Englishwoman found dead near Guatemala’s Lake Atitlan

This handout photograph obtained March 9, 2019 courtesy of the Lucie Blackman Trust shows British national Catherine Shaw, 23, who was last seen Monday, March 4, 2019 at a hotel in San Juan La Laguna, Guatemala, near the country's fabled Lake Atitlan, about 75 kilometers (45 miles) west of the capital Guatemala City. (AFP)
Updated 12 March 2019
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Englishwoman found dead near Guatemala’s Lake Atitlan

  • Shaw disappeared early Thursday in San Jan La Laguna, a town on the shores of Lake Atitlan

GUATEMALA CITY: An English tourist has been found dead nearly a week after she went missing near a Guatemala highland lake popular with travelers, authorities in the Central American nation said Monday.
Police Spokesman Pablo Castillo said the body of Catherine Shaw, 23, of Witney, England, was discovered at a mountain overlook called Nariz del Indio, or Indian Nose.
The area is wooded and uninhabited, and the body was found among brush without clothes and in a state of decomposition. An investigation has been opened.
Shaw disappeared early Thursday in San Jan La Laguna, a town on the shores of Lake Atitlan.
The woman’s father had arrived in Guatemala to assist the search for Shaw, the British Embassy confirmed, adding that it was supporting the family and authorities.


South Korea’s Lee calls for probe into links between religious group and politics

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South Korea’s Lee calls for probe into links between religious group and politics

  • President orders his ministers to consider ways to ‘disband religious groups that meddle in politics and do strange things with illegal funds’
SEOUL: South Korean President Lee Jae Myung has called for an investigation into the suspected illegal links between a religious group and politicians, Lee’s office said on Wednesday.
Lee’s order should apply “no matter whether (a politician is from the) ruling or opposition party, a high or low position,” the presidential office said in a statement.
The statement did not specify the religious group.
During a livestreamed cabinet meeting on Tuesday, Lee said he had ordered his ministers to consider ways to “disband religious groups that meddle in politics and do strange things with illegal funds,” and asked about how South Korea’s process to disband a religious group differed from Japan’s system.
Lee’s spokesperson on Tuesday also said the president had not singled out a particular religious group.
Some politicians have said, however, that Lee’s comments appeared to be directed at the Unification Church, whose leader Han Hak-ja is currently on trial over allegations she bribed former first lady Kim Keon Hee in return for political favors.
The case is part of a string of investigations by special prosecutors into ousted President Yoon Suk Yeol and his wife Kim in the wake of Yoon’s martial law order in December 2024.
Han has denied any wrongdoing.
A former Unification Church official told a special prosecutor that lawmakers in Lee’s ruling party also received funds from the Unification Church, South Korean media has reported.
Police have been asked to investigate any contacts between ruling party members and the Unification Church, the Yonhap News Agency reported on Tuesday.
A spokesperson for the Unification Church did not have an immediate comment on Wednesday.
In Japan, a Tokyo district court ordered the dissolution of the Unification Church in March. The case has since gone to appeal.