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Added on the 21/07/2021 06:23:59 - Copyright : AFP EN
Caloocan City, Sep 17 (EFE/EPA).- Surviving relatives received Friday assistance from a project aimed at providing a final resting place for victims of alleged extra-judicial killings in the Philippines since President Rodrigo Duterte launched a 'war on drugs' and criminality in July 2016. The International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague, Netherlands, has authorized Wednesday an investigation into alleged crimes related to Duterte's war on drugs campaign in the Philippines. (Camera: ROLEX DELA PENA). SHOT LIST: THE REMAINS OF A VICTIM OF ALLEGED EXTRA-JUDICIAL KILLING ARE EXHUMED AT A CEMETERY IN CALOOCAN CITY, METRO MANILA, PHILIPPINES
Paterna (Valencia, Spain) May 28 (EFE).- Works to exhume the remains of some 150 victims of Spanish dictator Francisco Franco restarted inside a mass grave, known as Fosa 111 and located in the cemetery of Paterna, Valencia. FOOTAGE OF THE EXHUMATION WORKS ON THURSDAY.
Filipino President Rodrigo Duterte's spokesperson announced that the leader regretted calling US President Barack Obama a "son of a whore", on the day that both Duterte and Obama arrived in Vientiane, capital of Laos, for the ASEAN summit on Tuesday.
In footage courtesy of RTVM, The Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte called US President Barack Obama a “Putang ina," which means “son of a whore” in Tagalog at a press conference in Manila on Monday, saying that "the Philippines have long ceased to be a colony". Duterte is due to meet his US counterpart at a summit in Laos where he is expected to face questions over 2,000 alleged extra-judicial killings of drug dealers and users in the Philippines since he launched his war on drugs on June 30.
Six years after the mistaken murder of 15 teenagers by cartel hitmen in Juarez, Mexico, the victims' families gather to honor their lives. Nathan Frandino reports.
Dozens of military and police inspect vehicles on an avenue leading to the center of Ecuador's port city of Guayaquil, after the government and drug mafias declared war on each other. The small South American country has been plunged into crisis after years of growing control by transnational cartels who use its ports to ship cocaine to the United States and Europe. IMAGES