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Ramón Jesurún had charges of battering a security guard at the Copa America final dropped more than a month after the Colombian soccer federation president and his son were arrested at the match where hundreds of fans forced their way into Hard Rock Stadium.
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COMMENTARY Coddling apologists on the left and get-tough hardliners on the right loudly insist they have the solution to Venezuela's electoral fraud crisis. They don't.
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Souvenirs depicting the late Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar could be banned in Colombia if legislators approve a bill introduced this week in the nation’s congress.
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Sebastián Caqueza says that a new law to ban bullfighting in Colombia in three years will not dampen his passion for the tradition that he has been practicing since has was a small boy. The 33-year-old says he will struggle to make a living as a bullfighter, but vows to do his best to stay in the centuries-old tradition.
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COMMENTARY The loutish example of soccer bosses like Ramón Jesurún helps explain the hooligan behavior of soccer fans like those who stormed Hard Rock Stadium at the Copa America final.
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Miami-Dade police say Colombia’s soccer federation president and his son were among 27 people arrested during the crowd control issues that broke out at the Copa America final. Ramón Jesurún and his son Ramon Jamil Jesurun were detained after the event at Hard Rock Stadium and charged.
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Even as production surges, domestic and foreign shifts in the global drug industry have devastated many poor Colombians whose livelihoods are tied to cocaine.
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Karol Hernández's new children’s picture book celebrates community and love for one's homeland. The West Palm Beach resident was inspired by her childhood in Colombia.
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A pioneering U.S. civil trial judgment against banana giant Chiquita Brands for its actions in Colombia — which helped aid a terrorist group — featured a host of South Florida players. A second trial in West Palm Beach is set to begin next month, and it may not be the last one.
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A South Florida jury found the company liable for killings committed by a paramilitary group that was on the banana producer’s payroll.
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The bill approved by Colombia’s congress calls for the banning of bullfights in a three-year span, and will make the tradition illegal by the start of 2028. The law now needs to be signed by President Gustavo Petro
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Much of the criticism from lawmakers was directed at Colombian President Gustavo Petro, the country’s leftist leader elected in 2022.