• Wide angle Latin America: the left breaks ranks in search of an alternative to the Bolivarian axis

  • Venezuela Suspended the extradition of Ernesto Quintero, the Venezuelan who applied for asylum in Spain and who was to be handed over to Caracas tomorrow

"This is not over, they are going to continue attacking us"

.

Miguel Henrique Otero, editor-president of El Nacional, already warned EL MUNDO a few hours after learning that a Chavista judge had handed over the headquarters of the emblematic newspaper El Nacional to Diosdado Cabello,

number two

of the revolution.

The also vice president of the party took advantage of his television pulpit "With the mallet giving" to respond this week to Otero's words.

"With the value of El Nacional you did not pay me.

Now it provokes me to go for the (web) page because you owe me

," threatened Cabello, who said he was not satisfied with the "moral compensation" of 13 million dollars issued by the Court. Supreme Court of Justice of Venezuela (TSJ), Bolivarian hammer against the democratic opposition.

"You are provoking me to go a step further," boasted the revolutionary leader.

Said and done, only possible in revolution with the orders of its hierarchs: the website of El Nacional, the most read in Venezuela with 21 million unique visits per month and the most influential,

has suffered since then the digital bombardment of Chavismo.

"We already have a partial blockade.

This is an intermittent blockade, they have already knocked down half of our traffic

," Jorge Makriniotis, general manager of El Nacional, confirmed yesterday to EL MUNDO.

Even changing the DNS (Domain Name System) also makes access impossible, forcing its users to use a VPN (Virtual Private Network).

According to the newspaper itself, the blockade comes from providers in the country such as Cantv (state telecommunications company) and the private companies Movistar, Digitel and Inter.

The "judicial robbery" and

the new digital onslaught of the Bolivarian government make up the penultimate chapter of the expropriation

launched by Cabello, who took advantage of a news article published in the newspaper, which in turn included information from the Spanish newspaper ABC, about the investigation who is followed in the US for drug trafficking.

"Based on this investigation, the DEA (US Drug Enforcement Agency)

established a reward of 10 million dollars

for those who collaborate in the capture of Cabello," the newspaper recalled.

The attack against one of the most emblematic newspapers in Latin America occurs

only days after a new digital attack by Chavismo against other independent media

, such as El Pitazo, Tal Cual and Cocuyo Effect.

The communicational hegemony of the revolution mixes the purchase of media, through Bolivian millionaires, with censorship strategies and forced self-censorship on television, radio and

online

.

Paper is today a cemetery of dinosaurs tamed by the Bolivarian power.

Amnesty International and the Penal Forum have investigated for a year the effectiveness of the threats that Cabello makes from her television program.

The result is illuminating:

almost half of the public stigmatization of Chavismo is carried out in "Con el mazo giving"

and of these, 77% become forced arrests, one of the crimes against humanity investigated by the Court's Prosecutor's Office International Criminal Court (CPI).

Conforms to The Trust Project criteria

Know more

  • Venezuela

  • Nicholas Maduro

On the recordJuan Guaidó, president in charge of Venezuela: "Nicolás Maduro is a caricature of a dictator"

CrisisRussian boots on Venezuelan soil

VenezuelaNicolás Maduro assures that he will remain in power until 2030 so that the revolution is "irreversible"

See links of interest

  • Last News

  • Translator

  • Work calendar 2022

  • how to

  • Rayo Vallecano - Osasuna

  • Atletico Madrid - Getafe

  • Alaves - Valencia CF

  • Levante - Real Betis

  • Real Sociedad - Granada CF