Latest news with #LatinaNoticias


Daily Mail
31-07-2025
- General
- Daily Mail
Grandma saw tsunami alert then brought grandson to beach 'because he had never seen one before'
A grandma was curious to know what all the fuss was about after authorities issued a tsunami alert - and decided to take her grandson to the coast for a close-up look. The woman was watching the local news in Peru on Wednesday morning when she found out about the scary advisory - triggered by the 8.8 magnitude earthquake that struck off Russia 's Kamchatka peninsula. She decided to get dressed and drag her grandson from her home in Chorrillos, Lima, to a nearby area overlooking the sea in the hopes of seeing the tsunami form. 'I wanted to see something because I had never seen a tsunami,' she said in an interview with Latina Noticias. 'I also brought my grandson so he could see and learn.' She seemed to downplay the impact of the warning when she was asked if she was scared - after rushing towards the water at a time when many were running away. Her unbothered reaction caused the clip to go viral online during the crisis. The grandma said: 'Well, they've told us it's something preventative, that it's not high risk, right? Well, that's what I've heard. It's not high risk. 'It's a precaution because we don't know how high the waves will be.' The Peruvian government issued the tsunami warning Wednesday and shut down 65 of its 121 Pacific ports while imploring residents to stay away from coastal areas after the 8.8 magnitude earthquake. Russia´s Oceanology Institute said tsunami waves of less than 20 feet were recorded near populated areas of the peninsula. A tsunami crashed through the port of Severo-Kurilsk and submerged the local fishing plant, according to officials. Russian state television footage showed buildings and debris swept into the sea. The surge of water reached as far as the town's World War II monument about 400 meters from the shoreline, said Mayor Alexander Ovsyannikov. One death was reported and multiple people were injured while fleeing from buildings, including a hospital patient who jumped from a window. In Japan, almost two million people had been ordered to higher ground, before the warnings were downgraded to an advisory for large stretches of its Pacific coast, with waves up to 2.3 feet still being observed on Thursday. One person died and 10 others - most of them in Hokkaido - were injured while heading to a shelter following the tsunami alert, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi. A woman in her 50s died after falling from a cliffside road while driving to an evacuation center in central Japan's Mie Prefecture.
Yahoo
13-05-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
‘The pope is Peruvian!' How two decades in South America shaped the vision of Pope Leo XIV
In his first appearance as Pope Leo XIV on the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica, the man born Robert Francis Prevost spoke for 10 minutes in Italian. Then he transitioned to Spanish and, with a big grin, gave a greeting to his 'beloved diocese of Chiclayo in Peru.' Many Peruvians were overjoyed with the election of Leo, who they are proud to claim as a fellow citizen. 'The Pope is Peruvian!' reported the live coverage on Latina Noticias, one of the main national networks. Other news outlets around Lima, where I live, shared similar headlines. Within minutes, all of Peru knew that the new pope, who was born and raised in Chicago, had served in Peru for over two decades and was nationalized as a citizen in 2015. During his time in the South American nation, he lived alongside his parishioners through a bloody civil war, a decade-long dictatorship and an unstable post-dictatorship period that has so far led to three former presidents being handed prison sentences. Amid these challenges, Prevost became part of Peruvian society – and eventually, a leader within it. Prevost's leadership roles in Chicago and Rome were essential in his formation. But as a scholar of religion in Latin America, I believe that it is his time in Peru that has best prepared him to take on the challenges of directing the global Catholic Church. In Peru, where Catholicism permeates public life, Prevost encountered deep social and political challenges in ways that bishops in many other countries may never face so directly. Prevost first arrived in Peru in 1985. A member of the Order of St. Augustine, the young man had been sent to its mission in Chulucanas, in the northern province of Piura. Chulucanas is about 30 miles east of the regional capital, where the desert coast begins to rise up into the Andes. After a year, Prevost left to finish his doctoral degree and serve briefly in Illinois. But he soon returned to Peru, serving as a missionary in the northern city of Trujillo. He stayed there through the remainder of the 1980s and 1990s, amid civil war between the government and various militant groups – primarily the Maoist guerrillas of Sendero Luminoso, or 'Shining Path,' who aimed to install a Communist state. The violence hit other regions more severely, but Trujillo and the surrounding area were home to car bombs, sabotaged electrical grids and brutal military dragnet operations. Prevost accompanied Peruvians through some of the darkest days of the country's history. During these years, Prevost trained future clergy and served as a parish priest. One fellow Augustinian recalled that Prevost played a key role in recruiting and training Peruvian candidates to the priesthood. Prevost also founded the Trujillo parish of Nuestra Señora de Montserrat, where his parishioners knew him as 'Padre Roberto.' As the country transitioned away from the civil war period, which ultimately left nearly 70,000 dead, Prevost remained in Peru. During the 1990s, President Alberto Fujimori's government built a polarizing legacy by undermining democracy and citizenship rights while capturing the two most powerful guerrilla leaders. As I show in my research, religion and politics are deeply intertwined in Peru. By the 1990s, the Peruvian Catholic Church was divided between members who spoke out in defense of human rights and those who defended the often brutal tactics of the government. Juan Luis Cipriani, who was then the archbishop of Ayacucho – the Andean stronghold of Sendero Luminoso – became a spokesperson for the pro-state faction, framing defenders of human rights as apologists for terrorism. Prevost was among those who maintained a critical view of any party, including the government, that committed human rights abuses. Diego Garcia-Sayan, the country's former minister of justice and foreign affairs, recently wrote an op-ed praising Prevost's willingness to speak out against attempts to legalize the death penalty and to defend embattled human rights organizations. After returning to the United States in 1999, Prevost rose through the leadership ranks of the Augustinian Order. He was sent back to Peru in 2014, when Pope Francis named him the apostolic administrator, and later bishop, of the northern diocese of Chiclayo. As bishop, Prevost emerged as a voice for democracy and justice. In a 2017 public statement to national media, he urged former president Fujimori to 'personally ask forgiveness for the great injustices that were committed and for which he was prosecuted.' During his tenure as bishop, Prevost helped guide his community through the COVID-19 pandemic. He also played a key role ministering to Chiclayo's growing population of Venezuelan migrants. Meanwhile, he was gaining the confidence of his peers, as well as Pope Francis. Prevost was given a leadership role in the Peruvian Conference of Bishops, and played a central role during Francis' 2018 visit to Peru. In 2023, Francis named Prevost prefect of the Dicastery of Bishops, the oversight body for naming new bishops across the world. Prevost took the position in Rome but was sad to leave Peru again. 'This time, again, it will be hard for me to leave here,' Prevost told Peruvian media. In recent years, Prevost has taken on causes central to Francis' papacy. He was a key actor in the Vatican investigations of a Peruvian organization, Sodalicio de Vida Cristiana, which was found to have committed dozens of sexual and psychological abuses dating back to the 1970s. Francis dissolved the organization in 2025. Prevost has also developed an increased focus on Indigenous and environmental rights, in line with Francis' 2015 encyclical 'Laudato Si' and 2019 conference for bishops in the Amazon. Photographs and memes celebrating the Peruvian pope have flown around social media and WhatsApp groups in Peru. The photos of Prevost eating traditional dishes from the north coast are especially popular. AI-generated memes of the pope wearing the Peruvian national soccer jersey or eating ceviche with an Inka Kola soda are making the rounds. In Chicalayo and in Trujillo, in addition to official church celebrations, thousands have taken to the streets to express their joy with placards and chants. Leo XIV has clearly brought the memory of his years in Peru with him into the Vatican. He has chosen Edgar Rimaycuna, a Peruvian priest whom the pope knew from his time in Chiclayo, as his personal secretary. I believe that the challenges that Leo guided his parishioners through in two decades in Peru should offer valuable lessons for the new pope to build on the legacy of Francis, the first Latin American pope. This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit, independent news organization bringing you facts and trustworthy analysis to help you make sense of our complex world. It was written by: Matthew Casey-Pariseault, Arizona State University Read more: Pope Leo XIV: Why the College of Cardinals chose the Chicago native and Augustinian to lead the church after Francis A pope of the Americas: What Francis meant to 2 continents Columbus who? Decolonizing the calendar in Latin America Matthew Casey-Pariseault does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.