In the early hours of this Monday, the National Electoral Council proclaimed the winner of Venezuela’s elections a Nicolas Maduro with 51.2% of the votes. However, the Organization of American States has assured this Tuesday that There was an “aberrant manipulation” carried out by the Venezuelan authorities and asking the country’s president to accept “his electoral defeat.” In the last few hours there have been large protests by those citizens who do not agree with the president’s re-election, and there have even been numerous deaths.
Protests in Venezuela over Maduro’s victory: the opposition says it has evidence of a vote fraud
Meanwhile, many politicians from other countries have spoken out on the matter, one of them Irene Montero, who gave her opinion through her ‘X’ accountThe former Minister of Equality of the Government of Spain said that the Venezuelan people have elected Nicolás Maduro as president and that the International Community and international observers should “guarantee respect for the results everywhere inside and outside the country.” “The right must understand that democracy is also respected when it loses,” concluded his public message.
David Bisbal’s wife, who was born and raised in Venezuelahas used her social networks to publicly respond to Irene Montero’s message about the current situation in her country. “I don’t think you would want a Spain like Venezuela right now, or maybe you would? “It would be a real shame and horror if that were to happen. Whether it’s right or left, a dictatorship is a dictatorship,” the model began by saying.
Rosanna Zanetti’s response to Irene MonteroINSTAGRAM
Zanetti added that, in his opinion, “it is clear that dictatorships evolve, they try to legitimize themselves with fraudulent and manipulated results so that they are not perceived internationally as what they are.” “These people have changed the laws and have been in power for 25 years, kidnapping the country. What do you call it when you have hundreds of political prisoners, they change laws to perpetuate themselves in power, when there is no freedom of expression, media outlets closed and censored for thinking differently, when you have bought the international electoral system, the judicial power and the armed forces that instead of protecting the people, oppress and kill them? Our voice, hearts and prayers are with Venezuela,” he concluded by writing in a message that he wanted to make public.
This is not the first time that Rosanna Zanetti has spoken about the delicate situation in her country. In 2016, the model shared a video on her Instagram account talking about what was happening in the place where part of her family still lives. “There is no medicine, there is no food, there is no security. Many people don’t know that I was born eight years ago I suffered an express kidnapping and it was the worst four hours of my entire life“, he commented at the time through his social networks.