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Charges dropped against teen pilot detained in Antarctica

Charges dropped against teen pilot detained in Antarctica

BBC News2 days ago
Charges against an American influencer and teen pilot who has been stranded on a remote island in the Antarctic since June have been dropped.Ethan Guo, 19, is alleged to have illegally landed his plane in Chilean territory after embarking on a solo trip to all seven continents to raise money for cancer research, according to local authorities. They accused him of providing false flight plan information to officials who detained him and opened an investigation. A judge has ordered him to leave the area, pay a $30,000 (£22,332) donation to a children's cancer foundation and is banned from re-entering Chilean territory for three years.
Mr Guo made headlines last year when he began an attempt to become the youngest person to fly solo to all seven continents and collect donations for research into childhood cancer. Having already visited six of seven continents, in June he flew his small Cessna 182Q aircraft from the city of Punta Arenas, near the southernmost point of Chile, to King George island off the Atlantic coast, which is claimed by Chile and named after the UK's King George III. He was taken into custody after landing on the island, which is home to a number of international research stations and their staff.Authorities said he submitted a plan to fly over Punta Arenas, but not beyond that, according to CBS News, the BBC's US partner.He was charged on 29 June with allegedly handing false information to ground control and landing without authorisation, but these were dropped by a judge on Monday. "I remain in Antarctica awaiting approval for my departure flight," Mr Guo told the Associated Press (AP) news agency following the judge's ruling on Monday. "I sincerely hope they give it to me soon so that I and my plane can continue with my original mission."Mr Guo has been staying at a military base on the island for the last six weeks, AP reported. He was told he could travel to other parts of Chile but because of frigid temperatures was unable to leave the island, it added.Mr Guo is hoping to become the first pilot to complete solo flights across all seven continents in the Cessna aircraft, and has already spent 140 days in the air on his travels. He decided to raise money for cancer research after his cousin was diagnosed with cancer.He is aiming to raise $1m for cancer research at St Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.
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Peru enacts amnesty for military and police accused of human rights abuses
Peru enacts amnesty for military and police accused of human rights abuses

The Guardian

time3 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Peru enacts amnesty for military and police accused of human rights abuses

Human rights groups and families of victims of Peru's two-decade internal armed conflict have expressed outrage after the country's government granted a blanket amnesty for all military and police officers accused of human rights crimes from 1980 to 2000. The Peruvian president, Dina Boluarte, signed the amnesty – which was approved by the country's congress last month – into law on Wednesday, to the applause of military top brass and ministers at Lima's government palace. The legislation prevents the criminal prosecution and conviction of former soldiers, police officers and self-defence committee fighters accused of serious human rights violations in the country's fight against leftist insurgents of the Mao-inspired Shining Path and other groups. Gisela Ortiz, the sister of one of the victims of a 1992 death squad massacre, said on X: 'A government that violates human rights enacts an amnesty law for those who support it: police and military personnel who murdered, disappeared and raped between 1980 and 2000.' Juanita Goebertus, Americas director at Human Rights Watch, described the law as a betrayal of Peruvian victims. 'It undermines decades of efforts to ensure accountability for atrocities and weakens the country's rule of law even further,' she said. The brutal and protracted conflict was marked by atrocities committed by both sides. Between 1980 and 2000, nearly 70,000 people were killed and 20,000 disappeared, according to the findings of Peru's Truth and Reconciliation Commission; Shining Path fighters were responsible for about 54% of the deaths and the military for the rest. Boluarte said: 'With the enactment of this amnesty law, the Peruvian government and congress recognise the sacrifice of members of the armed forces, the police and self-defence groups in the fight against terrorism.' She added: 'We're giving them back the dignity that should never have been questioned.' There has been widespread concern about backsliding on human rights under Boluarte's government. In 2023, the former president Alberto Fujimori was released from prison, where he was serving a 25-year term for human rights crimes, despite a request from the regional inter-American court of human rights to delay his release. Last year, Peru's congress approved a bill establishing a statute of limitations for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed before 2003. The UN Human Rights Commission expressed alarm about the amnesty bill in July, warning Peru that it had a 'duty to investigate, prosecute, and punish serious human rights violations' and that 'international standards prohibit amnesties or pardons for such serious crimes'. Peruvian courts have secured more than 150 convictions, and an estimated 600 investigations are under way, according to the National Human Rights Coordinator, a coalition of Peruvian human rights organisations. 'This amnesty law is a law that consecrates impunity,' said Jo-Marie Burt, a Peru expert and senior fellow at the Washington Office on Latin America. 'Peru is now a pariah state from the point of view of international law. It puts Peru on the same level as Venezuela and Nicaragua for their outright disregard for the rulings of the inter-American court and of international law more generally.' She expressed disappointment at what she called a 'cynical move', especially as Peru 'for many years did make meaningful efforts to bring perpetrators of serious human rights violations to justice'.

Argentina rocked as contaminated medical fentanyl kills up to 96 patients
Argentina rocked as contaminated medical fentanyl kills up to 96 patients

The Guardian

time5 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Argentina rocked as contaminated medical fentanyl kills up to 96 patients

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Sobbing couple blame ChatGPT for missing their flight to Puerto Rico after they asked it about visa requirements… and arrived with the wrong paperwork
Sobbing couple blame ChatGPT for missing their flight to Puerto Rico after they asked it about visa requirements… and arrived with the wrong paperwork

Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Sobbing couple blame ChatGPT for missing their flight to Puerto Rico after they asked it about visa requirements… and arrived with the wrong paperwork

A young influencer couple said they were barred from boarding their flight to Puerto Rico after ChatGPT gave them the wrong visa information to enter the Caribbean Island. In a video shared by the Spanish tourists on social media, TikToker Mery Caldass appears in tears as she walks through the airport after not being allowed to travel. As partner Alejandro Cid comforts her, Caldass tells the camera: 'Look, I always do a lot of research, but I asked ChatGPT and they said no,' referring to whether they needed a visa to enter the country. 'I don't trust that son of a b***h anymore', she adds. But in between her tears, the influencer jokes that the AI tool gave them the wrong information as an act of revenge after she insulted it. 'I don't trust that one anymore because sometimes I insult him, I call him a b*****d, you're useless, but inform me his revenge'. The video has racked up 6.1 million views on TikTok and several users have poked fun at the couple for asking ChatGPT for information instead of checking official travel advice. 'Well, natural selection I guess. If you are going to take a transoceanic trip and you put all your advice in ChatGPT, little has happened to you,' one user commented. 'But who trusts ChatGPT for those types of situations?,' another said. Others came to ChatGPT's defence, claiming the AI tool's answer was not incorrect and that instead the couple had asked it the wrong question about the necessary documents to enter Puerto Rico. Spanish tourists do not need a visa to enter the Caribbean island, however holidaymakers must process an Electronic Travel Authorization (ESTA) online. The couple's ordeal with ChatGPT comes a day after a man was left fighting for his sanity after replacing table salt with a chemical more commonly used to clean swimming pools after following AI advice. The 60-year-old American spent three weeks in hospital suffering from hallucinations, paranoia and severe anxiety after taking dietary tips from ChatGPT. Doctors revealed in a US medical journal that the man had developed bromism - a condition virtually wiped out since the 20th century - after he embarked on a 'personal experiment' to cut salt from his diet. Instead of using everyday sodium chloride, the man swapped it for sodium bromide, a toxic compound once sold in sedative pills but now mostly found in pool-cleaning products. Symptoms of bromism include psychosis, delusions, skin eruptions and nausea - and in the 19th century it was linked to up to eight per cent of psychiatric hospital admissions. The bizarre case took a disturbing turn when the man turned up at an emergency department insisting his neighbour was trying to poison him. He had no previous history of mental illness. Intrigued and alarmed, doctors tested ChatGPT themselves. The bot, they said, still recommended sodium bromide as a salt alternative, with no mention of any health risk.

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