The Bolivarian National Guard (GNB) detained two people who were transporting war material, according to reports. Such arrests were made in the border entities of Táchira and Zulia.
At the citizen service point located in Capacho (Táchira), the military detained Manuel Antonio Ochoa Montilla, who was traveling in a public transport vehicle from San Antonio del Táchira and bound for San Cristóbal.
Six facsimiles of a P90 rifle-type firearm, seven drones and six projectors were seized from the subject, according to a report from Detachment 211 of the GNB.
The man was handed over to the Public Ministry, where they opened a file on him for use of a facsimile as a firearm and association to commit a crime.
Last Friday, December 6, the governor of Táchira, Freddy Bernal, reported on the interception of telephone calls coming from abroad, from whose content it is clear that they are preparing plans for violence to be executed in the Andean entity starting on January 5, 2025. .
“We have managed to intercept these calls thanks to our electronic security systems. “We will not allow anyone to disturb the peace of our state,” declared the governor through his program. Bernal Report.
gringo flag
At the citizen service point located in Nueva Lucha, Santa Cruz de Mara (Zulia), military agents detained Keberth Alberto Barceló Torres, who was a passenger in a public transportation unit.
Two Zoraki brand traumatic pistols, four pistol magazines and 185 traumatic cartridges (non-lethal rubber ammunition) were seized from Barceló Torres.
They also confiscated two identification badges from him as a bodyguard and carrying a weapon from the Republic of Colombia, a telephone equipment, nine debit and credit cards, six micro SD cards, a hard drive and several military clothing with the US flag. says the report from Detachment 112 of the GNB.
Both procedures were notified to the General Directorate of Military Counterintelligence (Dgcim).
On September 14, the Minister of the Interior, Justice and Peace, Diosdado Cabello, reported the capture of Venezuelans and foreigners who were putting together a plan aimed at the overthrow of President Nicolás Maduro.
The plan included the introduction of weapons to Venezuela to deliver them to certain cells of criminal groups, which would carry out certain missions of attacks on public services. This entire operation, which was frustrated, was coordinated by Wilbert Josep Castañeda, an active US military officer.
Two months after that plan was revealed, Cabello appeared again publicly on November 23 to report the partial dismantling of another project to destabilize whose epicenter was located in the state of Zulia, headed by businessman José Enrique Rincón.