By Oliver Griffin, Luis Jaime Acosta and Nandita Bose BOGOTA/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Colombia's President Gustavo Petro ...
U.S. President Donald Trump and Colombian President Gustavo Petro ended their public tit for tat that began when military ...
Trump said the measures were necessary because the Colombia president’s decision “jeopardized” U.S. national security.
The tit-for-tat with the South American nation underscores the febrile environment surrounding the US president’s deportation ...
The country’s leader, Gustavo Petro, backed down after a clash with President Trump, which started when Mr. Petro turned back ...
By declaring he’d put tariffs on goods from the South American country, the president imperiled a growing influx of foreign investment there.
There is no census, and migrants come and go, but the majority of people in La Soledad appear to be from Venezuela, the ...
He slaps a 25% tariff on Colombian goods and imposes a raft of visa restrictions. Latin American nations are grappling with ...
Colombia has walked back from the brink of a damaging trade war with the United States, reaching an agreement on accepting ...
Many remain determined to reach the U.S. through more dangerous means, riding freight trains, hiring smugglers and dodging ...