Panama’s president alleges US threatening to revoke visas over China ties

Panama President Jose Raul Mulino said that someone at the United States Embassy has been threatening to cancel the visas of Panamanian officials.

His statements come as the administration of US President Donald Trump pressures Panama to limit its ties to China.

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Responding to a reporter’s question at his weekly news conference, Mulino said — without offering evidence — that an official at the US Embassy is “threatening to take visas”, adding that such actions are “not coherent with the good relationship I aspire to maintain with the United States”. He did not name the official.

The US Embassy in Panama did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Trump administration has previously declined to comment on individual visa decisions.

But in September, the US Department of State said in a statement that the country was committed to countering China’s influence in Central America. It added that it would restrict visas for people who maintained relationships with China’s Communist Party or undermined democracy in the region on behalf of China.

Earlier this week, the Trump administration revoked the visas of six foreigners deemed by US officials to have made derisive comments or made light of the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk last month.

Similar cases have surfaced recently in the region. In April, former Costa Rica President and Nobel Peace Prize winner Oscar Arias said the US had cancelled his visa. In July, Vanessa Castro, vice president of Costa Rica’s Congress, said that the US Embassy told her her visa had been revoked, citing alleged contacts with the Chinese Communist Party.

Panama has become especially sensitive to the US-China tensions because of the strategically important Panama Canal.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio visited Panama in February on his first foreign trip as the top US diplomat and called for Panama to immediately reduce China’s influence over the canal.

Panama has strongly denied Chinese influence over canal operations but has gone along with US pressure to push the Hong Kong-based company that operated ports on both ends of the canal to sell its concession to a consortium.

Mulino has said that Panama will maintain the canal’s neutrality.

“They’re free to give and take a visa to anyone they want, but not threatening that, ‘If you don’t do something, I’ll take the visa,’” Mulino said Thursday.

Bolivia on the brink: How a presidential election heralds a political shift

Economy a top issue

The economy, however, is seen as the deciding issue across segments of Bolivian society.

The Ipsos Ciesmori survey found that voters identified Bolivia’s economic crisis as their top concern going into the run-off. Other key concerns included the rise in consumer prices and the ongoing fuel shortage.

In recent years, Bolivia has experienced a sharp fall in its natural gas production, the country’s main source of export revenue.

With reserves of its primary export nearly depleted, the country has limited ability to earn outside revenue. That has contributed to an acute shortage of United States dollars, which in turn has made it more difficult to import products.

Prices have risen as a result, and an unofficial, parallel market has cropped up to swap the boliviano currency for dollars — albeit at a higher exchange rate than the official standard.

A woman places a flower garland around Rodrigo Paz’s neck during a closing campaign rally in Tarija, Bolivia, on October 15 [Juan Karita/AP Photo]

According to Jauregui, the country’s rightward shift is a response to the economic hardships that many attribute to the current government of outgoing President Luis Arce.

But it’s also due to the inevitable decline of a left-wing political project that has lost its sense of direction.

“From the outset, the historical MAS project achieved its goals and has run its course; it no longer offers new proposals for a changing society,” Jauregui said.

“The economic crisis has exacerbated all of this, driving a search for something different.”

To address the economic decline, the two right-wing candidates in this Sunday’s run-off have taken distinct approaches.

Quiroga has called for increased international investment and the implementation of austerity measures that would “end wasteful spending” — though critics warn that could come at the expense of social programmes.

“I am here to change everything, dramatically and radically,” Quiroga told The Associated Press in August.

Jorge Quiroga spreads out his arms on stage at a rally as confetti falls.
Jorge ‘Tuto’ Quiroga waves during a closing campaign rally in La Paz, Bolivia, on October 15 [Natacha Pisarenko/AP Photo]

Paz, on the other hand, has proposed more gradual reforms under the slogan, “Capitalism for all”. Among his proposals are tax cuts, tariff reductions and the decentralisation of the national government.

“Eighty-five percent of the budget is today managed by the central government,” Paz told the online newspaper Infobae. “That must change in favour of the regions.”

Like Quiroga, Paz has pledged to crack down on government corruption, arguing that, “when money isn’t stolen, there is enough for everyone”. But unlike Quiroga, Paz believes it would be unwise to seek international loans before the Bolivian economy has stabilised.

Both candidates have also expressed their intention of restoring diplomatic relations with the US, which were severed in 2008 amid tensions over Washington’s “war on drugs”.

But Paz and Quiroga diverge on a major hot-button economic issue: the continuation of fuel subsidies.

Since the late 1990s, the Bolivian government has sold fuel at a fixed price, something critics say is unsustainable. The subsidies cost the state billions of dollars each year.

Trump says he will meet Putin again after ‘productive’ phone call

US President Donald Trump says he and Russia’s President Vladimir Putin have agreed to meet again for talks on the war in Ukraine.

Trump announced on social media on Thursday that he and Putin would meet in the Hungarian capital Budapest, after the two leaders held a lenghty and productive phone call. A date for the meeting has not been set.

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The call came a day before Trump is set to meet with President Zelenskyy in Washington, DC, where the Ukrainian leader is expected to resume his appeal to Trump to sell Tomahawk missiles to Ukraine, which could allow it to strike deeper in Russian territory in the two countries’ ongoing war.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump said he would brief Zelenskyy on the Russia talks in the Oval Office tomorrow.

“I believe great progress was made with today’s telephone conversation,” he added.

Trump also said that senior US and Russian officials would meet next week to prepare for another meeting between Putin and Trump, the US leader said.

The call is the first known conversation between the two leaders since they met for a summit in Alaska in August.

The surprise development comes with Zelenskyy preparing to meet Trump at the White House on Friday, as Ukrainian officials seek greater support to fend against aerial attacks and strike back at Russia.

Russian forces continued to bombard Ukraine on Thursday, firing hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles overnight that targeted infrastructure, including energy-related infrastructure.

Eight Ukrainian regions experienced blackouts after the barrage, Ukraine’s national energy operator, Ukrenergo, said on Thursday. DTEK, the country’s largest private energy company, reported outages in the capital, Kyiv, and said it had to stop its natural gas extraction in the central Poltava region due to the strikes.

Natural gas infrastructure was damaged for the sixth time this month, said Naftogaz, Ukraine’s state-owned oil and gas company.

Earlier this week, Russian forces struck a hospital and a United Nations convoy in Ukraine, injuring 57 people and forcing the evacuation of 50 patients.

Kyiv, in turn, has ramped up attacks on Russian targets, including a strike on an oil refinery in the Saratov region.

Ukraine seeks Tomahawks

Zelenskyy has argued that boosting Ukraine’s ability to carry out long-range strikes would help compel Putin to take Trump’s calls for direct negotiations to end the war more seriously.

Tomahawk cruise missiles have a range of around 1,600km (1,000 miles) and would make a strike on Moscow and other major Russian cities possible. While Putin has warned that selling such missiles to Ukraine would be a “whole new level of escalation,” Trump told reporters over the weekend that he’s considering it.

“I might talk to [Putin], I might say, ‘Look, if this war is not going to get settled, I’m going to send them Tomahawks.’ I may say that,” Trump told reporters.

“The Tomahawk is an incredible weapon, very offensive weapon, and honestly, Russia does not need that.”

Trump spoke to reporters en route to Israel over the weekend, where he addressed Israel’s parliament as the ceasefire he helped broker in Gaza took effect. In that speech, Trump signalled the ceasefire deal could lay the groundwork for a truce between Russia and Ukraine, making it clear he’s ready to apply pressure to Putin.

“First we have to get Russia done,” Trump said. “We gotta get that one done.”

Trump and Putin met in Alaska in August to discuss ending Moscow’s war in Ukraine, but left that short summit without a deal.