Breaking News
US revokes Colombian president’s visa after he urges troops to disobey Trump’s orders
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The US has said it will cancel the visa of the President of Colombia after he urged US troops to disobey Donald Trump’s orders.
Speaking at a pro-Palestinian demonstration outside the UN in New York on Friday, Gustavo Petro called for a global armed force with the priority of freeing Palestinians.
Mr Petro, who appeared at the rally alongside Roger Waters of Pink Floyd, said in Spanish that the force “has to be bigger than that of the United States.
“I ask all the soldiers of the army of the United States not to point their guns at people. Disobey the orders of Trump. Obey the orders of humanity.”
The US state department said in a post on X that it will “revoke Petro’s visa due to his reckless and incendiary actions”.
Mr Petro, a prominent critic of Israel’s war in Gaza, which the US has backed, used his speech at the UN General Assembly on Tuesday to accuse Mr Trump of being “complicit in genocide” there and demanding “criminal proceedings” over US missile attacks on suspected drug-running boats in the Caribbean.
It comes as strikes on drug traffickers inside Venezuela could start within weeks, according to NBC, Sky’s US partner.
Quoting US officials familiar with the planning, NBC said Mr Trump has not approved anything yet, but is contemplating drone strikes on trafficking groups’ members, leadership, and laboratories because his administration feels Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro is not doing enough to stop the flow of illegal drugs out of his country.
In recent weeks, the US military has attacked at least three boats from Venezuela allegedly carrying narco-traffickers and drugs that could threaten Americans, President Donald Trump said on Truth Social, without showing evidence that drugs were on all the vessels.
At least eight US ships with more than 4,000 personnel have been sent to the Caribbean, along with F-35 fighter jets.
Washington is offering a $50m (£37m) reward for the arrest of Mr Maduro, whom it accuses of working with cartels sending cocaine, fentanyl and gang members to the US.
Venezuela isn’t a significant cocaine producer, but is thought to be a major departure point for flights carrying the drug elsewhere, while most of the illegal fentanyl transported to the US comes from Mexico.
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Colombia is Washington’s main ally in the fight against drug trafficking, but relations between them have soured this year.
Soon after Mr Trump returned to the White House in January, President Petro refused to allow military flights carrying deportees as part of his US counterpart’s immigration crackdown to land in Colombia.
He agreed to accept the migrants after both countries threatened tariffs on each other and after the US cancelled visa appointments for Colombians.
Earlier this month, the US named Colombia on a list of countries that it said had failed to uphold their counter-narcotics agreements, blaming Colombia’s political leadership.
Breaking News
Spanish city honours Gaelic chieftain Red Hugh O’Donnell
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Thousands of people have lined the streets of a Spanish city to pay tribute to the Irish war hero Red Hugh O’Donnell.
The Gaelic chieftain from Donegal died in Spain in 1602 and last night the city of Valladolid came to a standstill as Red Hugh’s royal funeral was re-enacted.
A horse-drawn carriage, flanked by torch bearers, carried Red Hugh’s coffin through the winding streets of the medieval city.
The colourful cortege featured armed soldiers in 16th century costume, Franciscan friars, soldiers on horseback, Irish wolfhounds, King Philip and Queen Margaret.
Former members of the Irish army also marched in the funeral, as well as Spanish and Irish pipers.
Known as Aodh Rua to his own people in Irish-speaking Tír Chonaill, O’Donnell was a clan chieftain who fought with Hugh O’Neill and the Irish confederacy during the Nine Years’ War.
Following the defeat of the Irish by the English at the Battle of Kinsale, Red Hugh departed for Spain to seek military assistance from King Philip III.
However, on his journey to Valladolid, which was then the capital of Spain, Red Hugh took ill and died. The Spanish King granted him a royal funeral and O’Donnell was laid to rest in Valladolid.
There were moving scenes last night when the funeral cortege paused at the site of the Chapel of Marvels, the Gaelic chieftain’s final resting place.
The Mayor of Valladolid addressed the large crowds and wreaths were laid beneath a commemorative plaque, before a lone Irish piper sent Amhrán na bhFiann echoing through the Spanish city’s streets.
The funeral re-enactment is the centre-piece of a three-day celebration of longstanding Spanish-Irish relations. Organised by the Irish-Hispano Association in Valladolid the festival also features history talks, film screenings, music sessions and other cultural events.
The Irish Government is represented by Minister of State Kevin ‘Boxer’ Moran. The newly appointed Irish Ambassador to Spain, Brian Glynn, is also attending, as is former Lord Mayor of Dublin and current TD, Paul McAuliffe.
This is the fourth year that Valladolid has witnessed the re-enactment of O’Donnell’s funeral.
Organiser, Carlos Burgos, said that the funeral has become a source of great pride for the people of the Spanish city.
“There is something very powerful about the connection the Spanish feel with the Irish. It is a very special relationship that goes back a long way. It carries a sense of brotherhood,” he said.
“Red Hugh O’Donnell is a true hero, a man of great bravery, and it is an honour for us that our city is associated with him,” he added.
The 7th Duke of Tetuan, Hugo O’Donnell is a respected historian in Spain and a direct descendant of Red Hugh’s cousin. He said he was very proud that O’Donnell was receiving such recognition on Spanish soil.
“Hugh O’Donnell was an international protagonist of the history of Europe. He was a military man of his time. He was very sincere and very loyal to his feelings and in that way he is a teacher for many people, especially for me as I share the same blood,” he said.
The funeral re-enactment brings together various Irish and Red Hugh O’Donnell associations from Ireland, Spain, the United States, Argentina and Portugal.
The Irish-Hispano Association was established 17 years ago. The association has erected a number of plaques in honour of the Tír Chonaill chieftain, and was the driving force behind an archaeological dig for the remains of Red Hugh on the site of the Chapel of the Marvels in 2020.
The city of Valladolid and the town of Lifford, O’Donnell’s birthplace, have been twinned, highlighting the historical link between the two places.
The voluntary committee also hopes to have a commemorative plaque installed at Dublin Castle, where a 15-year-old Red Hugh was incarcerated and remained there for four years before his dramatic escape.
The events in Valladolid are supported by the local university and the city council. This afternoon the Irish delegation will visit the nearby town of Simancas.
While on route to Valladolid, Red Hugh died in the castle of Simancas.
The visitors will view important historical documents held in the castle’s extensive archive, including Red Hugh’s last will and testament which he dictated in Irish on his deathbed.
The precious collection also contains a number of letters sent by Hugh O’Neill and O’Donnell, as well as a document which details the questioning by Spanish authorities of James Blake, a Galway merchant who was visiting Spain at the time of O’Donnell’s death.
Blake was suspected of being an English spy and of poisoning O’Donnell.
Former Irish soldier and chairman of the Red Hugh O’Donnell Association in Ireland, Eddie Crawford, led last night’s funeral procession carrying the Irish tri-colour.
He said the level of respect and admiration displayed by the Spanish towards Red Hugh O’Donnell has surprised many of the Irish visitors to Valladolid this weekend.
“I was born and reared in Lifford, Red Hugh was born in Lifford. I’m here representing my former battalion, the 28th camp in Finner Camp in Donegal,” he said.
“I feel so proud wearing my uniform and carrying my country’s colours through this beautiful city of Valladolid to honour a true Irish hero,” he added.
Breaking News
Search for fisherman missing off Sligo coast to resume
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A multi-agency search for a fisherman missing off the coast of Mullaghmore, Co Sligo is to resume this morning.
A member of the public alerted the Malin Head coordination centre on Thursday evening after they found an abandoned boat that had run aground, about 4km south of Mullaghmore Head.
It is believed that the fisherman fell overboard from the vessel as the engine was still running when the vessel was discovered.
The search coordinated by the Malin Head Coast Guard is concentrating on the area off Mullaghmore and out into Donegal Bay.
Gardaí are also assisting the Coast Guard in the search operation.
The extensive search is being conducted by Sligo based Coast Guard helicopter R118, Dublin-based Coast Guard helicopter R116, Killybegs Coast Guard Unit, and RNLI lifeboats from Bundoran, Árainn Mhór, An Baile Glas and Sligo along with a merchant vessel and several local vessels.
Breaking News
Police bill for Epping protests could reach £1.7m
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The cost of policing protests in Epping could reach £1.7m by October, a crime panel meeting was told.
Thousands of people have demonstrated in the town after an asylum seeker, Hadush Kebatu, was charged with sexual offences in July.
Since then, Essex Police have arrested 32 people in connection with the disorder outside The Bell Hotel, where Kebatu, who was later jailed, was staying.
Roger Hirst, the police, fire and crime commissioner for Essex, said the force’s response had required a “substantial level” of resources.
Speaking at an Essex crime panel meeting, Hirst said: “I think some [officers] even came from Wales to support [us].”
Essex Police would only receive help from the government if costs topped £4m, the Conservative explained, meaning the force had to swallow the bill it faced.
“It’s a classic public service conundrum,” he said.
“You have the requirement right now, you have to do it. That’s the job.”
The latest protest outside The Bell Hotel took place on Thursday evening.
While most action has been peaceful, Essex Police said eight officers were hurt on 17 July, when fireworks were let off and eggs thrown.
Epping Forest District Council has been trying to block The Bell from housing asylum seekers at the High Court.
It was awarded a temporary injunction in August, but this was later overturned at the Court of Appeal.
The full legal challenge will return to the High Court on 15 October.
Tensions first flared in July when Kebatu, an asylum seeker from Ethiopia, was arrested on suspicion of sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl and a woman.
He was found guilty of those offences at Chelmsford Magistrates’ Court and jailed for one year on Tuesday.
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