Violence erupted on Thursday after residents blockaded an oil exploration company’s compound. They were demanding its help to build roads in the area.

Columbian leader Gustavo Petro had called for the 79 officers and nine Emerald Energy employees to be released.

A police officer and a civilian have  been killed during the unrest.

Announcing the release of the hostages, who were filmed sitting in a crowded room on the floor, President Petro called on investigators to find those responsible for the two deaths. Interior Minster Alfonso Prada said earlier on Friday that they were killed by gunfire.

Many of the protesters are rural and indigenous people who want Emerald Energy to build new road infrastructure around the San Vicente del Caguan area.



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233 killed, around 900 injured in Odisha triple train crash

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At least 233 people have been killed and about 900 injured after two passenger trains collided in the eastern Indian state of Odisha – the country’s deadliest rail accident in more than a decade.

The Coromandel Express, which runs from Kolkata to Chennai, collided with another passenger train, the Howrah Superfast Express, about 7pm local time, railway officials said on Friday.

The Howrah Superfast Express derailed and crashed into the Coromandel Express, South Eastern Railway authorities said. Media reports had earlier said the crash was between the Coromandel Express and a goods train.

(PTI)

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Mexican police find 45 bags containing human remains

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(picture BBC)

BBC reported that Mexican authorities have found 45 bags containing human remains in a ravine outside the western city of Guadalajara.

Officials were searching for seven young call centre workers, who had been reported missing last week, when they found the bodies. The remains include men and women, and the number of bodies is not yet known. The search is expected to continue for several days because of difficult terrain and poor lighting.

The state prosecutor’s office for the western state of Jalisco said in a statement that, following a tip-off in the search for the seven people, they had begun searching at the Mirador del Bosque ravine where they found the bags that included body parts.

The first bag was found on Tuesday, but because of the difficult terrain and lack of sunlight, the investigation resumed on Wednesday and will continue until all remains are located, the prosecutor’s office said. Firefighters and civil defence were working with police and a helicopter crew to recover the remains.

Officials said they would continue working to determine the number of dead bodies, who they were, and their causes of death. It added that it would continue trying to establish the whereabouts of the seven people reported as missing.

Although it has not yet been established how the bodies ended up in the ravine, crimes of disappearance are relatively common in Mexico.

More than 100,000 people are missing, government figures suggest, with many being victims of organised crime. Perpetrators are rarely punished. Government data shows that many disappearances have occurred since 2007, when then-President Felipe Calderón launched his “war on drugs”.Three quarters of those reported missing were men and one fifth were under the age of 18 at the time of their disappearance. Relatives of the disappeared say that the government is not doing enough to find them, and that officials are indifferent when they report their loved ones as missing.

The United Nations has called it “a human tragedy of enormous proportions”.

Jalisco is the heartland of a violent drug war, and some of the most powerful groups operating there include the Jalisco New Generation cartel (CJNG), and their rival, Nueva Plaza, which split from the CJNG in 2017, sparking violence across Guadalajara, the capital of Jalisco state.

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Woman who accused Biden of sexual assault seeks Russian citizenship

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Tara Reade is seeking Russian citizenship (pic BBC)

An American woman who accused US President Joe Biden of sexually assaulting her has flown to Moscow and is seeking Russian citizenship.

Speaking to a state-run Russian news outlet, Tara Reade, 59, said she felt safe in the country and wanted to stay. Reade alleged that  Biden assaulted her while she was working in his congressional office in 1993.

Biden strongly denied her allegation. “Unequivocally it never, never happened,” he said.

Reade worked as an assistant to Biden when he was a senator for Delaware. She made headlines in 2020 as his presidential campaign was getting under way, when she claimed that he assaulted her in a Capitol Hill corridor when she was 29.

She accused him of forcing her against a wall and putting his hands under her shirt and skirt.

(BBC)

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