The opponent Edmundo González has planned, for this Saturday, January 4, a meeting in the city of Buenos Aires with the president of that nation, Javier Milei. A note published by the media La Nación indicated that Milei will receive the Venezuelan opponent at the Casa Rosada, the main government headquarters.
The opponent Edmundo González arrived in Argentina on the night of January 3, where he will begin an international tour of Latin America prior to January 10, when he plans to be sworn in as president of Venezuela.
González Urrutia has planned, for this Saturday, January 4, a meeting in the city of Buenos Aires with the president of that nation, Javier Milei. A note published by the media La Nación indicated that Milei will receive the Venezuelan opponent at the Casa Rosada, the main government headquarters.
However, from the Casa Rosada it was reported that there will be no joint statements or press conference. Along with Milei, Foreign Minister Gerardo Werthein and the Secretary General of the Presidency, Karina Milei, will be present at the meeting, La Nación highlighted.
A note published by the Spanish agency EFE highlighted that Elisa Trotta, general secretary of the Argentine Forum for the Defense of Democracy, said that Edmundo González’s visit to Argentina is not a coincidence, “it is the first country that González Urrutia visits in Latin America. ahead of their international tour prior to January 10. Argentina has demonstrated its commitment to freedom, democracy and human rights. “It is about consolidating international support to achieve the transition,” he indicated.
A call emerged on social networks for Venezuelans to gather in the Plaza de Mayo, in front of the Casa Rosada, starting at 10:00 am local time in Argentina.
In August, the government of Javier Milei was one of the first to recognize González as the winner of the presidential elections on July 28, after the opposition platform published the majority of the electoral records that show him as the winner.
*Journalism in Venezuela is carried out in a hostile environment for the press with dozens of legal instruments in place to punish the word, especially the laws “against hate”, “against fascism” and “against the blockade.” This content was written taking into consideration the threats and limits that, consequently, have been imposed on the dissemination of information from within the country.
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