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Guinea releases 16 soldiers and police officers from Sierra Leone after border dispute

CONAKRY, Guinea (AP) — Guinea on Friday released 16 soldiers and police officers from neighboring Sierra Leone who were arrested earlier this week in a border dispute, Sierra Leonean authorities said.

“All security officers arrested by the Guinean authorities have been safely handed over to Sierra Leone,” Sierra Leone’s Ministry of Information said in a Facebook post.

The release followed a visit to Guinea’s capital, Conakry, by a delegation led by Foreign Minister Alhaji Timothy Kabba, the ministry said.

Several members of a security team, including an officer, were apprehended and transported across the border by members of Guinea’s military, Sierra Leone’s government said Tuesday.

The Guinean military said in a statement the same day that the security team had entered Guinean territory without authorization and “set up a tent and raised their national flag” about a mile (1.6 kilometers) inside Guinea’s border.

For more than two decades, the West African countries have been involved in a border dispute stemming from Sierra Leone’s civil war between 1991 and 2002. Sierra Leone’s government invited Guinea to help defend its eastern borders during the war, but Guinean troops did not fully withdraw afterward.

The latest incident occurred Monday in the border town of Kalieyereh in Falaba District, according to Sierra Leone’s government, which said members of its armed forces and police were working on “making bricks for the construction of a border post and accommodation facility” at the site.

Last year, the Guinean military entered a mineral-rich border town in Sierra Leone, sparking regional concerns.

Here’s what to know about Timmy, the humpback whale whose life and death captivated Germany

BERLIN (AP) — The remains of Timmy, the humpback whale whose life and death captivated Germany for months, will be turned into biodiesel as some of the mammal's bones are set to go to a Danish museum. A series of failed rescue attempts split the scientific community and a private initiative over whether it was more humane to let the weakened and sick animal die on its own or continue the efforts. The whale, nicknamed “Timmy” and “Hope” by German media, was found dead on May 14, stranded just off the small island of Anholt in the Kattegat, the broad strait between Denmark and Sweden that connects the Baltic Sea to the North Sea. Here's what to know:
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