Cracking Down on the Caribbean Drug Trade
The Trump administration just announced a new operation to crack down on the illegal drug trade in the Caribbean, and regime authorities act like it has nothing to do with them.
Naky gets called Naibet at home and at the bank. She coordinates training programs for an NGO. She collects moments and turns them into words. She has more stories than freckles.
The Trump administration just announced a new operation to crack down on the illegal drug trade in the Caribbean, and regime authorities act like it has nothing to do with them.
Despite recommendations from human rights organizations, people infected with coronavirus are criminalized; The public debates on the U.S. proposal for a transition.
The arrival of coronavirus to Venezuela allows the regime to deploy its well-known totalitarian weapons: discrimination, merciless persecution and bullying.
U.S. federal prosecutors announced a reward for Maduro and his co-conspirators, that even if it seems fair, distracts both countries from the tragedy that threatens them.
Guaidó proposed measures to assure that resources they obtain are used to help the most vulnerable and protect the population without blackmails from the regime.
This is the recipe for disaster proposed by the regime to face the pandemic in a country going through a complex humanitarian emergency.
The pandemic, which has become a sanitary and economic catastrophe for the whole world, has arrived to a country that couldn’t be in worse shape.
The AN and Juan Guaidó propose reasonable measures to the regime, which replies with contradicting figures and more repression, discrimination and impunity.
The Communications Minister keeps using a relaxed tone regarding the pandemic that has paralyzed the world, while FAES takes journalist Darvinson Rojas for publishing the figures in Miranda.
Becaue of lack of test kits or lack of transparency, Maduro’s regime said that there are no new cases of COVID-19 in the country. Some figures from the regions did leak, though.
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