Autonomy with Pepper Spray
University autonomy is defended through pepper spray; Reuters publishes an outstanding report on the FAES activities; the Russian government sides with the Bolivian interim administration.
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.
University autonomy is defended through pepper spray; Reuters publishes an outstanding report on the FAES activities; the Russian government sides with the Bolivian interim administration.
The teacher's protest rages on, with professors holding their ground against the unsatisfactory answers from the regime; The Venezuelan Embassy in Brazil is the center of controversy; Guaidó gets ready for the November 16th demonstration... and so does chavismo.
The reformation of the CNE advances at different fields, with different perspectives; Evo Morales, long-time chavista ally, took refuge at Mexico; Carlos Holmes Trujillo, Colombia's former Foreing Minister and vocal critic of chavismo is the new Colombian Defense Minister.
Evo Morales left Bolivia. The opposition prepares for a march on Saturday. Chavismo announced a march that same day.
The downfall of Evo Morales, a long-time regional ally for chavismo, came about yesterday, November 10th, 2019. Here's the step-by-step of the dramatic events.
Nicolás's imposes the petro, his own cryptocurrency, on Venezuelans; the UN's envoyee worries about our situation and is focused on solving it; human rights in Venezuela are threatened, and we have the figures.
With votes saved from the Psuv, the preliminary commission to appoint new electoral authorities continues to advance in the AN
The Citgo saga carries on, with investors doing all they can to renegotiate their deals; a new "conspirator" seems involved in the multinational money laundry and corruption scheme; the state of Nueva Sparta is in serious risk of drought.
El Salvador expels Maduro's diplomats from the country, and the Venezuelan regime follows suit; a "fellowship for democracy" meets, without irony, in Cuba; the Bolivian opposition directly asks for Evo Morales' resignation.
The National Assembly advances on the correct process to appoint new CNE authorities, while chavismo tries to muddle it all; Venezuelan exiled deputies fight for the diaspora's rights in America; the continent struggles through its demonstrations.
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