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Added on the 08/10/2021 14:00:00 - Copyright : EFE Inglés
Families receive the remains of 60 victims of Peru's bloody Shining Path insurgency during the 1980's. Sean Carberry reports.
Chalchuapa, May 20 (EFE).- The Prosecutor's Office and the Institute of Legal Medicine of El Salvador on Thursday recovered part of the remains of 14 people allegedly killed by a former police officer to identify them through genetic tests.The recovery of the remains took place in an urban area of the municipality of Chalchuapa, more than 73 kilometers west of San Salvador, where former police officer Hugo Ernesto Osorio Chávez lived. (Camera: VLADIMIR CHICAS).SHOT LIST: AUTHORITIES REMOVE REMAINS OF VICTIMS ALLEGEDLY KILLED BY FORMER POLICE IN CHALCHUAPA, EL SALVADOR.
Former prime minister Boris Johnson apologises to families of Covid victims, as he began giving evidence at a UK public inquiry into his government's handling of the pandemic. "I am deeply sorry for the pain and the loss and the suffering of those victims and their families," he says at the start of two days in the witness box. Johnson, who has faced a barrage of criticism from his former aides for his indecisiveness and a lack of scientific understanding during the pandemic, is expected to admit that he "unquestionably made mistakes" during two days at the inquiry London. SOUNDBITE
In his nightly address, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky offers his condolences to the families of victims of Russian shelling in Sloviansk, which Ukrainian authorities say killed five and injured 15. "Rescue operations are underway in Sloviansk. (...). Everything is being done to save the wounded", he adds. SOUNDBITE
Devastated families in Thailand gather for the cremation of their loved ones, killed in a nursery massacre that claimed 36 lives -- including those of 24 children. The kingdom has been stunned by the tragedy in northeastern Na Klang province, one of the worst mass killings in its history, with flags at half-mast and King Maha Vajiralongkorn visiting the families of the victims. IMAGES
U.S. President Barack Obama attends an outdoor arrival ceremony in heavy rain, as the first sitting U.S. president to visit Laos. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).