Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Colombia's president says thousands of grenades and bullets have gone missing from army bases !

Colombia's president says thousands of grenades and bullets have gone missing from army bases

Time:2024-05-02 01:17:22 source:Universal Unfoldings news portal

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Colombian President Gustavo Petro said Tuesday that hundreds of thousands of pieces of ammunition have gone missing from two military bases in the South American country.

In a brief statement, Petro said that an inspection this month by the army found that hundreds of thousands of bullets, thousands of grenades and 37 anti-tank missiles were stolen from a military base in the center of the country and another near the Caribbean coast.

Petro, the country’s first left-wing president, said the ammunition might have ended up in the hands of Colombian rebel groups, or may have been sold illegally to criminal groups overseas, including Haitian gangs.

“The only way to explain these missing items is that there are networks made up of people within the armed forces who are involved in the illegal arms trade,” Petro said.

Related information
  • Box office: ‘Challengers’ scores with $15 million in ticket sales
  • Ports, cross
  • China State Shipbuilding Corp wins world's first ammonia
  • Tencent's AI technology to find pulsars 'FASTER'
  • Armed men storm a hospital in central Mexico, killing a patient
  • 3 scientists share 2022 Nobel Chemistry Prize
  • China prepares to launch Shenzhou
  • Industry sees OpenAI's Sora as a game changer
Recommended content
  • Queen Mary and King Frederik are caught in a royal Photoshop row
  • Space contractors release China's annual launch plan
  • China's autonomous driving enters fast lane with commercial operations
  • Why foreign enterprises double down on investment in China
  • Malian army says it killed an Islamic State group commander who attacked U.S., Niger forces
  • China's internet sector R&D spending logs robust growth in Jan.