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Hunt for Jamaican drug suspect to resume

Written by: admin on 29th May 2010
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Security forces in Jamaica plan to renew a push Monday to arrest an accused drug lord at the center of violence that has now killed 76 people, the country’s police commissioner said.

Authorities in the northern Mexican city of Torreon said Saturday that they found 10 “mutilated” bodies inside the back of a truck, the state-run news agency reported.

The Haitian government has declared the search-and-rescue phase over for the survivors of the massive quake, the United Nations said Friday.

Honduras’ de facto President Roberto Micheletti said he has lifted a controversial emergency decree that had limited some civil liberties.

Anxious family members and exhausted rescue workers reveled in joyful relief after a drill pierced the roof of an underground mine in Chile where 33 men have been trapped since August 5.

Hurricane Jova weakened to a Category 2 hurricane Tuesday as it slowly spun toward the southwestern Mexican coast.

More than 48 hours after two mangled bodies appeared hanging by ropes from a pedestrian bridge in a Mexican border city, authorities had yet to identify the victims.

Aruba’s general prosecutor vowed Monday that investigators will keep working “to get to the bottom” of what happened to a Maryland woman last seen in early August, even after the only person held in connection with the disappearance likely leaves the Caribbean island.

Six jailed Cuban dissidents will be moved to prisons closer to their homes in “the coming hours,” the island’s Roman Catholic Church said Thursday.

The confirmation of five cholera cases in Haiti’s capital is a “very worrying development,” a U.N. spokeswoman told CNN.

The United Nations Security Council has approved a proposal to send an additional 2,000 soldiers and 1,500 police officers to quake-ravaged Haiti, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Tuesday.

Violence in the United States is not related to illegal Mexican immigrants, but violence in Mexico is connected to vast shipments of weapons from the United States, Mexico’s foreign minister told CNN Thursday.

An American’s cartoon showing the eagle in the Mexican flag dead in a pool of blood is drawing criticism.

Not all of the earthquake-traumatized Haitians are receiving the aid they need, a U.S. general said Thursday, partly because displaced residents are moving from place to place.

Bolivian leader Evo Morales says he’s worried that U.S. authorities will plant something on his presidential plane to link him with drug trafficking when he attends Wednesday’s United Nations General Assembly meeting.


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