An opposition coalition in Venezuela called for Guaidó to be investigated for corruption

An opposition coalition in Venezuela called for Guaidó to be investigated for corruption

Guaidó managed to control those companies because both the United States and Colombia recognized him as the “interim president” of Venezuela when he was the head of the National Assembly and those countries and dozens of others were unaware of the elections in which President Nicolás Maduro was reelected in 2018 .

“The looting that these companies have perpetrated is notorious, public and communicational, using the needs of the Venezuelan people as bait,” the opposition alliance explained on Twitter, which, unlike the force of Guaidó and other anti-Chavistas, did decide to participate in the latter Parliamentary election.

“They have manipulated and swindled in their good faith some countries of the international community that allowed them attributions that do not correspond to them, because they do not have legal endorsement nor are they within the framework of our National Constitution,” the coalition continued.

And he said: “We want to make it clear to the country and the international community that the legal responsibility with respect to the embezzlement of the nation must fall on those who fraudulently formed a self-styled interim government.”

“However,” he added, “we do not accept under any circumstances the strategy of some of those who make up this farce, to distance themselves from this, 30 months after having been participating and benefiting from the economic dividends obtained for that purpose.”

The message from the opposition coalition also included a request for the Maduro government.

He demanded that he review the disqualifications of opposition political parties “since the performance of some characters in the November 21 elections could put the electoral process into question,” in reference to the upcoming regional elections.

For this reason, Alianza Democrática demanded an “exhaustive investigation” of all these complaints and “if evidence of looting of the nation is found, we ask that justice be administered in an impartial manner where appropriate.”

As an example of these complaints, the letter mentioned the money raised in the so-called ‘cucutazo’, when the international community donated large sums and humanitarian aid as part of a concert in the Colombian border city of Cúcuta.

“The country was never held accountable for its use or abuse,” he denounced and cited a journalistic investigation carried out by the PanAm Post that argued that they were diverted, to, among other things, pay for the “Guaidó embassies.”

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