Colombia's government said Thursday that the guerrilla group National Liberation Army, known as ELN, was responsible for the weekend kidnapping of the father of Liverpool and Colombian national soccer team striker Luis Díaz. The peace delegation of the government, which is currently in negotiations with ELN, said in a statement it was “officially aware” that the kidnapping had been “perpetrated by a unit that belongs to ELN.” “We demand that the ELN releases immediately Mr. Luis Manuel Díaz and we say as of now that they are entirely responsible to secure his life and integrity,” said Otty Patiño, who leads the peace delegation.
Red Star takes these images from the National Anthropological Archive, and frees them from stillness. She traces in red ink around objects; notates; adds speech balloons; explains; diagrams.
How should we read these fields of red ink? As analysis? As adornment? As utterance? The convergence of all of this in a decisive act of archival intervention?
course, the elderly woman. some ukrainian press have gathered here. the local community are trying to put out the smoke now. the police are still here. they have asked them to stay away from the actual. where the action basically took place. we are going to spend the rest of our day here, reporting from the scene and speaking to the local community to get a sense of how they are feeling in the midst of all this. yalda, thank you. it is good to get that sense of geography of what is happening on the ground where you are. we ll be back with you throughout the day, as you can bring us more details of what has happened in that latest missile attack. thank you. this is all happening as an african peace delegation is making its way to the ukrainian capital to try to broker some sort of peace deal. the african peace delegation includes leaders from south africa, zambia, and egypt.