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The Latin Times spoke to drug and security experts in Colombia to find out what lies behind the country's cocaine boom and what it means for a nation already struggling with internal security issues.
A military bombing of an outpost of Colombia's powerful Gulf Clan drug cartel killed three of its members, officials said Friday, as the conflict-torn country confronts its worst violence in a decade.
BUENAVENTURA, Colombia (Reuters) -Colombia is increasing its troop numbers as part of a renewed offensive against illegal ...
With approval ratings falling and key reforms stalled, Colombian President Gustavo Petro enters the final year of his term ...
Calamar, a town of 11,000 inhabitants in Guaviare, a jungle region in southeastern Colombia, is in the heart of one of these ...
BOGOTA - Illegal armed groups in Colombia have added thousands of members and expanded their territorial control in the last ...
Coup claims, trade threats, and guerrilla attacks ignite a legal standoff between Colombia and the U.S. over diplomacy, war ...
Former Colombian president Alvaro Uribe has delivered his closing statement in a landmark trial for bribery and witness ...
Colombia is ramping up its military efforts against illegal armed groups following the collapse of peace talks. President ...
Hundreds of Colombian ex-soldiers are fighting alongside Ukraine's forces against Russia. Some have been captured and ...
A Colombian soldier was killed and two others injured on Wednesday after explosives carried by a mule detonated in rural ...
The U.S. State Department has recalled its top diplomat in Colombia for urgent consultations. The move follows comments from ...