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Vice Chancellor Rander Peña criticized interventionist statements by the presidents of Chile and Paraguay

Venezuela's Deputy Minister for Latin America, Rander Peña
Internet

Published at: 24/09/2024 11:06 PM

This Tuesday, September 24, the Deputy Minister for Latin America of Venezuela, Rander Peña, criticized the interventionist statements against the Bolivarian nation of Presidents Gabriel Boric and Santiago Peña, of Chile and Paraguay, respectively, during the 79th General Assembly of the United Nations (UN).

In his account on the social network Telegram, he stated that “as a young, Latin American and leftist, I tell Boric that: The oppressor would not be as strong if he did not have accomplices among the oppressed themselves.”

“You betrayed and used the Chilean people, presenting yourself as a left-wing and popular option, and you ended up submissively dragging yourself to the Pinochetist right, begging them for clemency and forgiveness in exchange for your subservient voice obedient to fascism. You have robbed your people of hope,” he emphasized.

Peña said that “throughout these years of popular struggle we have seen characters like you, who seek notoriety end up being part of the club of losers, at the end of the day you will be remembered for what you are a coward as a subject, a failure in politics and a despised by those who knew you, you will be left alone with your Boric conscience, which is quite damaged”.

He also recalled young Chileans who lost their eyes at the hands of police officers acting under the orders of former president (Sebastián) Piñera, and emphasized that Boric “is on his right.”

“You will never be anywhere close to having the moral and political strength that the Bolivarian Revolution possesses. You're just a blink in history, an attempt at president and you'll be a bad memory for your people,” he said.

He said that “you can't stand your eyes fixed on Pdte. Nicolás Maduro, you have no morals, you have a long way to go. Wash your mouth before talking about Venezuela and our people.”

On the other hand, Peña also faced the infamous statements of the Paraguayan president, who he said is “the representative of the most corrupt system in Latin America.”

“He lacks the courage to maintain an independent foreign policy; they handed him the script of what he had to say about Venezuela and he said it,” he argued.

He criticized that Santiago Peña “uses the cliché of wanting to interfere in external affairs to divert attention from his internal affairs; a totally predictable classic for weak, fragile governments without their own identity.”

He also recalled that the Paraguayan political system “is plagued by issues related to drug trafficking, organized crime and corruption,” so the president of that country “is more than morally unable to even pronounce the name of Venezuela.”

“We know that acting wisely is difficult for you, but we think you can do a better job,” he lashed out.

Mazo News Team