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Peru approves emergency overhaul of state oil firm Petroperu

As authorities work to stabilize a struggling company, which is plagued by mounting losses and debt, Peru’s government has approved an emergency decree allowing private investment in some shares of the state-owned oil company Petroperu.

Just before the new year’s beginning, President Jose Jeri made the announcement.

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The change allows for private participation in significant operations to be reorganized into one or more asset units. That includes the prestigious Talara refinery, which recently received a $6.5 billion upgrade.

Along with a national fuel distribution and marketing network, Petroperu also runs or holds concessions for six crude oil blocks with limited production.

The decree, according to Peru’s Ministry of Energy and Mines, “lays the groundwork for Petroperu’s self-sustaining company by ensuring compliance with financial obligations through technical management of its assets.”

The ministry cited accumulated losses of $479 million between January and October 2025 as well as supplier debts totaling $764 million through December as examples of the company’s financial position, which the ministry called “particularly sensitive.”

These figures add up to the $774 million loss that was previously reported.

The Talara refinery modernization, which ultimately cost double what was originally anticipated, added to Petroperu’s financial strain, which resulted in the company losing its investment-grade credit rating in 2022.

The government has since provided about $5.3 billion in financing between 2022 and 2024, and has since done so on numerous occasions.

The business has also been subject to environmental scrutiny, which is considered crucial to Peru’s energy security.

Authorities declared an “environmental emergency” and launched an investigation in 2024 following an oil spill that reportedly affected 47 to 229 hectares (roughly 116 to 566 acres) along a portion of the nation’s northern coastline.

In response to Peru’s persistent political unrest, Petroperu is attempting to restructure. Dina Boluarte, one of the many presidents who failed to serve fully in office in recent years, was impeached by the Congress in October.

Jeri, her immediate successor, has had a difficult time finding steady leadership at Petroperu, appointing three board chairs in three months.

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Venezuela releases more prisoners amid US pressure campaign: Rights groups

Difficulty inmates have been released from Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s government after he won a disputed election in 2024.

At least 87 prisoners have been released as part of the president’s campaign to pressure Caracas, according to Donald Trump’s administration.

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Even as he has accused Trump of trying to overthrow his government and seize Venezuela’s vast oil reserves, some observers have interpreted Maduro’s decision as a diplomatic effort.

On Thursday, two human rights organizations confirmed the release, the Committee for the Freedom of Political Prisoners and the Committee of Mothers in Defense of the Truth.

The Committee for the Freedom of Political Prisoners wrote on social media that “mothers and relatives reported new releases of political prisoners from Tocoron prison in Aragua state” in northern Venezuela.

The government of Venezuela had previously announced the release of 99 of its prisoners on December 25 as a “concerned expression of the State’s commitment to peace, dialogue, and justice.”

However, a prominent Venezuelan rights organization, Foro Penal, claimed it was unable to verify the release of 61 prisoners at the time.

In the vote held in July 2024, Maduro claimed victory, claiming to have won a third six-year term. The opposition has claimed that Edmond Gonzalez won by a landslide despite widespread fraud, and independent experts later verified the results.

Maria Corina Machado, the opposition leader, was removed from the race and replaced by Gonzalez. After months of hiding, Machado recently emerged in Oslo, Norway.

At least 28 people died and thousands of people were injured as a result of the disputed vote’s widespread protests throughout the nation.

At least 2, 000 people have been freed since their release, according to official records, and more than 700 are still alleged to have been held for political reasons.

The Trump administration’s pressure on Maduro, who they have accused of running a drug trafficking operation that aims to destabilize the US, has been bolstered by the disputed election.

Since August, the Pentagon has increased military assets off Venezuela’s coast, with Trump revealing the first attack on Venezuelan soil against a dock that allegedly served to load drug boats earlier this week.

In what rights groups claim amounts to extrajudicial killings, the US has also blocked sanctioned oil tankers’ entry and exit into Venezuela while simultaneously launching strikes on alleged drug boats in the Caribbean and the eastern Pacific.

In the current strikes, more than 100 people have died.

Machado has vehemently supported the US pressure campaign from exile. She has maintained that Venezuela has been “invaded” by “terrorist groups” and “drug cartels,” but has been more circumspect with her attacks on Venezuelan soil.

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Israeli forces kill Palestinian child as Gaza humanitarian crisis deepens

As hundreds of thousands of families across the bombarded enclave continue to suffer from Israel’s continued restrictions on shelter supplies and other humanitarian aid, Israeli forces have killed a Palestinian child in northern Gaza.

The child, identified as Youssef Ahmed al-Shandaghli, was killed by Israeli forces in the Jabalia an-Nazla area of the north of the territory, according to a medical source at al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on Thursday.

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The boy’s death’s exact circumstances were not immediately known.

More than 400 Palestinians were killed and many others were injured in Israel’s continued attacks on Gaza in spite of a US-brokered ceasefire agreement that was signed in October.

Israel’s genocidal war against the Palestinians there has also worsened already dire conditions there, which have also been largely reduced to rubble as a result of the country’s enclave’s already dire conditions.

A young girl died in the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza on Thursday from the extreme cold, according to local media outlets.

Separately, the Palestinian Civil Defense in Gaza reported that its teams had recovered the bodies of a mother and a child in the tent that had been a refuge for displaced people in the Yarmouk neighborhood of central Gaza City.

Because of Israel’s more than two-year-old war, hundreds of thousands of Palestinian families have been living in overcrowded displacement camps and temporary homes across the strip.

To help families survive the dangerous winter conditions, the UN and human rights organizations have urged the Israeli government to allow tents, blankets, and other supplies into Gaza.

Despite growing international condemnation that its policy is putting Palestinian lives in danger, Israel has ignored the calls to lift its aid restrictions.

At least five Palestinian children died in Gaza in December as a result of a lack of adequate shelter, according to the UN’s child rights agency (UNICEF) earlier this week.

Ata Mai, a seven-year-old Palestinian boy, died on December 27 in a makeshift displacement camp northwest of Gaza City in the midst of heavy rain, wind, and freezing temperatures.

According to a statement from UNICEF’s Middle East and North Africa regional director Edouard Beigbeder, Ata went missing in the afternoon, and despite heavy machinery’s search and rescue efforts, his body was only found hours later.

All efforts must prioritize meeting this crucial need, according to Beigbeder, adding that “children in Gaza have endured enough and have the right to protection and safe shelter.”

Additionally, a full range of life-saving and life-sustaining supplies are urgently needed, including items that have previously been denied or restricted, on a large-scale basis.

Israel also made the warnings on Thursday, as it made the decision to impose a ban on international aid organizations that work with Palestinians in Gaza and the occupied West Bank.

37 aid organizations’ operating licenses have been suspended in Israel because they failed to adhere to new government rules that mandate detailed information on their staff, funding, and operations.