The spokesman of the Secretariat of National Council for Sovereignty and PeaceJorge Rodríguez, announced on Saturday the formal installation of the Sectorial Council for Fisheries for Sovereignty and Peace in La Guaira.
He added that “a total of 1,540 fishermen tips went to sea and not one more day of their daily fishing work; The fishermen leftcohesive, by the Mar de Margarita, of Aragua, of Falcón, the Sea of Lake Maracaibo and on the coast of La Guaira ».
Through his telegram account, Rodríguez wrote: «I am very happy to have installed the National Council for sovereignty and peace in La Guaira. Here the voices of all and all Venezuelans must be heard to defend our only truth: peace!
Rodríguez said that fishermen and fishermen are peaceful people, and today they have been directly “directly brutal empire aggression more criminal who has known the history of humanity », being affected in his daily work.
«Our fishermen and fishermen, together with the Bolivarian National Armed Forces, are the true expression of civic-military-political fusion. They are the true guards of the Caribbean Sea of La Paz«- Jorge Rodríguez said.
He also indicated that what happened a few days ago is inconceivable, when a tuna ship was intercepted by a powerful American war ship, which in addition to making a fool of them, feels a very dangerous precedent for the work of our fishermen and fishermen.
He continued saying that this incident also feels the lack of disrespect for international laws, of the regulations of maritime law and international law to peace of sovereignty, to independence and life, because that brutal empire has not been arrested in the action against seafood men and women, but “they will defend peace and sovereignty even with life itself.”
Then, he pointed out that “that’s why we went to sea today in one of the most beautiful demonstrations, a caravan of fishing boats, but above all a caravan of worthy women and men who get up early day by day to carry the product of fishing to the table of Venezuelans and Venezuelan.
