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Chavismo has made Juan José Márquez , uncle of Juan Guaidó, his political prisoner of gold . Judge Elffy Vicente issued this morning custodial measures against one of the relatives closest to the president in charge, under the accusation that he was carrying explosive material when landing in Caracas with his nephew.

Márquez, a civil pilot, has been held in one of the "hells" of the revolution: the Caracas headquarters of the General Directorate of Military Counterintelligence (DGCIM), a torture center where Captain Rafael Acosta was murdered last year and in the that the military captured by Chavism are mistreated. Guaido's uncle is not military .

"Márquez was sown with a powder of unknown substance in the lanterns he carried for his profession to show that he had an explosive. He traveled from the US to Portugal to meet his nephew and come to Caracas together," explained his defense lawyer, Joel Garcia .

The prosecution in court copied the arguments given hours before by Diosdado Cabello, leader of the Bolivarian hard wing, in his television show 'With the mallet giving'.

"A man who claims to be an uncle of Juanito Alimaña [Guaidó] was arrested. This man brought very dangerous material into the plane, violated civil aviation standards , entered a flight with a bulletproof vest. He brought tactical flashlights which inside there were explosive substances, C4 [powerful plastic explosive]. What else did he bring? An Israeli manual, a flash drive with some files and the contact of someone from the secret service on his phone, "argued Cabello, president of the Constituent Assembly, the body revolutionary imposed by Nicolás Maduro to snatch his functions from Parliament.

On the USB device, "[Marquez] had a document in English that I am not authorized to show. This document talked about operations against Venezuela," said Cabello.

Nicolás Maduro greets Diosdado Cabello.EFE

"Diosdado invented a soap opera with C-4," deputy Adriana Pichardo protested after hearing the accusations. According to the Bolivarian assembly, Márquez would have traveled with the explosives from the US to Portugal and then boarded the TAP plane, with his nephew and with such dangerous material, knowing that in Caracas they were waiting for a reception in style. All this despite the iron controls both in the US and in Europe .

Chavista mobs, led by a colonel accused of torture in the International Criminal Court of The Hague and composed mostly of leaders of the revolution, tried to lynch Guaidó at the airport. The legitimate president of Parliament received punches, kicks and elbows in a violent coven in which a dozen journalists were also injured. The attackers pretended that there was no record of the attack, beyond what was recorded by the Bolivarian propaganda organs to sell that it was an "inflamed town."

"I hold you responsible, usurper Nicolás Maduro, and each one of your minions of what happens to Juan José Márquez, an honest and brave man who knows as nobody the value of this fight and whose only problem is to worry about his family," he cried Guaidó before knowing the court order.

Chavismo has increased even more if there is pressure against the president in charge on his return to the country. "This is the right thing to do," Cabello boasted when he showed the Guaidó identity card, broken by the immigration police who took it away at the airport. "What the Conviasa workers did must be done everywhere," added the retired military, in relation to the beating received by the opposition leader and by journalists.

Chavismo transferred to the airport in several buses the members of the violent mob, a Bolivarian copy of the repudiation meetings so common in Cuba. Leaders of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), community chiefs, government employees and trade unionists of the Conviasa airline, sanctioned by the US, made up the mob, which acted with the total collusion of the military present at the facilities.

"They were not journalists, they were agents of the Empire," said Cabello.

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  • Nicolás Maduro
  • Juan Guaidó
  • Venezuela
  • Venezuela Elections

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