2024-08-16 14:59:28
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva took a tougher stance on the Venezuelan government on Friday, accusing it of “authoritarian bias” even though he believed the country was not living under a dictatorship. A “very unpleasant regime” indeed.
What Lula da Silva said
“I think Venezuela lives in a very unpleasant regime. I don’t think it’s a dictatorship. It’s a government with authoritarian biases, but I don’t think it’s a dictatorship,” Lula said, urging President Nicolas Maduro said the day after the election results were explained.
Lula says Maduro may hold new elections in Venezuela ‘if it makes sense’
“The opposition says they won the election, Maduro says he won too. What do I have to do to identify one of them? At least to know the authenticity of the numbers, where are the records of the ballot boxes? ” Lula Dashier Wa asked in an interview with Radio Gaucha on Friday.
Lula also expressed his disagreement with his party, the Workers’ Party (PT), after a note recognizing Maduro as the winner of the election. “I don’t agree, but I am not part of the leadership of the Workers’ Party. Venezuela’s problems will be solved by Venezuelans.
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The day before, Lula advocated caution and demanded “verified” results before Maduro is considered president-elect. “He knows he owes an explanation to society and the world,” he said in another interview, in which he also raised the possibility of holding new elections.
Lula also asked the opposition to provide evidence
Lula recalled on Friday that he had a conversation with Maduro before the election and expressed that the election must be held in a fully democratic manner, which the Venezuelan president made a commitment to.
“We sent observers there. Everything was normal. The opposition then said they won, Maduro said he won, but no one has proof. The opposition has to show the minutes to show the results. “Only if they show Only with evidence can I realize whether this is democratic,” he said.
The Brazilian president also criticized “the so-called ‘democratic’ world, such as the European Union and the United States”, which he believed did not act “correctly” in this political crisis, recalling that they had elected “such” countries .
“To prove the absurdity of this, Venezuela’s gold reserves in the UK, about 31 tons of gold, were given to Guaidó for safekeeping. He is not the president and is eager to punish and judge this matter,” he criticized.
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