The opponent Leopoldo López responded to Nicolás Maduro and reaffirmed that he agrees with the actions carried out by the United States in the Caribbean to combat drug trafficking. He also told him to support actions by the Trump administration in national territory “aimed at dismantling the Cartel of the Suns.”
The opposition Leopoldo López responded to Nicolás Maduro about the request to the Supreme Court of Justice (TSJ) to withdraw his nationality and considered that the measure was taken to say what “all Venezuelans think and want.” He said that if the measure was carried out, he would be the first Venezuelan to be stripped of his nationality.
López insisted: “We agree to take all paths to get out of the dictatorship,” because in his opinion, Maduro stole last year’s presidential elections.
The founder of the political party Voluntad Popular reiterated what he says caused anger to Nicolás Maduro: “Yes, I agree with the deployment of the United States in the Caribbean against the Cartel of the Suns, a criminal organization that has infiltrated all the structures of the State and that for years has looted and oppressed our country,” he wrote in a x’s post the afternoon this Saturday, October 25.
US President Donald Trump stated this week that his government is preparing attacks against drug traffickers who operate on land and assured that they will hit them “very hard.” These actions were also supported by López and he reaffirmed: “Yes, I agree with the development of military actions in national territory aimed at dismantling the Cartel of the Suns and those who lead this criminal network that keeps Venezuela hostage.”
Leopoldo López assured that for having denounced the Cartel of the Suns in 2014, he was unjustly sentenced to 14 years in prison.
Thirdly, the opponent expressed his agreement with “doing everything necessary – always in a legitimate, peaceful and constitutional manner – to end the dictatorship of Nicolás Maduro and move towards a democratic transition led by the legitimate and elected president, Edmundo González”, together with the leader of the opposition, María Corina Machado and millions of Venezuelans.
López recalled that the Constitution establishes that no citizen born in the country can have his nationality taken away and pointed out that Venezuelans not born in Venezuela may have their nationality revoked: “So we can take away the nationality of the dictator Nicolás Maduro, born in Colombia. But that will be a detail that will be resolved when I leave power, very soon,” he wrote.
*Read also: Donald Trump warns that they will hit drug traffickers on the ground “very hard”
*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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