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Trapped Chilean miners forge refuge
Mario Gómez is all too familiar with the hardships of prolonged confinement. While still in his 30s, his family said, he survived as a stowaway on a ship for 11 days, living below deck on little more than bits of chocolate and drops of water collected in a shoe — an ordeal so trying it brought him closer to God.
Almodóvar's “Broken Embraces”
Various predicaments unfold from within the story. Themes like passion, jealousy, and other compunctions awake a feeling of faultiness and sarcasm that question the moral scruples, adulteration and falsehood of these well developed and glamorous characters.
$35 computer taps India's low-income market
$35 computer aims to bring cheap technology to India's schools and universities. The $35 computer also targets a vast, untapped market of 1.2 billion people.
Gene-test dervices mislead public
A lab technician tests DNA samples at Pathway Genomics Corp. The company is preparing to sell gene-testing kits to consumers.
Argentina legalizes gay marriage in historic vote
Argentina has legalized same-sex marriage nationwide, becoming the first country in Latin America to give gays and lesbians all the legal rights that marriage brings to heterosexual couples.
'Zoot Suit' still relevant after 30 years
Luis Valdez's play, which premiered in Los Angeles in 1978, has finally reached Mexico, where it has struck a chord in light of Arizona's recent law against illegal immigrants.
Peru judge validates Van der Sloot confession
A Peruvian judge denied a defense motion to void the confession of Joran van der Sloot in the murder of a 21-year-old Lima student because the attorney representing him at the time was state-appointed.
Chavez targets alcohol, smoking in Venezuela
President Hugo Chavez says he wants Venezuelans to stop drinking so much alcohol, and he has ordered the military to crack down on businesses selling beer on the streets or after legal hours.
Brazilian beauty goes beyond blond
RESTINGA SÊCA, Brazil — Before setting out in a pink S.U.V. to comb the schoolyards and shopping malls of southern Brazil, Alisson Chornak studies books, maps and Web sites to understand how the towns were colonized and how European their residents might look today.
Teen Boys’ Fear of Impregnating Girls Drops
Teenage boys are becoming less worried about getting a girl pregnant, with a quarter saying they would be pleased if it happened.
Jamaica seeks $1 billion to rid drug gangs
Jamaica is seeking $1 billion in loans and grants to rid the country of “cancerous” drug gangs that have taken over poor neighborhoods on the Caribbean island and hurt economic growth, Finance Minister Audley Shaw said.
Cuba trains Venezuela in military, communications
It's no longer just doctors, nurses and teachers. Cuba now sends Venezuela troops to train its military, and computer experts to work on its passport and identification-card systems.
Melanoma drug unleashes immune system to treat cancer
For more than three decades, scientists have dreamed of unleashing one of nature’s most powerful inventions, the human immune system, to treat cancer.
For Peru and American inmate, much is changed
When Lori Berenson was jailed in Peru on terrorism charges over 14 years ago, she was a fiery young leftist from New York enmeshed in a shadowy Marxist rebel group, stunning a war-weary nation with her clenched fists and defiant statements in support of revolution.
Calderón state dinner attracts crashers
WASHINGTON — Some of them were still clutching their embossed invitations, proof that they belonged. They had already been asked their names once, twice, three times to make sure they were actually on the list.
Gay killings increase in Mexico
Killings of gays and lesbians have risen in Mexico despite a government tolerance campaign and a law legalizing same-sex marriage in the capital, according to a report released by a coalition of civic groups.
Cuban romance haunts US ambassador nominee
The nominated ambassador to El Salvador has sparked controversy because of her ex-boyfriend's ties to Cuban diplomats.
A priest’s legacy divides Mexico
The Vatican’s decision to take control of the Legionaries of Christ, a powerful religious order and to label Father Maciel “devoid of scruples and of genuine religious sentiment” because of his long history of sexual abuse is causing particular soul-searching in Mexico.
Infant deaths decline in US
Infant mortality, a measure used to evaluate national health systems, declined 3 percent in a U.S. study, indicating the country may be catching up with some of its industrialized peers.
Alarm about chemicals and cancer
The President’s Cancer Panel is the Mount Everest of the medical mainstream, so it is astonishing to learn that it is poised to join ranks with the organic food movement and declare: chemicals threaten our bodies.
‘Incredible’ world cup delays harm reputation
Brazil’s 2014 World Cup organizing comitteess conducting an audit to examine the progress being made by the 12 host cities that could result in venues for the soccer tournament being dropped or changed.
Brain games make you poorer not smarter
Playing memory, reasoning or other brain games won’t make you smarter or mentally stronger, researchers said.
Salt limits for food should be set
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration should limit the amount of salt in restaurant and packaged foods to reduce the risk of heart disease, a report ordered by Congress said.
US sees Carribbean as soft drug trade target
BRIDGETOWN, BARBADOS -- Defense Secretary Robert Gates says he is concerned that drug trafficking routes will migrate to the Caribbean, which could become an easier target than Mexico or Central America.
Mx rejects church sex education criticism
MEXICO CITY -- Mexican educators and officials defended the country's public school sex education Friday from criticism by a Roman Catholic bishop who said such teachings make celibacy vows more difficult for priests to keep.
Most Mexico drug war dead are criminals
President Felipe Calderon insisted Friday that few innocent civilians have fallen victim to Mexico's bloody drug war, saying nearly all those killed are people tied to cartels wrestling for power.
Alzheimer’s cut eating veggies, fish, poultry
More than 2,000 Manhattan residents age 65 and older have given researchers one more reason to tell us to eat more greens.
Colombia candidate discloses Parkinson's diagnosis
A Colombian presidential candidate and popular former mayor of Bogota revealed that he has been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease.
Death toll over 200 in Rio landslides
The death toll from floods and landslides around the Rio de Janeiro area this week reached 205 and was expected to rise as searchers continued looking for bodies, authorities said.
Human currency in Mexico’s drug trade
IN Mexico, there is a strange practice known as the “art of renting.” If you’re arrested for drunken driving, for example, you can pay someone to spend two nights in jail in your place.
Cuba readies for US tourists: golf courses, luxury hotels
President Obama said that he’s seeking a “new era” in relations with Cuba even as he denounced “deeply disturbing” human rights violations by its government.
Battle in Mexico amid blockades
A shootout in the northern city of Monterrey killed two suspected drug cartel gunmen and wounded a soldier.
Cancer costs doubled
The rising cost of cancer research and care, which helped reduce death rates by 16 percent over 40 years, is straining the U.S. health system and needs to be restrained, commentators said in a special edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
MitraClip alternative to open-heart surgery
March 14 (Bloomberg) -- Abbott Laboratories´ MitraClip cardiac clamp safely repaired leaking heart valves in a study, potentially providing a less invasive alternative to open-heart surgery.
Gay couples celebrate historic weddings
MEXICO CITY -- Two glowing brides in matching white gowns and four other same-sex couples made history in Mexico City on Thursday as they wed under Latin America's first law that explicitly approves gay marriage.
Red Cross latest victim of Mexican drug war
Red Cross clinics in some parts of Mexico are refusing to treat people wounded by gunshots after finding themselves caught in the drug war, with cartel hit men intercepting ambulances to seize patients and even killing a Red Cross worker.
For many in Haiti, nowhere to call home
A lack of available land in Haiti hampers efforts to relocate people from flood-prone camps.
SeaWorld resumes shows with killer whales
Shows featuring killer whales reopened at SeaWorld marine parks Saturday, days after the tragic death of whale trainer Dawn Brancheau in Orlando, Fla. Are these shows a good idea? That's a debate that's flared this week after the tragedy.
Marijuana use linked to psychosis
Young adults who used marijuana as teens were more likely than those who didn’t to develop schizophrenia and psychotic symptoms including hallucinations and delusions, an Australian study found.
Corona main sponsor of men’s tennis
Mexican beer brand Corona Extra agreed to be a global sponsor of the men’s tennis tour through 2015.
Gene marker take guesswork from cancer
Feb. 18-- Blood tests derived from the DNA of cancer patients’ tumors will offer doctors a new way to determine whether the patients’ treatment has eliminated the disease, a study said.
Marital affairs: what after spouses cheat
Why Americans are getting more conservative about affairs, but seem willing to accept them in their own marriages.
Venezuela: Rise and shine, get manicure
Beauty is highly prized in Venezuela, home of numerous Miss Universe winners, and women are willing to rise before dawn to get a manicure.
Paramilitaries successors still terrorizing Colombia
A reemergence of the paramilitaries, and their successors, are terrorizing Colombia anew.
Gay marriage puts Mexico at center of debate
MEXICO CITY — Angela Alfarache and Ivonne Cervantes met at a party 16 years ago and have been a couple ever since, filling their lives with books and writing and friends. After their daughter, Constanza, was born six years ago, they became a family.
The web way to learn a language
The young woman seated next to us at the sushi bar exuded a vaguely exotic air; her looks and style, we thought, made it likely that she was not American born.
Interpol leads fake drug seizures
Police seized more than 20 million packs of counterfeit medicines, arrested at least 33 people and closed more than 100 illegal pharmacies in a series of raids in eight Southeast Asian nations coordinated by Interpol.
Fighting starvation, Haitians share portions
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Maxi Extralien, a twig-thin 10-year-old in a SpongeBob pajama top, ate only a single bean from the heavy plate of food he received recently from a Haitian civic group. He had to make it last.
Quake reignites fast adoptions debate
Haiti and the US have cut red tape in order to facilitate adoption of the hundreds of children who are believed to be orphaned by the Jan. 12 earthquake, but some argue that rushing the process could jeopardize family reunification.
El Niño packs a punch beyond California
A periodic climate phenomenon, El Niño has prompted storms to smack southern California this week rather than the Pacific Northwest. But Indonesia and parts of Australia are also affected, except they're too dry.
Brazil beer consumption rose 5% in 2009
Brazilian beer consumption rose more than 5 percent last year to 10.7 billion liters, even with the economic slowdown, O Estado de S. Paulo reported, without saying where it got the information.
Shakira has domination in mind
The driven Colombian singer, who names Alexander the Great among her heroes, has the album sales and tour grosses to prove that her global appeal makes her a force to be reckoned with.
Suppressing anger doubles heart attack
Nov. 24 -- Men who suppress their anger about unfair treatment at work are two to five times more likely to suffer a heart attack or die from heart disease than those who quickly vent their frustration, a Swedish study shows.
Diabetics in US double
Nov. 27 -- The number of Americans with diabetes may almost double in 25 years, and the annual cost of treating them may triple to $336 billion, according to a study published today in the journal Diabetes Care.
Argentine gay couple licensed to marry
Two men who were granted a marriage license in Buenos Aires are planning what may be the first legal same-sex wedding in Latam.
Money trickles north
MIAHUATLÁN, Mexico — During the best of the times, Miguel Salcedo’s son, an illegal immigrant in San Diego, would be sending home hundreds of dollars a month to support his struggling family in Mexico. But at times like these, with the American economy out of whack and his son out of work, Mr. Salcedo finds himself doing what he never imagined he would have to do: wiring pesos north.
Grim glossary of the narco-world
Average words aren't sufficient for the over-the-top violence of Mexico's drug war, so new ones have been invented.
Dominican Republic town blames US firm for birth defects
A small Dominican Republic town plagued by birth defects wants to know if a U.S. power company is to blame.
Breast cancer vaccine tests Merck’s strategy
Merck KGaA of Germany is gambling an unproven therapy that spurs the immune system to attack cancer cells will increase its share of a $48 billion oncology market.
Lula gives pensioners raise as GDP grows
Brazil’s government may agree to raise some pension payments in a bid to defeat a more costly proposal, Folha de Sao Paulo reported, without saying how it obtained the information.
Latam leaders seek media rein
Populist leaders in Latin America are increasingly making legal and political moves to silence their critics in the media, the president of the Intere American Press Associoation said.
Swine flu vaccine demand rises
The swine flu vaccine shortage is boosting demand from Americans concerned they won’t get the product in time to hold off the disease, said Thomas Frieden , director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Antipsychotic drugs: kid weight gain
Children and teens who took antipsychotic medicines in a study gained weight and developed increased blood-fat levels, possibly harming their future health, researchers in New York State said.
Infertility help from stem cells
Stem cells were changed to form the precursors of sperm and eggs in a research advance that may lead to better ways of treating the infertility affecting 10 to 15 percent of would-be parents in the U.S.
Gene therapy doubles lung supply
Lungs too damaged for use in transplant operations may be salvageable through a gene-based technique, doubling or tripling the supply of organs, said the Canadian author of a report on the method.
Fidel Castro's sister worked with CIA
Juanita Castro, sister of Cuban rulers Fidel and Raúl Castro, cooperated with the CIA in the 1960s -- a time when the U.S. agency was plotting to assassinate Fidel and overthrow his revolution -- according to an exclusive Univisión-Noticias 23 report on her newly published book.
Mexico City power company shutting no cure
MEXICO CITY — The lights have been going out all over this city. Food rots in tepid refrigerators. Computer screens pop and fizzle out. At a taco stand in Iztapalapa, José Martínez sticks a candle in a Coke bottle and serves hungry customers by its glow.
Michael Moore irks Chavez supporters
Michael Moore, the filmmaker who is a bête noire of conservatives in the United States, now appears to have made some enemies among the leftist supporters of President Chavez.
Obama relieves pain with medical marijuana
Oct. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Madeline Martinez is in constant pain from a disease that is destroying her joints and the discs in her back. Marijuana relieves her discomfort, she said, and the Obama administration has ended her worries that she may someday be jailed for using the drug.
Latam´s worst wage gap for women
Men earn 30 percent more than women in Brazil, according to a new report from the Inter-American Development Bank. That gap is almost zero in Guatemala and Bolivia.
For Argentines, a legendary coach letsdown
BUENOS AIRES — Argentines woke up Thursday feeling as if a great weight had been lifted from their collective shoulders. After a 1-0 victory over Uruguay, Argentina´s soccer team qualified for the World Cup in South Africa next summer, despite growing doubts that Coach Diego Maradona could lead it there.
Living near green lowers anxiety, depression
People living near gardens, parks and other green spaces have lower rates of anxiety, depression and poor physical health than those living in urban areas, Dutch researchers found.
US-Mexico urge assault weapons ban
MEXICO CITY -- The United States should reinstate a Clinton-era ban on assault weapons to prevent such guns from reaching Mexican drug cartels, former officials from both countries said in a report released Tuesday.
Venezuela folk religion rituals
SORTE, Venezuela -- Thousands of Venezuelans congregated for candlelit rituals on a remote mountainside where adherents make an annual pilgrimage to pay homage to an indigenous goddess known as Maria Lionza.
Obama to end military’s ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’
President Obama told the largest U.S. gay-rights group that he’ll work with Congress and the Pentagon to end the policy that forbids openly gay men and women from serving in the military.
Former Marine new face of Vieques battle
ISABELA, Puerto Rico -- The headaches began just after Hermogenes Marrero arrived on Vieques, the small Puerto Rican island where the young U.S. Marine guarded stores of Cold War-era chemical weapons.
Chávez hates golf
Venezuelan Leader Makes 'Bourgeois' Sport Latest Object of His Disaffection
Argentina limits media ownership
Argentina’s senate approved a government-backed bill that puts new limits on television and radio ownership and will probably force Grupo Clarin SA, the country’s biggest media company, to sell off assets.
Guilty plead in plot to bomb Toronto sites
OTTAWA — A man unexpectedly pleaded guilty to leading a plot to to blow up at least three prominent sites, including the Toronto Stock Exchange, in a bid to create chaos to force Canada to withdraw its troops from Afghanistan.
Mexico swine flu cases surge
MEXICO CITY — The man in the hospital bed complained of muscle aches and a fever so high he was sweating into his sheets. Two other patients, also confirmed to be infected with the swine flu virus, shared a special room with him, cut off from the general population.
Cancer, aging discovery brought Nobel to 2 women
Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- It was Christmas Day, 1984, and Carol Greider, a 23-year-old first-year graduate student at the University of California couldn’t stay away from the lab where she and assistant professor Elizabeth Blackburn were trying to untangle a genetic mystery.
Jamaica cashing in on its image
Boltmania has Jamaica trying to protect its brand through trademarking anything from the national colors to its celebrities.
AIDS study pointing to possible cure
Oct. 2 -- Scientists, moving closer to a cure for AIDS, identified a way to find medicines that would help rid patients of the hardest-to-treat pockets of HIV.
NY Philharmonic won't go to Cuba without patrons
Violinists, bassoonists and timpanists in Cuba? Fine. A bevy of rich Americans? Sorry.
Lula vies Obama by courting African partners
Brazilian President Lula da silva as applying his strategy of promoting ties among Southern Hemisphere countries to the quest for Rio de Janeiro to host the 2016 Olympics.
Chile invites Peru to disputed military exercise
The Chilean air force said Tuesday it has invited its Peruvian counterpart to send observers to military maneuvers that Peru has interpreted as threatening and wants canceled.
In Mexico City, a political deal redone
MEXICO CITY — Back-room deals have long been a staple of Mexican politics, but no one has focused more attention on what goes on in the country’s smoke-filled rooms than a political neophyte who goes by Juanito.
Michelle Obama "suntanned"? Berlusconi’s gaffe
Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi called President Obama 'tanned' ... again. And this time he brought the First Lady Michelle Obama into it.
Not enough rain nor food in Guatemala
A record-breaking drought in Guatemala -- coupled with higher food prices and a drop in remittances -- is raising concerns that malnutrition could be spreading in the Central American nation.
Toronto University makes cancer-sensing microchip
Sept. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Researchers at the University of toronto said they have developed a microchip sensitive enough to more easily determine the type and severity of a patient’s cancer, which may lead to quicker and more effective treatment.
Pre-concert nerves caused Juanes outburst
Cuba's official press said Friday that a Colombian rock star's nerves got the better of him before last weekend's historic "peace concert" in Havana, causing an outburst against authorities in which he threatened to cancel the show.
Alzheimer’s rises faster
Sept. 21-- Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias will afflict 35.6 million people in 2010, about 10 percent more than previously estimated because of a higher number of cases in developing countries than doctors realized, researchers said.
Cubans wary of politics behind Juanes concert
Many Cubans see politics behind Sunday's concert by Colombian rocker Juanes, but they expect the event to attract a large crowd.
Pursuing battery so vehicles go extra
A future generation lithium-air battery might be the much sought after power source for electric vehicles with ranges that match gasoline powered cars of today.
Microsoft sues ‘Malvertisers’
Microsoft filed five civil lawsuits in Seattle, Washington against alleged "malvertisers."
Del Potro ends Federer’s US open reign
Juan Martín del Potro ended Roger Federer´s reign of dominance at the U.S. Open, claiming his first Grand Slam tennis title with a five-set win over the five- time defending champion.
Bolivia seeks partners not ‘Bosses’
Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Bolivian President Evo Morales said companies that respect the law and don’t “conspire” against the government are welcome in his country.
Spain's terror judge in court
MADRID -- The Spanish judge famous for indicting Augusto Pinochet and Osama bin Laden appeared in court with the tables turned: This time he was a suspect, accused of overstepping his authority in a huge domestic case involving Spanish civil war atrocities.
Canada: Repeat drunken driver life sentenced
A Quebec man who has been convicted of drunken driving 19 times was sentenced to life in prison.
Lawmakers in Uruguay allow gay couples adoption
Lawmakers voted to extend adoption rights to gay couples in Uruguay, the latest measure to relax laws on homosexuality that has drawn criticism from church leaders in the country, which is predominantly Roman Catholic.
World’s biggest meatball? Try Mexico
MEXICO CITY — If Guinness World Records ever creates a category for the country most obsessed with being in the Guinness book of world records, Mexico will surely be in the running.
Changes to Cuban travel, gift rules official
The federal rules regulating what gifts and how much cash can be sent to Cuba finally became official Thursday, five months after President Barack Obama announced a loosening of restrictions amid great fanfare.
Bus service end cuts rural Canada lifeline
WINNIPEG, Manitoba — Each day, a single Greyhound bus pulls into Ethelbert, Manitoba, population 312, and stops for just five minutes before moving on, a critical lifeline for the village’s fragile economy.
2 Koreas agree on separated families reunion
SEOUL, South Korea -- North and South Korea agreed to hold a new round of reunions for families long separated by the Korean War - the first in nearly two years - in the latest sign of easing tensions on the divided peninsula.
Key to bacterial resistance may be stomach
Aug. 27 (Bloomberg) -- The stomach may be a breeding ground for drug resistance, a study finds.
U.S. and Cuba work together on storms
MEXICO CITY — The first tropical storms of the season have begun raging across the Atlantic, bringing with them all manner of panic and potential destruction — and, behind the scenes, a little boost in United States- Cuba relations..
Mexico decriminalizes small drug possession
MEXICO CITY -- Mexico decriminalized small amounts of marijuana, cocaine and heroin - a move that prosecutors say makes sense even in the midst of the government's grueling battle against drug traffickers.
Another step toward synthetic life
A team led by J. Craig Venter, the scientist who headed a private effort to map the human genome in the 1990s, succeeded in morphing one kind of bacteria into another, edging closer to the creation of artificial life.
First solar-powered mobile phone released
Safaricom, Ltd, Kenya’s biggest mobile-phone company, today began what it describes as the world’s first commercial release of a solar-powered mobile phone, Chief Executive Officer Michael Joseph said.
Chávez loyalists push to close golf courses
President Hugo Chavez´s political movement has found a new target: golf. President Hugo Chávez says some golf courses could be better used for the poor.
Alexis Arguello and the mayoral curse

When Alexis Arguello was found dead July 1, he became the latest in a line of Managua mayors to reach a bad end. His apparent suicide -- if it was that -- is surrounded by mystery.

Cuba in crisis mode as economy worsens
HAVANA -- Cuba clicked into crisis mode Friday, postponing a key Communist Party congress aimed at charting a post-Castro future and announcing that its woeful economy is even worse than expected.
Hurricane outlook in Atlantic cut to 3
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration cut the number of Atlantic hurricanes it expects this year to a range of three to six of the storms.
Tanning beds cause cancer as smoking
July 29 -- Tanning beds are as certain to cause cancer as smoking, according to a new risk assessment.
Lula increases anti-poverty stipend by 9.7%
July 31 --Brazilian President Luiz Ignacio Lula da Silva raised the benefit in the country’s flagship anti- poverty program by 9.7 percent seeking to ease the impact of the economic crisis on the poorest citizens.
Galapagos tortoise could have kids
QUITO, Ecuador -- Ecuadorean officials say there's new hope that famed Galapagos giant tortoise Lonesome George, believed to be the last of his species, could soon be a father.
Ambushed by a Drug War
Mormon Clans in Mexico Find Themselves Targets of the Cartels
Mexico's La Familia cartel offers truce
After killing a dozen Mexican police, Michoacán drug organization goes on TV to proclaim it wants 'peace' and a 'national pact.' The government declines.
Fujimori admits payment
Former President Alberto Fujimori of Peru acknowledged that he had paid his spy chief $15 million in government money to quit as the government collapsed amid a corruption scandal.
Abortion pill infection falls
The number of women who developed an infection following an abortion induced by prescription drugs at U.S. Planned Parenthood centers plummeted after antibiotics were given routinely and other changes were made, a study found.
Madoff should spend rest of life in prison
Bernard Madoff, the investment manager who pleaded guilty to masterminding the largest Ponzi scheme in U.S. history, should be sentenced to a term of 150 years in prison, federal prosecutors recommended.
Jackson ‘Looked Great, Fabulous’ in rehearsal
June 27 (Bloomberg) -- Michael Jackson showed no signs of illness or lethargy during concert rehearsals preceding his death, according to one of the owners of the sound stage where the singer practiced.
Focus on Flights 447 sensor malfunctions
The National Transportation Safety Comission said that it had begun an investigation into two recent incidents involving Airbus A330s, the same kind of plane as the one operated by Air France that crashed over the Atlantic Ocean on June 1.
Search ends for crash victims
Brasil Air Force and Navy called off the search for additional victims and wreckage from Air France flight 447
In a death, a symbol of Iranian protests
TEHRAN — It was hot in the car, so the young woman and her singing instructor got out for a breath of fresh air on a quiet side street not far from the antigovernment protests they had ventured out to attend. A gunshot rang out, and the woman, Neda Agha-Soltan, fell to the ground. “It burned me,” she said before she died.
Bullets don't stop Guatemala green activist
Reporting from Guatemala City -- His stride is an awkward hop, the scars on his abdomen and legs an ugly road map of hurt. Seven bullets tore into Yuri Melini -- that much is known.
Air France crash most costly for insurers
The Air France crash that killed 228 people may be the most costly airline disaster since 2001 as insurers led by Axa SA compensate victims’ families and pay for the loss of the plane.
Brazil to identify bodies from disaster
Brazilian authorities are preparing to identify the first bodies recovered from the debris of an Air France plane that plunged into the Atlantic Ocean last week with 228 people on board.
Acapulco is now home to drug war
MEXICO CITY — Cliff divers, all-night discos, towering hotels on the sand — that is one side of Acapulco. But a four-hour gun battle over the weekend between soldiers and suspected drug traffickers made clear that the popular beach resort has a dark side and that no part of Mexico may be completely immune from the continuing drug war.
Management uneducated on value of wellness
Over 50 percent of wellness executives do not believe an adequate job is being done to educate senior management and employees on the value of wellness programs.
Air France aware A330 sensor problem a year ago
Air France said it first noticed flaws with the Airbus 330 speed sensors involved in last week’s deadly crash more than a year ago.
Mexico considers 'ban' on street children
New law would require officials to move street kids into schools or other programs – or face a $420-per-child fine.
'River' of US guns flows across northern border
In Canada, concerns mount about weapons smuggling – a problem that has long roiled Mexico.
Among the victims, doctors, dancers and royalty
They were dancers and doctors, engineers and executives, and even royalty. Many were parents, and eight were children.The passengers on the ill-fated Air France Flight 447 were from nations throughout Europe as well as from Africa, South America, Asia, the United States and Canada.
Search on for wreckage of Air France jet
The disappearance of an Air France jet en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris left seasoned crash investigators with a mystery to plumb and very little data to work with.
Weary Haiti braces for the rain
As the start of the 2009 hurricane season begins, many Haitians are wondering: Are we ready?
Jews in Mexico thrive and serve
Mexico's 50,000-strong Jewish community has grown over the years along with the country's tolerance -- and they've involved themselves in all aspects of Mexican society.
‘Che’ statue removal demand
(Bloomberg) -- Che Guevara’s likeness shouldn’t stand at an entrance to New York’s Central Park, say 10 Republican U.S. lawmakers who urged Mayor Michael Bloomberg to immediately remove the artwork they say honors the Marxist revolutionary.
NBA speaks Spanish
LATIN AMERICA – Bringing with them remarkable technical skills and athletic ability, many Latin and Hispanic players are beginning to play in the NBA.
Cannes to enjoy Latam flair
BOGOTÁ, Colombia – Latin America will be represented in the competitions at the 62nd Cannes International Film Festival which opens on 13 May by exceptional films from three directors – Colombian Ciro Guerra, Brazil's Heitor Dhalia and Gaspar Noé from Argentina..
Disloyalty costly for Chávez backers
Hugo Chávez's revolution in Venezuela targets more than the president's enemies. Even supporters are punished when their loyalty comes into question.
Mexico isolates swine flu cases
MEXICO CITY — This sprawling capital was on edge Saturday as jittery residents ventured out wearing surgical masks and President Calderón published an order that would give his government emergency powers to address a deadly flu outbreak, including isolating those who have contracted the virus, inspecting the homes of affected people and ordering the cancellation of public events.
Mexico/US swine flu global concern event
The World Health Organization is set to declare the deadly swine flu virus outbreak in Mexico and the U.S. a global concern, potentially prompting travel advisories, said a person familiar with the matter.
Paraguayan leader hit with 2nd paternity claim
After admitting that he fathered a child when he was a Roman Catholic bishop, Paraguay's president was accused of fathering another child.
Michelle Obama hugs Queen-breaks protocol
When first lady Michelle Obama hugged Queen Elizabeth yesterday, it was reminiscent of the classic American masterpiece when Chris Farley, embracing his new stepbrother said, “Brothers don’t shake hands, brothers gotta hug!”
Amid abuse, Brazil abortion debate flares
The waiting room at Pérola Byington Hospital resembles a small day care center many days. Young girls play on the cold tile floors or rock hyperactively in plastic chairs, while their mothers stare pensively at the red digital readout on a wall, signaling their place in line.
Chile,Argentina legislators meet in Antarctica
SANTIAGO, Chile -- Lawmakers from Chile and Argentina are meeting in Antarctica to speak with a common voice against Britain's claim to oil and gas in the southernmost seas.
Warmer Atantic caused Katrina, drought
Warmer Atlantic waters spawned more severe storms in the Caribbean in 2005, including Hurricane Katrina, and had an unexpected impact on the world’s largest tropical rain forest: drought.
It's breasts at Paraguay nuke protest
Activists in Paraguay are showing a little skin for world peace.

About 100 women disrobed Friday in a square in downtown Asuncion to protest nuclear weapons.
Chile to rehabilitate its salmon industry
SANTIAGO, Chile — When a devastating virus swept through Chile's farmed salmon stocks last year, some of the industry's biggest players laid off thousands of workers, packed up operations and moved to unspoiled waters farther south along the Chilean coast. But the virus went with them.
Cost of genome sequence down to $5,000
Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) -- Complete Gonomics, which offers DNA analysis services to drugmakers and other companies, will begin in June to sequence human genomes for $5,000, a far cry from the $2.3 billion the first sequencing cost in 2003.
Official see fraud in Colombia folk hero
BOGOTÁ, Among the elite here, David Murcia Guzmán is often disparaged as the Madoff of Colombia, after Bernard Madoff, the New York financier accused of creating a $50 billion investment fraud. But to some in the lower classes in one of Latin America's most stratified of countries, he is a folk hero, and his government-shaking arrest recently was just another example of the extent to which the rich will go to keep the poor in their place.
Releases first photo of Castro in months
The Argentine government released a photograph of Fidel Castro, the first to be made public in two months. It came as Mr. Castro, the ailing former Cuban leader, broke his silence by publishing his first newspaper columns in more than a month.
Bolivia native peoples poised to win new rights
COTA COTA BAJA, Bolivia -- Highland Indian communities here remain rooted in the past. The towns have dirt streets. Farmers till their fields with hand plows. Pigs, sheep and cattle graze alongside dogs that run loose. The men wear trousers, sandals and fedoras. Women prefer bowler hats, colorful shawls and multilayered skirts known as polleras. They carry infants on their backs, wrapped in the shawls. Most everyone chews green coca leaves to ward off hunger and the cold.
Death penalty in Caribbean
One Caribbean nation, St. Kitts and Nevis, staged its first hanging in a decade . Another wants to begin executing criminals who use weapons, even if they have not killed anyone. And a South American country in the region is seeking the death penalty for murderous pirates.
Canada crank caller to seek therapy
OTTAWA — Marie-Ève Dean's harassment of the Montreal police department was, if nothing else, labor intensive. Over 15 months she flooded the city's 911 emergency line with more than 10,000 crank calls in a dialing marathon that sometimes blocked legitimate callers.
As Mexico's drug war rages, military takes over
Tijuana's anticorruption police chief was fired and replaced with an Army officer Monday, following three days of drug-related violence that left 37 people dead.
Catholic groups fear abortion rights bill
But it's unclear if the Freedom of Choice Act imperils a doctor's right not to perform the procedure.
What to wear at the wrong end of gun
MEXICO CITY — Exclusive clothing boutiques line Avenida Presidente Masarik here. A Burberry coat? A Corneliani suit? A Gucci scarf? Have enough pesos, and they are yours.
Sex rebellion in Chile
SANTIAGO, Chile — It is just after 5 p.m. in what was once one of Latin America's most sexually conservative countries, and the youth of Chile are bumping and grinding to a reggaetón beat. At the Bar Urbano disco, boys and girls ages 14 to 18 are stripping off their shirts, revealing bras, tattoos and nipple rings.
Venezuela, Iran team on university plan
CARACAS, Venezuela -- Venezuela and Iran plan to start a new university program in the South American country with a focus on teaching socialist principles.
Colombia emergency over pyramid schemes
BOGOTA -- Colombia declared a state of emergency to crack down on illegal investment schemes that lured millions of people with promises of improbably high payouts, only to collapse amid rioting.
Mexico's wealthy, living includes guards
MEXICO CITY — When José hops into his Ferrari, presses his Ferragamo loafer to the floor and fills the night air with a deep roar, his bodyguards hustle into a black sport utility vehicle with their weapons at the ready, tailing their fast-moving boss through the streets.
A pastime became a masses passion
Walking into Brazil's new soccer museum is like entering a hall filled with busts of Greek gods. Suspended on glass screens some eight feet tall in the darkened chamber are the outlines of a dozen or so of Brazil's soccer legends in action.
Breakway church sympathetic to Chávez
From their makeshift chapel in a room above a schoolhouse here whose entrance is adorned with a portrait of President Hugo Chávez and revolutionary slogans from his government, the bishops of the Reformed Catholic Church of Venezuela welcomed congregants to Sunday Mass.
Cuban TV shows new images of ailing Fidel
HAVANA -- Cuban television showed the first images of Fidel Castro in more than five months, broadcasting a silent video of the ailing revolutionary chatting in a garden with visiting Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
Former nun helps Mexico 'femicide' victims
Linabel Sarlat runs a support center to help bring economic and spiritual renewal to the women of Anapra, Mexico.
Dollar seekers get creative
Some Venezuelans gamble in neighboring Aruba. Others sell part of the purchasing power of their credit cards to brokers who turn it into dollars. Still others cross into Colombia to sell subsidized goods bought in Venezuela.
Colombia: Rebel memos raise questions
BOGOTA, Colombia -- Documents from a computer seized where Colombian commandos killed a senior rebel leader indicate Ecuador's president is deepening relations with Colombia's main guerrilla group, Colombia's police commander said Sunday.
Mexico legislation removes warrantless search
Mexican lawmakers stripped a controversial provision from their plan to overhaul the country's judiciary that would have given police officers, who are widely mistrusted here, the ability to enter homes without obtaining warrants beforehand.
Brazil alcohol ban hard to swallow
Government tries to limit TV advertising and sales along highways
Zapatero assailed by Church over gay marriage
Feb. 7 (Bloomberg) -- It isn't just People's Party leader Mariano Rajoy who's running against Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero.
Mexican Robin Hood gains notoriety in U.S.
Jesús Malverde has been revered for almost a century in northwestern Mexico. According to folklore, he was a Mexican Robin Hood who took from the rich and gave to the poor until he was killed by the police in 1909.
Marches show disgust with Farc
Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators marched here and in other cities around Colombia on Monday to protest the abductions and killings carried out by the country's largest rebel group. Relatives of people kidnapped by the FARC attended a church service in Bogotá. Some relatives were opposed to the marches.
Rio rocks as samba groups parade
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil -- A two-story high lion led an army of spinning women in gold-and-red hoop skirts Saturday night to open the carnival parade in a Rio stadium, a fierce competition between second-division samba groups seeking a promotion.
Puerto Rico activists push new pet law
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -- Animal advocates in Puerto Rico said they are proposing lawmakers adopt stiffer penalties for abusing or abandoning animals.
Mexico City rolls out women-only buses
Groping and verbal harassment is an exasperating reality for women using public transportation in this sprawling capital, where 22 million passengers cram onto subways and buses each day. Some men treat women so badly that the subway system has long had ladies-only cars during rush hour, with police segregating the sexes on the platforms.
Chile's streets turn mean
Chile's ranking as Latin America's safest country is cold comfort for the people who live there. The recent kidnap and murder of a mother of three, the robberies of three celebrities -- including former World No. 1 tennis player Marcelo Rios -- and an attack on an executive have Chileans on edge. Reports of serious crimes jumped 7.8 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier.
Stolen paintings recovered in Brazil
Police recovered paintings by Picasso and Candido Portinari worth millions of dollars stolen last month from Brazil's leading modern art museum and have two suspects in custody, officials said Tuesday.
Indictments stir plot in cash-filled bag
— A federal grand jury here indicted four Venezuelans and one Uruguayan on Thursday on charges of illegally operating as agents of the Venezuelan government in covering up a scheme to deliver $800,000 in a cash-filled suitcase to the campaign of Argentina's new president.Argentina's president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, has been angered by an American investigation touching her campaign. Argentina wants the United States to extradite Guido Antonini Wilson for questioning.
Uruguay: Gay unions approved
Congress legalized gay civil unions in the first nationwide law of its kind in Latin America. President Tabaré Vázquez is expected to sign it.
Brazil eyes nuclear sub to defend oil
SAO PAULO, Brazil -- This month's discovery of a monster offshore oil reserve justifies Brazil's plan to build a nuclear submarine because it would be used to protect the find, the defense minister said.
Charges likely in Puerto Rico pet deaths
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -- A Puerto Rico prosecutor indicated criminal charges will be filed in the slaughter of dozens of dogs and cats seized last month from housing projects and allegedly thrown from a bridge - an incident that generated worldwide public outrage.
Victims of Colombian conflict sue Chiquita
Victims of Colombia's civil conflict sued the banana importer Chiquita Brands, accusing it of making payments to a paramilitary group responsible for thousands of killings.
Students emerge as force against Chávez
CARACAS, — Finding Yon Goicoechea, a leader of the nascent student movement protesting the expanding power of President Chàvez, is not easy. He changes cellphones every few days. After receiving dozens of death threats, he moves among the apartments of friends here each day in search of a safe place to sleep.
Language, not quite Spanish, with African echoes
SAN BASILIO DE PALENQUE, The residents of this village, founded centuries ago by runaway slaves in the jungle of northern Colombia, eke out their survival from plots of manioc. Pigs wander through dirt roads. The occasional soldier on patrol peeks into houses made of straw, mud and cow dung.
Fujimori returns to face trial
LIMA, PERU - Human rights groups in Peru and abroad are heralding the weekend extradition of former President Alberto Fujimori as a groundbreaking move for Latin America and beyond.
Ex-Minister guilty in assassination
A former justice minister was convicted of masterminding the assassination of Luis Carlos Galán, a cartel-fighting politician and presidential candidate.
Mexico City opens war against street vendors
Trying to resolve one of Mexico City's oldest and most intractable problems, Mayor Marcelo Ebrard sent more than 1,000 police officers in riot gear into the historic center to keep street vendors from setting up stands and blocking sidewalks. The operation to clear the vendors from 87 streets downtown was carried out peacefully, though several hundred angry vendors staged a march to protest.
Mexico's ex-president rebukes critics
MEXICO CITY -- Vicente Fox, the former president of Mexico, wants his fellow citizens to know that he'll never abandon his beloved rancho in central Mexico, which his opponents and the media have attacked as a gaudy display of opulence rarely seen in a country racked by poverty. Currently on a tour of the United States to promote his autobiography "Revolution of Hope," Fox is under fire at home for the wealth he appears to have accumulated during his six years as president. Fox handed over the reins to fellow conservative Felipe Calderon last year.
Little surprise over Madrazo's shortcut
MEXICO CITY, Oct. 9 — Having spent his life as a stalwart in the corrupt political machine that ruled Mexico for decades, Roberto Madrazo has never suffered from a reputation for honesty.
Rights advocate's work divides Dominicans
WHEN Sonia Pierre won an international human rights award last fall, there were two diametrically opposite reactions here: "Way to go!" and "Oh, no!"
Cuba to forgo World Boxing Championships
US woos top Latin American students
US universities are 'open for business,' said US education secretary Margaret Spellings as she announced new student exchange initiatives this week.
Smuggled turtle eggs seized in Mexico
The Mexican police have seized thousands of eggs of endangered turtles from a group of smugglers in the southern state of Oaxaca, where the eggs are a delicacy believed to have aphrodisiac powers.
Mexico City: Aztec ruler's grave discovered
MEXICO CITY, Aug. 4 (AP) — Mexican archaeologists using ground-penetrating radar have detected underground chambers they believe contain the remains of Ahuizotl, who was the emperor of the Aztecs when Columbus landed in the New World. It would be the first tomb of an Aztec ruler ever found.
Pipeline break spews oil onto Vancouver
Environmentalists were assessing damage to land and seawater in suburban Vancouver as a cleanup of oil sprayed from a ruptured pipeline continued.
Ecuador president calls hostage rescue `luck'
Ecuador's president says neighboring Colombia's success in freeing 15 rebel-held hostages is more ``good luck than a good decision.''
Castro warns Cubans of coming hardships
Cuban leader Raúl Castro said workers' salaries may remain stagnant as the nation struggles to boost its food production.
Venezuela takes 2008 Miss Universe crown
NHA TRANG, Vietnam -- Miss Venezuela was crowned Miss Universe 2008 on Monday in a contest marked by the spectacle of Miss USA falling down during the evening gown competition for the second year in a row.
Escapee gives glimpse of captives' harsh lives
Three U.S. defense contractors held by Colombian guerrillas survive on small pleasures amid jungle harshness.
Bush turns on charm for Latin America
President Bush hosted an elaborate gathering with nongovernmental groups to showcase U.S. programs that benefit Latin America.
Free internet for Brazil Amazon tribes
Brazil will offer free satellite Internet connections to indigenous communities in the Amazon as part of its latest effort to crack down on illegal logging in the tropical rain forest.
Transit fiasco wounds Chile's leader
Only a year in office, Michelle Bachelet draws the ire of exasperated commuters in the capital.
Paraguayan government blamed for dengue surge
More than 18,000 Paraguayans have contracted dengue fever, and many people blame the government's lack of planning for the outbreak.






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