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Colombian paramilitary warlord Salvatore Mancuso completed a 12-year cocaine trafficking sentence in 2020 and has been been fighting extradition to Colombia ever since.
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The Petronio Alvarez Festival has been the biggest source of income for artists, cooks and vendors in the Pacific region. But some critics say they want the festival to return to its roots.
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The midday quakes were both centered about 100 miles southeast of Bogota, with the first one registering a preliminary magnitude of 6.3 and the aftershock registering a preliminary magnitude of 5.7, the U.S. Geological Survey said.
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Colombia's president hopes to parlay a ceasefire with the country's last remaining guerrilla group into "total peace" after six decades of violence. Expats are skeptical.
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The son of Colombian President Gustavo Petro has acknowledged that his father's 2022 election campaign received money of dubious origin, according prosecutors investigating Nicolás Petro for alleged illicit enrichment and money laundering.
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Nicolas Petro, 36, the son of Colombia's leftist president Gustavo Petro, has been charged with money laundering and illicit enrichment. Prosecutors said he took tens of thousands of dollar from drug traffickers to buy luxurious homes and expensive cars.
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Colombian prosecutors have accused a former presidential candidate of receiving at least $2.8 million from Odebrecht, the Brazilian construction giant that has admitted paying bribes across Latin America to secure infrastructure contracts.
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There are a lot of important things happening in Colombia right now. The government of Gustavo Petro – its first-ever leftist president – is in big turmoil, while a small plane crash that made international headlines put its most neglected population in the positive spotlight it deserves.
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Colombia’s government and the country’s largest remaining guerrilla group, the National Liberation Army, have agreed to a six-month cease-fire during talks in Cuba.
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COMMENTARY Thanks to ideological arrogance, Colombian President Gustavo Petro risks fumbling the reforms he was elected to carry out, at home and abroad.
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Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó says he fled to Colombia because he faced arrest by the Maduro dictatorship — and then to Miami because he faced deportation.
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Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó says he has crossed the border into Colombia on foot to seek a meeting with international delegations gathering there for a conference focused on his country’s political crisis.