RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – The government of Nicolás Maduro rejected on Wednesday the accusations of the president of Guyana, Mohamed Irfaan Alí, who said that Venezuela tried to “suffocate” the independence of his country, which today celebrates its 55th anniversary, in the framework of the bilateral dispute over the Essequibo region.
“Venezuela strongly rejects the inaccuracies and false accusations contained in the speech delivered by the president of the Cooperative Republic of Guyana, Mohamed Irfaan Ali, in the framework of the 55th anniversary of the independence of that country,” the Venezuelan Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
Esequiba Guyana. (Photo internet reprouction)
Women march in Colombia against police sexual violence
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Venezuela Accuses UN Commissioner Bachelet of Losing Her Rigor in Unbalanced Report
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Venezuela demands from Cape Verde immediate release of diplomat
Venezuela demands from Cape Verde immediate release of diplomat
Caracas, Mar 6 (Prensa Latina) Venezuela on Friday supported the request by the African Bar Association to demand Cape Verde to release diplomat Alex Saab, who has been detained in that country since June 12, 2020. In an official statement, the Venezuelan government recalled that Saab is registered as Venezuela´s special envoy and alternate ambassador to the African Union, with full rights to the guarantees of international agreements on the protection of political agents.
For such reasons, Cape Verde could not and should not meddle into the special humanitarian mission Saab was carrying out at the time of his arrest, according to the Venezuelan Foreign Ministry document.
4 Mar 2021
Venezuelan socialist dictator Nicolás Maduro revealed via Twitter on Wednesday that he had concluded an “excellent videoconference” that day with United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet, who previously accused him of “grave human rights abuses.”
Maduro’s regime enjoys a seat on the U.N. Human Rights Council and Maduro himself addressed the Council last month, using the opportunity largely to promote dubious coronavirus “cures” and complain about sanctions against his regime imposed by the United States. The U.N. Council and independent investigators working for the global institution and Bachelet’s office itself has for years affirmed that an extensive body of credible evidence exists that Maduro ordered the Venezuelan military to engage in gross human rights violations for years, particularly the use of rape, torture, and extrajudicial killing to silence anti-socialist dissidents.