Humanitarian Aid Finally Arrives
The regime received humanitarian aid in Maiquetía, an admission of sanctions not being an impediment and a reflection of chavismo’s failure to manage the resources received by the country all these years.
The regime received humanitarian aid in Maiquetía, an admission of sanctions not being an impediment and a reflection of chavismo’s failure to manage the resources received by the country all these years.
Add ignorance to the list of problems that affect us. The regime presents more incoherent figures, the U.S. keeps cornering Maduro and the population helplessly awaits a solution.
The Venezuelan population is facing lockdowns with power outages and water shortages, poor internet access, lack of food and medicine and with the black market dollar at 100,000 bolivars.
Without an epidemiology bulletin, a repressive regime with no reliable technical team seems to be leading us towards a worse disaster than what we already have.
The international community recognizes the urgency of an institutional solution to the crisis in Venezuela because of the pandemic; The regime’s figures and attitude are as expected.
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.
We’ve been able to hang on for 22 years in one of the craziest media landscapes in the world. We’ve seen different media outlets in Venezuela (and abroad) closing shop, something we’re looking to avoid at all costs. Your collaboration goes a long way in helping us weather the storm.
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