Currently, the diplomat is in exile in Madrid since the presidential elections of July 28. There, the National Electoral Council declared the winner Nicolás Maduro, but without publishing the disaggregated results. However, according to the tally sheets collected by the opposition, the winner was González.
“You don’t go to war with fear. “Somehow I’m going to travel to Venezuela to be sworn in on January 10,” He stated from a video conference he held from the Spanish capital.
In turn, called for “an orderly and concerted transition”although he acknowledged that “among those who control power there is no willingness to abide by the will of the citizens.”
“We require maximum support from the world’s democracies. Venezuela requires justice and democracy,” he said, while emphasizing: “I see myself assuming the position for which I was voted by the majority of Venezuelans.” In Venezuela, graffiti with the phrase “El 10E es ya” appeared on walls and streets in different cities.
María Corina Machado: “S“We know the risks we face.”
For his part, Machado, who was present at the videoconference, warned that “tremendously challenging and dangerous days are coming.”
“We know the risks we face and we have assumed them with the conviction that this fight has only one destiny: the freedom of Venezuela,” he added.
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Finally, he asked the Argentine president Javier Milei for “firmness” and asserted thatand “this is the time to act, it is not in January”since the change is not “subject to dates”.
“Anyone who maintains a position of indifference or equidistance is placing themselves on the side of the oppressor”he concluded.
Source: Ambito

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