Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro stated on Thursday that Ecuador, from being the “most secure nation on the continent,” has turn out to be the nation with “probably the most crimes and insecurity,” for which he criticized his Ecuadorian counterpart, Daniel Noboa, whom he known as a “fascist” and a “massive wig.”
“Ecuador has gone from being the most secure nation on the continent to the nation with probably the most crimes and insecurity. Is that what you need for Venezuela? And who governs Ecuador? An enormous wig,” stated Maduro throughout an occasion along with his supporters in a city within the state of Aragua (north) as a part of his electoral marketing campaign, forward of the presidential elections on July 28.
The candidate for re-election warned his supporters that, on that day, the Caribbean nation will resolve whether or not to turn out to be a “homeland or a colony,” so – he assured – it’s not about “any resolution,” however one that can outline “the future of the following 50 years” of Venezuela.
“Both we’re a homeland or a colony, or fascists like (President Javier) Milei in Argentina or Noboa in Ecuador will arrive,” Maduro stated in the course of the occasion, broadcast by the state-run channel Venezolana de Televisión (VTV).
Final January, the Chavista chief stated that Noboa was “threatening Venezuela from Ecuador,” whose authorities then rejected the ratification, by the Venezuelan Supreme Court docket, of the political disqualification in opposition to opposition chief María Corina Machado, winner of the October primaries, who in the present day helps the candidacy of former ambassador Edmundo González Urrutia.
Maduro additionally stated Thursday that the nation will resolve “battle or peace” on July 28, during which he’ll compete in opposition to 9 candidates from completely different opposition sectors and search a 3rd consecutive time period.
The presidential marketing campaign accomplished its first week on Thursday, full of mass rallies, accusations of opportunism and alleged plans for violence, with Maduro and González Urrutia on the centre of the diatribes. EFE
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