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The European Union (EU) has announced new sanctions against Chavismo after its last attack on Parliament , the only democratic power that is not yet in the hands of the revolution. These are eight Bolivarian leaders and three "collaborators", with deputy Luis Parra at the helm. This leader, expelled from Primero Justicia (PJ), was imposed in January as a false head of the National Assembly (AN), in a military operation that counted on the connivance of Chavista deputies with the aim of seizing Juan Guaidó's legitimate presidency. .

Along with him also appear on the EU list the parliamentarians Franklyn Duarte and José Gregorio Noriega , who make up the fraudulent board of directors and, in turn, make up the group of "traitorous" deputies, expelled by the Democratic Unit after knowing their ties economic with Alex Saab. This Colombian millionaire, identified as figurehead of Nicolás Maduro and main international operator of Chavismo, remains imprisoned in Cape Verde while the United States fights for his extradition.

Three heavyweights from Chavismo appear among those punished, with comptroller Elvis Amoroso at the helm, one of the Bolivarian leaders closest personally to the presidential couple. The name of Brigadier General Jorge Márquez , at the head of the state telecommunications entity, has returned to the public fore in recent weeks with the intervention of DirecTV, a television operator belonging to the American AT&T. Márquez also chairs the Socialist Telecommunications Corporation.

The third in importance is Juan José Mendoza , magistrate of the Supreme Court of Justice (TSJ) and one of the architects of the judicial offensives against the democratic parties and the Parliament.

Prosecutors Farik Mora and Dinorah Bustamante , the military José Adelino Ornelas and the delegates of the Constituent Assembly Tania Díaz and Gladys Requena make up the rest of the sanctioned list for a total of 36 at four different times.

The first sanction against Chavismo in January 2018, which included the almighty Diosdado Cabello , number two of the revolution, provoked the anger of the president of the Constituent Assembly and the subsequent expulsion of the Spanish ambassador, Jesús Silva.

The second round of sanctions, which included Vice President Delcy Rodríguez , ended with a wake-up call to European diplomats in Caracas. And the third, in which those noted for the torture and murder of Captain Rafael Acosta at the headquarters of the General Counterintelligence Directorate (DGCIM), were accepted without major reaction from the revolutionary power.

The preparation of the last list began after the assault on Parliament in January. It has taken European officials several months to reach consensus among the 27 countries. The sanctioned cannot travel to Europe and their assets on the continent will be frozen .

The sanctions come when the Bolivarian regime has shown its displeasure against Brussels in recent days. "The EU should go long into the reed, to put it mildly. Venezuela will make its elections, we do not care about the EU or a reed," Maduro said after the international complaint made in Europe when the imposition of a National Electoral Council was known. (CNE) with Chavista militants and renegade opponents and the intervention of opposition parties.

The government of the "son of Chávez" also accused Leopoldo López, a refugee at the Spanish Embassy, ​​over the weekend of being behind various operations against Maduro and taking advantage of his stay in the diplomatic legation.

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Know more

  • Venezuela
  • European Union
  • Nicolás Maduro
  • Leopoldo López
  • Juan Guaidó
  • Spain

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