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There was second survivor from Mexico massacre, officials say

Written by: admin on 1st September 2010
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A second person survived a massacre in which 72 migrants from Central and South America were killed last week in northern Mexico, Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa and Mexican officials said.

Franklin Lobos and Jorge Galeguillos were driving a Nissan pickup truck into the San Jose copper and gold mine near Copiapo, Chile, when the Earth shook.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is urging countries in the Gulf region to support Iraq’s newly created government as she prepares to head to an international forum on development and the environment.

Wolves should be reintroduced in U.S. national parks to help restore damaged ecosystems, according to a new report.

Manuel Gonzalez was eager to get the rescue operation under way as he descended the shaft to the darkness where 33 miners had been trapped since August 5.

A delegation from the Organization of American States concluded a trip to Honduras on Thursday with little progress made toward a resolution between the country’s de facto government and its ousted president.

Fermin was a mechanic, not a coal miner, but on the morning of February 19, 2006 he had to go down into the Pasta de Conchos mine near here to fix a broken cart that couldn’t haul the coal out.

Alleged cartel boss Edgar Valdez Villarreal — alias “La Barbie” — will be extradited to his native United States from Mexico, a spokesman for the Attorney General’s Office in Mexico City said Saturday.

The United Kingdom has “no doubt” about its sovereignty of the Falkland Islands, a British government minister said Tuesday.

Dozens of people attended a memorial in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, commemorating the one-year anniversary Sunday of a house party massacre that left 15 people dead.

Mexican authorities dispatched engineers to check damaged houses and buildings Monday in Baja California state following a major earthquake Sunday that left two people dead.

Authorities sent in the military to help quell violence that continued Friday in the slums of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, with criminal gangs torching at least two more buses and five cars before dawn, state media reported.

Massive food distribution coordinated by the World Food Programme, international aid agencies and the Haitian government will begin Sunday in the quake-ravaged capital.

A traffic crash in Bolivia has killed eight people, police said Saturday.

A fully functional submarine built for the primary purpose of transporting massive amounts of cocaine has been seized by Ecuadorean authorities with the help of U.S. drug enforcement agents.


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