After Maduro's Capture by the U.S., Will Venezuelan Migrants Return Home?
2 Articles
2 Articles
On January 3, in the middle of a summer night in Buenos Aires, a Venezuelan migrant shook his girlfriend to wake her up and tell her that Nicolás Maduro, the authoritarian leader of his country, had left. Another migrant rose up startled in Santiago de Chile when his phone vibrated with the news that the United States had captured him. Many more woke up with a photograph of Maduro handcuffed aboard an American warship. Reactions were immediate. …
The Secretary General of the United Nations, Antonio Guterres, offered revealing statements on Monday about the fall of the dictator Nicolás Maduro. During a press conference in Nairobi, Kenya, Guterres stated that he believes the military operation that led to the capture of the former president had a high level of collaboration within the Venezuelan political apparatus itself. Being consulted on whether he feared that a scenario similar to tha…
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