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Ukraine war briefing: Drones strike Russia’s Tyumen oil refinery 2,000km away, says Zelenskyy

Volodymyr Zelenskiy has confirmed that Ukrainian drones attacked an oil refinery in Russia’s Tyumen region ⁠in western Siberia, ⁠more than 2,000 km (1,200 miles) from Ukraine. He said Ukrainian company Fire Point had developed new long-range drones capable of ⁠travelling more than 3,000km and they had been “successfully deployed”. In his nightly video address, Zelenskyy thanked the Ukrainian ⁠military for special operations that “have reached Tyumen Region in Russia, including an oil refining facility. More ‌than 2,000km from ‌our state border. This is effective work.” Unverified videos posted online showed smoke and flame rising over what was said to be the burning Tyumen refinery, also known as the Antipinsky refinery. The Tyumen governor, Alexander Moor, claimed emergency services were working at the site of “fallen [drone] debris” – a phrasing often used by Russian officials to play down successful Ukrainian attacks. Ukraine’s forces struck an oil terminal at Kerch in occupied Crimea over Saturday night, according to Ukrainian media and online accounts monitoring the war. Nasa satellite monitoring showed a fire at the Kerch seaport where the terminal is located. In what appeared to be a broader wave of strikes against Russian-held targets in Crimea, an electrical substation at Bilohorsk was reportedly on fire, and there were other attacks at Yevpatoria and the main city of Sevastopol. Russian attacks killed three people in Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk and Poltava regions in eastern Ukraine, local authorities said on Sunday. A woman aged 70 was killed in Nikopol and nine were wounded in other districts of Dnipropetrovsk, said Oleksandr Ganzha, head of the regional military administration. Vitali Dyakivnych, head of the Poltava regional military administration, said a Russian strike on Saturday evening killed two people and wounded 13, including six children. Russian ⁠forces struck the ⁠south-eastern Ukrainian ⁠city of Zaporizhzhia with glide ⁠bombs on Saturday, killing five ⁠people and ‌injuring 10, said Ivan Fedorov, the regional governor. Fedorov said there ‌had been nine strikes in the city. He ⁠said residents could be trapped in the rubble ‌of damaged buildings. Near the Russian border, a bomb attack killed one person on the outskirts of the city of Sumy, local officials said. In the southern Kherson region, the regional governor, Oleksandr Prokudin, said ‌one person had died in a drone attack on a village north of the region’s main city, also called Kherson. Russian bombs struck an apartment building on Saturday in Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, killing at least one person and wounding nine including a six-year-old child, authorities said.

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Colombia’s runoff election expected to trigger shift in decades-long armed conflict

Colombians go to the polls on Sunday in a presidential runoff expected to trigger to a dramatic shift in the country’s decades-long armed conflict, now at its most violent point since the landmark 2016 peace agreement between the government and most of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc). Polls show the frontrunner is the Trump-admiring far-right lawyer and millionaire businessman Abelardo de la Espriella, who has vowed to abandon President Gustavo Petro’s “total peace” plan of negotiating the disarmament of all criminal organisations and instead return to full-scale military confrontation with armed groups. De la Espriella’s opponent in the ballot will be Petro’s chosen successor and the main architect of “total peace”, the leftwing senator Iván Cepeda, who argues for the continuation of the plan, with “necessary changes”. Cepeda led the polls throughout most of the campaign but was defeated in the first round three weeks ago and has since struggled to attract centrist voters. The election, in which more than 41 million Colombians are eligible to vote, is expected to deliver another victory for a far-right candidate advocating an iron-fist approach to crime, after the examples of Keiko Fujimori, who is leading the vote count in Peru, and José Antonio Kast, who won last year’s election in Chile. Amid what many analysts see as a new wave of far-right victories across Latin America, a De la Espriella presidency would leave only Mexico, Brazil, Uruguay and Guatemala under leftwing governments. Sandra Borda Guzmán, an associate professor of political science at Los Andes University in Bogotá, said De la Espriella successfully tapped into two trends that have shaped recent elections around the world: presenting himself as an anti-establishment “outsider” and promising quick solutions to violence. He even promised that, if elected, he would restore state control over territories dominated by criminal groups within 90 days – although he later appeared to backtrack, telling Radio Caracol: “I never said I would solve the security problem in 90 days.” De la Espriella, a lawyer who launched his legal career defending leaders of rightwing paramilitary militias, maintained that his goal during his first three months in office would be to “capture or kill” 10 major narcoterrorist and organised crime leaders. “Between the international trend favouring candidates who present themselves as anti-political figures and Colombia’s domestic security situation, that combination has helped him significantly,” said Guzmán. Although violence remains far below the extraordinarily high levels recorded in the decades before the peace deal with the Farc, the past year has been the most violent since the 2016 agreement. Miguel Bermúdez, a 40-year-old business administrator from the coastal city of Cartagena, said he would vote for De la Espriella largely because he is an “outsider” despite his long history as a lawyer for the rich and powerful. “For a long time, I’ve been looking for something that feels fresh. I’m tired of that same old political narrative,” said Bermúdez. Kátia Outten, a 57-year-old dentist from the island of San Andrés, said she would vote for Cepeda because “he understands the needs of ordinary people”. During his presidency, Cepeda’s backer Petro expanded social programmes and increased the minimum wage. The poverty rate has fallen to its lowest level since records began in 2012. Outten also decided not to vote for De la Espriella because of what she sees as his sexist views, including a radio interview in which he claimed to have won support among female voters because of the size of his penis. “Women make up just over 50% of the population. If we go out and vote with women’s empowerment in mind, we can show that all of that rhetoric has no basis,” she said.

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Iran says it is closing strait of Hormuz over Israeli strikes in Lebanon

Iran has said it is closing the strait of Hormuz after waves of Israeli strikes in Lebanon in a move that threatens to derail the fragile interim peace deal with the US, signed just days ago. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned ships not to approach the strategic waterway, which before the war carried a fifth of global oil and liquid gas supplies, citing what it called Israeli crimes in Lebanon and a US violation of commitments to establish a ceasefire there. It was unclear if the threat had been carried out, or if it would jeopardise talks in Switzerland scheduled for Sunday that were supposed to start the process of turning the current interim agreement between the US and Iran signed this week into a more detailed deal covering Iran’s nuclear programme. Donald Trump promptly declared that “NO TOLLS” would be charged on ships seeking to pass through the strait during or after the ⁠60-day interim ceasefire. In a social media post on Saturday, however, he raised the prospect of the US imposing a toll should negotiations fail. US Central Command denied the strait, which Iran is required to keep open under the interim deal, has been closed. “Iran does not control ‌the strait ‌of Hormuz,” a spokesperson, Navy Capt Tim Hawkins, told Reuters. “Traffic continues to flow, and US forces are monitoring the situation to ensure ‌this remains the case.” JD Vance, the US vice-president, landed in Switzerland on Sunday to take part in the negotiations. Vance and his wife, Usha Vance, arrived at Emmen Air Base outside Lucerne just before 6am local time, his office said. “I can only be there for a day or two,” Vance said on Saturday evening before boarding a plane at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland. “I think we’re going to hopefully make progress on the nuclear issue, make progress on the Lebanon ceasefire issue.” Pakistan, the key mediator, said the talks would go ahead and reports from Tehran suggested that a delegation of top officials had left Iran to participate in the negotiations. The continuing hostilities in Lebanon between Hezbollah, which has close ties to Iran, and Israel have emerged as the main challenge to the new deal to end the war in the Gulf. Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon on Saturday killed at least 16 people, local authorities said, despite reports of a renewed ceasefire aiming to end the continuing clashes. Lebanon’s civil defence agency said its personnel transported “16 dead and 12 wounded” to hospital, adding that they had been working “since the early morning hours” in the Nabatieh district. The interim agreement calls for a cessation of hostilities on all fronts, including Lebanon. It has been fiercely criticised by Israeli ministers, officials and commentators, who argue that it stops Israel countering threats posed by Hezbollah. The Israeli military said it was striking Hezbollah targets in response to overnight projectile launches from the Lebanese militant organisation. Violence flared on Friday after four Israeli soldiers including a senior officer were killed when a tank was hit by Hezbollah, which said the strike had come after Israel broke a previous ceasefire agreement by advancing. The Israeli attacks that followed killed 83 people, local authorities said, across southern Lebanon and the Bekaa valley. The exact status of the new ceasefire reported to have come into effect locally on Friday evening was unclear. In public statements, Hezbollah has said it will abide by a ceasefire if Israel does, but has not said a ceasefire is actually in place. Hassan Fadlallah, a Hezbollah parliamentarian in Lebanon, said his group had the right to respond to Israeli attacks. “There is talk of a ceasefire. For us, what concerns us is that the enemy fully … doesn’t attempt to attack our country and villages or seek to occupy any new position,” he said. The most recent round of war between Hezbollah and Israel began days after the US and Israel launched strikes on Iran on 28 February, with Hezbollah firing rockets and drones at civilian communities in northern Israel, and Israel seizing and occupying large swathes of southern Lebanon to establish a “buffer zone”. The continuing violence and diplomatic back and forth over the planned talks between Iran and the US have fuelled scepticism that a definitive end can be found to a regional war that has killed at least ‌7,000 people, sent energy prices soaring and threatened global economic chaos. The interim US-Iran agreement signed this week called for the US to lift its naval blockade in return for the reopening of the strait of Hormuz, which was closed to most shipping by Tehran shortly after the beginning of the conflict. Neither Israel nor Hezbollah are signatories to the deal, which calls for a halt to military operations in Lebanon and for the country’s sovereignty to be respected. Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, has vowed to keep Israeli forces in southern Lebanon until any threat to Israel is eliminated. Hezbollah has refused to halt its attacks unless Israel commits to withdrawing from Lebanon, which Iran says is also a condition of the deal. Despite the violence in Lebanon, Vance said he was confident the ceasefire agreed in Washington’s 14-point deal with Tehran would hold, and that he had seen no evidence that ⁠the strait was closed. He added that the US negotiators Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff had been in Switzerland “for a few hours, dealing with some of the technical elements ‌of this negotiation”. Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson, Esmail Baghaei, however, signalled that little progress would be made until Iran was convinced the US was fulfilling its commitments under the deal. “This trip is therefore about demanding that the other side fulfil its obligations,” Baghaei said. The interim deal gives negotiators 60 days to come up with a nuclear agreement but that can be extended. Many observers warn that it will be very hard to reach an agreement on such a complex issue within two months. The 2015 nuclear deal, which Trump scrapped during his first term, took more than 18 months to negotiate.

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Al Jazeera cameraman Ahmed Wishah killed in Israeli strike on Gaza

Qatar-based news network Al Jazeera has said one of its journalists was killed by an Israeli strike in Gaza on Saturday, becoming one of the at least 260 Palestinian journalists to have been killed since Israel’s war on Gaza began in October 2023. Ahmed Wishah, a cameraman for the network, was killed in a strike targeting a house in the Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza, the broadcaster said on its website. Al Jazeera said it “strongly condemns the heinous crime”, adding: “This constitutes a new and flagrant violation of all international laws and norms, and reflects a continued systematic policy of targeting journalists and silencing the voice of truth.” Ahmed’s brother Mohammed was killed on 8 April this year by Israeli shelling when he was travelling in his vehicle, Palestinian civil defence authorities said at the time. Following Ahmed’s death, the Israeli military said it had carried out the strike but said Wishah was a “Hamas terrorist”. “The IDF (Israel Defense Forces) confirms it carried out a strike on Ahmed Wishah, who was a Hamas terrorist,” a military spokesperson told AFP. The spokesperson did not immediately provide evidence to support the military’s claim about Wishah, but said “there will be a statement issued with further details”. At least 260 journalists have been killed since Israel’s war on Gaza began in October 2023, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.

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Spanish PM’s wife to stand trial on corruption charges and banned from leaving country

A judge in Spain has ruled that the wife of socialist prime minister Pedro Sánchez must stand trial on corruption charges and has banned her from leaving the country. Begoña Gómez had previously been charged after a two-year investigation with embezzlement, influence peddling, corruption in business dealings and misappropriation of funds. Gómez, 55, denies any wrongdoing in the case, which was triggered by a complaint from the group Manos Limpias (Clean Hands), a self-styled trade union with far-right links. The judge in the case, Juan Carlos Peinado, ordered Gómez to surrender her passport, barred her ‌from leaving ‌Spain and required her to report to court twice a ‌month, according to a court order released on Saturday. She will face trial by jury on an unspecified date. Sánchez had repeatedly dismissed the case against his wife as a baseless and politically motivated smear. The prime minister, an outspoken leftist leader in Europe, has accused his political and media opponents of pursuing his family and has also openly questioned the impartiality of some members of the judiciary. The Socialist party quickly reacted to the judge’s ruling, posting on X: “(Begoña) has been subjected to judicial and political persecution for two years. Today’s development is another step in that process.” The case is one of a series of corruption investigations that have plagued Sánchez, who came to power in 2018 by promising to end the graft that had mired the ruling conservative People’s party (PP). Now, several investigations into Sánchez’s family and former top political allies threaten to topple the government. Sánchez has not been named in any of the ‌cases but his brother, David, is accused of influence peddling while the former transport minister, José Luis Ábalos, is accused of taking kickbacks on public contracts. Both deny the accusations. One of the most potentially damaging cases is against former socialist prime minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero – a titan of the Spanish left – who was placed under investigation last month for alleged influence peddling. Zapatero, who served as prime minister from 2004 to 2011, defended his innocence during hearings this week. Reuters and Agence France-Presse contributed to this report

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‘I’ve finally found God without all the extras’: behind the surge in people converting to Progressive Judaism

For Elizabeth Arif-Fear, there was no single moment when she realised she wanted to be Jewish. “It was just a journey over time,” she says. The 37-year-old interfaith activist was born Christian, then converted to Islam and was Muslim for 14 years, before realising that that faith was also not the right fit. Eventually, she found the answer she had been searching for in Judaism. “I feel I’ve finally found God without all the extras,” she says. “Without Jesus, without Muhammad.” Arif-Fear is part of a “surge” in the number of people converting to Progressive Judaism, a movement that represents about a third of British Jews. Figures shared with the Guardian show adult conversions rose from 78 in 2020 to 183 in 2025. “There has been a lot of antisemitism and anti-Jewish feeling in the last three or four years. So you would have thought this is the last time that people would want to identify with the Jewish community, and yet, we’ve had a surge,” says Rabbi Jonathan Romain, convener of the Reform Beit Din, the rabbinic court for Progressive Judaism, and former rabbi of Maidenhead synagogue. Romain says that, until recently, most converts did so for “romantic reasons”: they had Jewish partners and wanted to unify family life. But he believes the recent rise has been driven by three additional factors: the Covid-19 pandemic, the expansion of religious education in schools and DNA tests. “We’ve found several times people have said to me, ‘Somebody gave me a DNA test as a Christmas present and it turned out I was Jewish,’” he says. “For some people, that’s just a matter of information. But other people, it intrigues them, or maybe it even answers something deep inside them.” For Arif-Fear, what drew her towards Judaism was its progressive elements, and a culture in which questioning and debate were encouraged. “What really inspired me was the diversity and the pluralism in it,” she says. “I learned that you could be atheist and Jewish, and then they had Orthodox, Conservative, Reform, Liberal, and that was really intriguing and inspiring for me.” She adds: “So that inclusivity, that kind of dialogue, that questioning. It was just a really welcoming space. It’s LGBT-friendly, there are female rabbis, all of that. And people that were really proud of their faith but also felt very British at the same time.” Romain says converts are increasingly coming from more diverse backgrounds. “Whereas beforehand it was largely white British, now because Britain is so multicultural, it’s very common to have people, who may have come from Romania or Portugal or Korea,” he says. There are also notable numbers of LGBT people converting as Progressive Jewish communities can be more welcoming than other religious spaces. For Debbie Collings, 65, conversion was about reclaiming something she had been born into. She had been raised Jewish until she was 16, but later left the faith. She found herself moving back towards it after caring for her ill father, who asked if she would be able to find the graves of his great-grandparents. Collings found the gravesites, overgrown with grass, on a rainy day. “I just stood and looked at the graves and I went, ‘Oh my God’,” she says. Her great-grandparents had fled pogroms in Russia, she adds, and they and their children went on to make a huge contribution to Britain. “And now we – our generation – have rejected it.” She left wanting to find out more about her family and Judaism. Like other converts and returnees, she spent a year in classes learning more about the religion and community, before having an interview with Romain and others on the rabbinic court and receiving confirmation that she was Jewish. She describes stepping back into synagogue as a return to her roots. “I go in there and for me it’s like this peace just comes over me,” she says. “And it sort of fills a big gap that I didn’t really realise was missing until I started to explore it again.” And, she adds, “if I die tomorrow, I know I can be buried in a Jewish cemetery”. Amanda, who did not wish to give her last name, grew up in a Christian family and was a devout follower of the gospel before she began to question it. She felt people had failed to answer her growing issues with the New Testament, and the more she got to know people within Judaism, the more she felt she belonged. She had often heard adults who converted to Christianity say, “‘I felt full of the Holy Spirit’,” but she did not feel that when converting to Judaism. “It just felt normal, like it should have been. Like it always was, if that makes sense,” Amanda says. Her daily life hasn’t changed much: she never ate pork or shellfish, she says. The biggest change is “having gone from Sunday to Saturday,” she says. “Now, I forget that the world carries on on the Saturday.” She particularly enjoys preparing for shabbat. “At the end of the day, when you light your candles and you just collapse on the settee, you think, ‘Oh, phew.’” Romain says that sense of community is one of Judaism’s strongest draws. “There’s an enormous sense of camaraderie. In this world that is becoming increasingly polarised and lonely, because the local pubs are closing, high streets have collapsed, you can’t go to a post office anymore, you order everything online and you work from home, there’s that sense of human kindness and human contact,” he says. “That’s something religions in general can offer, but Judaism in particular is very good at.” The numbers of converts remain modest, in part because Judaism is not a proselytising faith. But Romain says that is central to its outlook. “There is a Jewish saying – this time I can quote – which says that if anyone tells you he loves God but he doesn’t love his neighbour, then you know he’s lying,” he says. “It’s all very well keeping kosher, or saying Hail Marys, or genuflecting, and fasting. But it’s no good if you’re then unpleasant to the person standing next to you.”

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Ghost of far-right paramilitaries hovers over Colombia’s presidential runoff vote

Whoever wins Sunday’s presidential runoff vote in Colombia, the country’s next leader will have a personal history intertwined with one of the criminal forces at the heart of a decades-long armed conflict that claimed nearly half a million lives. The lives of Iván Cepeda and Abelardo de la Espriella have, in very different ways, been shaped by their relationship with Colombia’s paramilitaries – private armies originally established by rightwing landowners, drug traffickers, businessmen, mining magnates and politicians to fight leftwing guerrilla groups. De la Espriella, 47, a far-right admirer of Donald Trump and self-styled outsider, launched his legal career defending paramilitary leaders. Cepeda’s father was assassinated by army officers linked to a paramilitary group, and the 63-year-old leftwing senator forged his public career as a human rights activist exposing those groups’ crimes. The winner will take office on 7 August and inherit the country’s worst violence since the landmark 2016 peace agreement between the government and most of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia. The two candidates advocate opposing strategies for dealing with the surge in crime. De la Espriella, who has led the polls since defeating Cepeda in the first round, supports a return to the kind of full-scale military confrontation that has done little to curb violence in the past. Cepeda, who is backed by the current president, argues for a modified continuation of Gustavo Petro’s strategy of “total peace”. Petro, who is barred by the constitution from running for re-election, has proposed negotiations to dismantle all armed groups, including leftwing rebels, paramilitaries and organised crime factions. Violence has surged, however, and security experts say the strategy has broadly failed. Sunday’s vote “reflects the reality of a country shaped by drug trafficking,” said Gustavo Duncan, one of Colombia’s leading scholars of paramilitarism. Paramilitary groups were first formed in the 1960s in response to the emergence of leftwing rebel groups and often operated with the collusion of the Colombian military. By the 1980s, as the cocaine trade grew central to the conflict, the paramilitaries also protected trafficking routes and drug lords such as Pablo Escobar. A major faction later broke with the Medellín cartel leader, helped bring about his downfall and used the resulting power vacuum to expand. “At its peak, these groups had more than 30,000 members. It was an enormous army spread throughout the country,” Duncan said. In the 1990s, the paramilitaries “became notorious for massacres” – choreographed displays of extreme violence designed to terrorise entire communities – said María Teresa Ronderos, the author of major investigations on the private militias. Their fighters would enter towns and rural communities and kill anyone suspected of sympathising with or providing information to the guerrillas, including peasants, Indigenous people and Afro-Colombians. They also carried out what they called social cleansing, targeting people deemed undesirable by paramilitary far-right culture, including LGBTQ+ people, sex workers, homeless people and drug users. Massacres frequently involved extreme forms of torture, including rape followed by murder, dismemberment of victims with chainsaws while they were still alive and decapitations carried out with axes. In 1994, paramilitaries and members of the army murdered the senator Manuel Cepeda as part of a campaign against the communist Patriotic Union party. Iván Cepeda, then a university professor, came across his father’s car riddled with bullet holes. In the early 2000s, the younger Cepeda founded and led a movement representing the death squads’ victims, investigating cases and visiting prisons to collect testimony from former paramilitaries. At the same time, De la Espriella was rising to prominence as a lawyer defending leaders of the country’s main paramilitary organisation, the United Self-Defence Forces of Colombia (AUC by its Spanish acronym), while the group negotiated its demobilisation. The AUC no longer exists, but the Gulf Clan, widely regarded as Colombia’s largest and most powerful illegal armed group, was founded by its former members and inherited much of its territory and many of its trafficking routes. Cepeda filed a criminal complaint against De la Espriella last week, alleging that he had not only represented the AUC in court in the past but had also acted as a “possible recruiter” for the group through a foundation he created. De la Espriella dismissed the accusations as a “smokescreen” and hit back by claiming that Cepeda maintained a “narco-political” alliance with guerrilla groups in order to secure votes. Cepeda is regarded as the main architect of Petro’s “total peace” plan. He has repeatedly denied any links to rebel groups, but the fact that Petro was once a guerrilla has been heavily exploited in De la Espriella’s campaign. After De la Espriella emerged ahead in the first round, Trump announced on social media that he was backing the lawyer, while calling Cepeda a “radical left Marxist”. Eleven Democratic members of the US Congress sent a letter to the Trump administration last week arguing that “rather than campaigning for [De la Espriella], our government should be examining his ties” to the AUC – which the Washington designated a foreign terrorist organisation in 2001 and which “was responsible for numerous massacres, assassinations and forced disappearances, as well as torture, forced displacement, sexual violence, collusion with state/security and political actors, and large-scale drug trafficking to the US and other countries”. They said De la Espriella had allegedly “maintained close relations with multiple leaders” of the AUC. De la Espriella did not respond to requests for comment. He has vehemently denied committing any crime or illegal act in relation to the paramilitaries, insisting that his contact with them was strictly professional in his capacity as a criminal lawyer. For his supporters, his past seems to matter less than his promises of an iron-fist approach to crime, including building private “mega-prisons” in the Amazon and “wiping out” criminals like “cockroaches and rats”. The past year has been the most violent since the 2016 peace agreement, with a surge in armed group attacks, homicides, kidnappings, forced displacement and massacres. The rightwing senator and presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe Turbay was shot during a campaign event last year and later died. Security experts say current indicators are far below the extraordinarily high levels of violence recorded in the decades before the peace deal, but many Colombians feel the country has returned to its “worst moments”. “One reason there is so much criminality in Colombia is that people rob, kill and then a few days later they are back on the streets,” said Lucy Vélez, a 38-year-old graphic designer from the western city of Manizales. “So I do like the idea of being tougher on crime.” A former businesswoman who now works as a driver in Bogotá and asked to be identified only as Marcela does not see De la Espriella’s alleged associations with the paramilitaries as a problem. “The paramilitaries kept the guerrillas in check,” she said. “When there were too many thieves or too much crime, the paramilitaries would carry out what they called ‘social cleansing’ … Unfortunately, they have served a purpose in some ways.” An investigation by the Colombian news outlet La Silla Vacía reported that among the minority shareholders of De la Espriella’s businesses – which include rum, wine, clothing and real estate ventures – are relatives of the convicted paramilitary leader Hugues Rodríguez Fuentes, who was known within the AUC as “Comandante Barbie”. “That does not mean he is personally a criminal [but] De la Espriella comes from the heart of those narco-paramilitary networks,” said Ronderos. “Colombia has spent years trying to dismantle that terrible war, and he talks about ‘disembowelling’ leftists and killing criminals,” she said. “To return to that after everything it cost us is deeply sad.”

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Israeli attack kills famed turtle sanctuary ecologist in Lebanon

The Lebanese marine activist Mona Khalil, who became a beloved figure in the country for a decades-long effort to protect a nesting site for turtles near her home, has died from injuries sustained in an Israeli strike. Khalil, 76, ran a sanctuary called the Orange House Project near the Mediterranean city of Tyre. She hosted volunteers in her house to clean and monitor a mile-long beach and welcomed tourists to stay and learn about conservation. An Israeli airstrike hit her house earlier this month, severely wounding Khalil, who was moved to an intensive-care unit in Beirut before succumbing to her injuries on Friday, according to friends. Her assistant, an Ethiopian woman, suffered burns but was recovering. During the Lebanese civil war of 1975-90, Khalil moved to the Netherlands. She returned to her family’s land in 1999, where she had a chance encounter one evening with a turtle digging a nest in the sand on the beach. Khalil painted the house orange to match the national colour of the Netherlands, which she said had given her refuge during a time of need, and started a protection and ecotourism project for loggerhead and green sea turtles that nest along Lebanon’s southern coast. Foreign tourists had to coordinate their trip with the Lebanese military, as the bed and breakfast sat on land that Israel had repeatedly invaded and occupied. Those who managed to get permission would stay in Khalil’s idyllic home, with its flower-lined courtyard often filled with rescued dogs and cats. It is just a short walk through banana groves to the beach. Regular power cuts and a lack of air-conditioning meant some visitors left unfavourable online reviews, although most were glowing as Khalil provided what other B&Bs could not – a chance to witness and help hatching turtles and to take part in protecting their vulnerable populations. Khalil’s marine conservation efforts were initially resented by some local people, including property developers and fishers who used dynamite fishing, a practice she successfully fought against. Her house was also hit by Israeli bombardment during the 2006 war with Hezbollah. Despite Israel’s continued invasions, Khalil remained in her home. In a 2017 interview, she said she had not lost hope in turtle conservation and would continue indefinitely. “As long as God gives me life,” she said. The Lebanese wildlife conservation group Green Southerners mourned the loss of an environmental campaigner they said had inspired generations of Lebanese to value and protect their ecosystems. “Her work made her one of Lebanon’s most respected voices for marine conservation and biodiversity protection,” the group said in a statement. “Green Southerners strongly condemns the attack that claimed Mona Khalil’s life and injured her assistant. The strike targeted a site that had long been known for environmental conservation, biodiversity protection, and public awareness. Her death stands as a stark reminder of the devastating toll that Israeli attacks continue to exact on civilians, environmental defenders, and the natural heritage they sought to protect.” Live Love Beirut, an environment-focused social enterprise group, said Khalil will be “remembered through an incredible legacy”. “Her life was selfless and impactful,” the group said. “May she rest in peace, and may the work she cared for so deeply continue for generations to come.”