INTERNACIONAL
Suecia: al menos tres muertos en un tiroteo en una ciudad cercana a Estocolmo

Al menos tres personas han muerto en un tiroteo en el centro de la ciudad sueca de Uppsala, 70 kilómetros al norte de Estocolmo, según anunció un portavoz de la Policía en declaraciones a la agencia sueca
Poco después de las 17 (12 de la Argentina) hubo «llamadas de personas que escucharon fuertes detonaciones que parecían disparos en el centro de Uppsala«, indicó la policía en su web, y agregó que hay varias personas «con heridas que pueden haber sido causadas por disparos».
La policía sueca ha acordonado la plaza de Vaksala Torg de Uppsala tras registrarse un tiroteo que ha dejado al menos tres muertos, confirmados por la Policía, y un número indeterminado de heridos de bala. Las identidades de los fallecidos no han sido confirmadas puesto que aún no se han comunicado a sus familiares, añade el comunicado policial.
Por el momento se desconocen las causas del suceso. Se está buscando a uno o más sospechosos, ha asegurado el portavoz de la policía Magnus Jansson a medios locales. Según medios locales, uno de los sopechosos habría huído del lugar en scooter. Un helicóptero polcial sobrevuela la zona.
Se da la circunstancia de que este hecho a ocurrido en vísperas de Walpurgis, una de las principales fiestas en Suecia, que se celebra con hogueras en la calle.
Según medios suecos, testigos presenciales escucharon entre siete y nueve disparos y el tiroteo se produjo junto a una peluquería.
Las autoridades no han informado de ningún detenido, aunque de acuerdo con el tabloide Aftonbladet se busca a un hombre que huyó del lugar en una patineta eléctrico.
La policía ha puesto en marcha un amplio operativo policial que incluye helicópteros.
El tráfico ferroviario estuvo interrumpido durante cerca de una hora, informó el diario local UNT.
Suecia ha sufrido en los últimos años un aumento de tiroteos mortales debido a los conflictos entre bandas criminales, que han afectado también a las vecinas Noruega y Dinamarca.
Flera personer har skadats i en misstänkt skottlossning i centrala Uppsala, uppger polisen. En större polisinsats pågår vid Vaksala torg.
”Ett flertal personer anträffas med skador som tyder på skottlossning”, skriver polisen på sin hemsida.
Upsala Nya… https://t.co/jxVECL3Eq6— DagensNyheterNyheter (@DagensNyheter2) April 29, 2025
Los autores son cada vez más jóvenes, en muchos casos contratados como sicarios porque tienen menos de 15 años, la edad de responsabilidad penal en Suecia.
En enero la policía indicó que el número de tiroteos había disminuido en 2024 por segundo año consecutivo, con 296, un 20% menos que el año anterior.
Suecia ha experimentado tiroteos significativos, muchos de ellos relacionados con el crimen organizado y actos de violencia aislada, en los últimos años, a los que se suma el ocurrido este martes en la ciudad de Uppsala, en el que han muerto tres personas y varias más resultaron heridas.
A continuación se detallan algunos de los incidentes más relevantes:
– 19 de marzo de 2015: Miembros de bandas rivales abrieron fuego en un pub en Gotemburgo matando a dos personas e hiriendo a al menos ocho más. El ataque fue atribuido a una disputa entre bandas.
– 26 septiembre de 2016: Un fallecido y tres heridos fue el balance de un tiroteo en Malmoe (sur de Suecia). Los cuatro eran jóvenes de unos 20 años residentes en Malmoe y varios de ellos eran conocidos con anterioridad por la policía.
– 19 de junio 2018: Tres jóvenes murieron y varios más resultaron heridos tras el tiroteo ocurrido en el centro de Malmoe (sur de Suecia) relacionado con un conflicto entre bandas criminales locales.
– 21 de octubre de 2021: El rapero sueco Einar es asesinado en Estocolmo a consecuencia de los disparos de varios individuos. Al parecer, el joven cantante, de 19 años, debía testificar en un caso contra una pandilla.
– 19 junio 2022: Un tiroteo en un centro comercial en Malmoe dejó heridas a dos personas en lo que la policía consideró una vez más una disputa entre bandas criminales.
– 10 de junio 2023: Dos muertos y otros dos heridos fue el resultado de un tiroteo en un centro comercial de Estocolmo.
– 27 de septiembre 2023: Dos personas fallecieron en un tiroteo del crimen organizado en Estocolmo. Además, esa jornada una mujer murió en la explosión de un artefacto en su casa.
– 4 de febrero de 2025: Tiene lugar una de las peores tragedia en el país por violencia. Al menos 11 personas fallecieron en un tiroteo, incluido el presunto autor, en un centro educativo para adultos en Örebro, a unos 200 kilómetros al oeste de Estocolmo.
Suecia
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Gran Bretaña desanda el Brexit: analizan un visado común para los jóvenes y un plan comercial y de seguridad con la UE

Cumbre UE-Londres, el 19 de mayo
Defensa, migración y el regreso de los jóvenes
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INTERNACIONAL
Massive European power outage blamed on solar plant breakdowns

The massive power outage that wreaked havoc in Europe is being blamed on a pair of likely solar plant breakdowns in southwest Spain, a report said.
By 7 a.m. local time Tuesday, more than 99% of energy demand in Spain had been restored, the country’s electricity operator Red Eléctrica announced. Portuguese grid operator REN said on Tuesday morning that all the 89 power substations had been back online since late last night and power had been restored to all 6.4 million customers.
Red Eléctrica said it identified two power generation loss incidents in southwest Spain – likely involving solar plants – that caused instability in the Spanish power grid and contributed to a breakdown of its interconnection to France, according to Reuters.
The economic cost of Monday’s blackout across the Iberian Peninsula could range between $2.5 billion to more than $5 billion, it cited investment bank RBC as saying.
POWER RESTORED TO HALF OF SPAIN AS TRAVEL DECIMATED
A car drives down an unlit street in Lisbon, Portugal, during a nationwide power outage on Monday, April 28. (AP/Armando Franca)
«We have never had a complete collapse of the system,» Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said in a televised address Monday night.
Emergency workers in Spain said they had rescued some 35,000 passengers on Monday who were stranded along railways and in underground tunnels.
Video that aired on Spanish television showed people evacuating metro stations in Madrid, and empty stations with trains stopped in Barcelona. Spain’s parliament was also left in the dark, public broadcaster RTVE reported.
The ATP Tour said play at the Madrid Open tennis tournament was suspended for the day due to the power outage.
In Portugal, several Lisbon subway cars were evacuated, courts stopped working and ATMs and electronic payment systems were affected. Traffic lights in Lisbon also stopped working during the outage.
REN, Portugal’s grid operator, described the incident Monday as a «rare atmospheric phenomenon.»
WALL STREET BANKER WASHES UP DEAD ON PARADISE BEACH WEEKS AFTER DISAPPEARING ON VACATION

People wait on a platform as metro operations resume partially in Madrid, Spain, on Tuesday, April 29, following the nationwide power outage. (Reuters/Violeta Santos Moura)
«Due to extreme temperature variations in the interior of Spain, there were anomalous oscillations in the very high-voltage lines, a phenomenon known as induced atmospheric vibration,» it was quoted as saying. «These oscillations caused synchronization failures between the electrical systems, leading to successive disturbances across the interconnected European network.»
However, on Tuesday, Spain’s meteorological agency AEMET said that it had not detected any «unusual meteorological or atmospheric phenomena» Monday and no sudden temperature fluctuations were recorded at their weather stations.
Eduardo Prieto, Red Eléctrica’s chief of operations, said the instability in the power grid caused the Spanish and French electricity interconnection through the Pyrenees mountains to split, leading to a failure on the Spanish side, according to Reuters. The news agency reported that some parts of France suffered brief power outages on Monday as well.

People sleep in a sports facility designated for people who were stuck at a train station in Barcelona, Spain, on Tuesday, April 29. (Reuters/Bruna Casas)
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Authorities were still investigating what happened on Tuesday.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
INTERNACIONAL
As judge is charged with obstructing justice in migrant case, spinners cast it as an anti-Trump story

Here’s what actually happened to that Wisconsin judge.
Setting aside the spin – and there’s plenty of it from some Democrats and pundits – these are the facts.
Based on the criminal complaint, county judge Hannah Dugan had a hearing scheduled for illegal Mexican immigrant Eduardo Flores-Ruiz – who is already facing charges of domestic abuse.
Not only that, Flores-Ruiz got into a fight with two roommates who complained that he was playing his music too loud.
Flores-Ruiz punched one roommate in the face 30 times, then hit a woman who tried to end the fight, the complaint says. Let that sink in for a minute.
WISCONSIN JUDGE’S ARREST BLASTED BY DEMOCRATS WHO PREVIOUSLY CLAIMED ‘NO ONE IS ABOVE THE LAW’ IN TRUMP CASES
Now let’s get to what Hannah Dugan did. (National Review’s Jim Geraghty has a highly detailed account with extensive quotes from the documents.)
First she blew off the hearing. ICE agents have the absolute power to arrest the immigrant at the county courthouse, and were closing in, but hoped to do it in a low-key manner.
Then she arranged for Flores-Ruiz to slip out a private exit, for the sole purpose of helping him avoid the federal agents. And it worked. But the agents tracked him down after a chase.
Many in the press have used the arrest of Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Hannah Dugan as a political weapon against the Trump administration. (Mike De Sisti / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)
This sounds very much like alleged obstruction of justice.
Now Dugan is entitled to the presumption of innocence, along with a healthy skepticism. We’ve only heard the government’s side of the story.
Does that sound like obstruction of justice? That’s what the judge has been charged with, along with concealing an individual to prevent an arrest.
The Washington Post yesterday made explicit what it implied a day earlier: «While many Republican supporters of the president cheered the aggressive actions, critics of the administration said the spectacle sent a chilling message.
«‘The obvious purpose of the arrest of Judge Dugan on criminal charges is to intimidate and threaten all judges, state and local, across the country,’ said J. Michael Luttig, a conservative former U.S. appeals court judge.»
Many others are treating Dugan’s arrest, unusual though it is, as an outrage.

Hannah Dugan is accused of helping conceal illegal Mexican immigrant Eduardo Flores-Ruiz as ICE agents closed in on her court. (DHS/Milwaukee Independent via AP)
Before the arrest of Flores-Diaz, the Milwaukee county executive said: «An attack on this safe, community-serving space undermines public trust, breeds fear among citizens and staff and disrupts the due process essential to our courts,» An attack, says David Crowley.
Some other quotes helpfully rounded up by Geraghty:
Minnesota Democratic Sen. Tina Smith posted: «If Kash Patel,» the FBI director, «and Donald Trump don’t like a judge, they think they can arrest them.» So this was not about alleged obstruction of justice but some kind of personal animus toward Dugan? And I doubt Trump knew anything about this.
JUDGE WHO ALLEGEDLY HELPED MIGRANT DOESN’T DESERVE ‘SPECIAL TREATMENT,’ WISCONSIN LAWMAKER SAYS
New York Times columnist David Brooks said on PBS: «It strikes me as maybe something illegal, but it also strikes me as something heroic.» It MAY be illegal, but on what planet would the judge’s actions be deemed heroic??
And here’s one I found from Guardian columnist Moira Donegan, saying: «The Trump administration is making an example of the Milwaukee judge to intimidate critics and opponents.»
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So now the tale has morphed into an anti-Trump hit job. The president does plenty of things to intimidate critics and openly talks about it. This isn’t one of them.
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As for the politics, aren’t most voters going to be more concerned with keeping violent illegal migrants off our streets?
Media Buzz,Wisconsin,Judiciary,Immigration,Illegal Immigrants,Crime
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