“Venezuela’s Primaries Were a Mandate for Change”
“I insist that there’s a window here, and we must try to keep that window open, and hopefully turn it into a door.”
“I insist that there’s a window here, and we must try to keep that window open, and hopefully turn it into a door.”
Government spokeswoman Arleen Rodriguez formulated the questions in a way more to do with public relations management than journalism.
I don’t know Legna in person, that’s why I say I imagine her, although we have spoken on WhatsApp and this interview came about.
Edgar Gutierrez, Guatemala’s former foreign minister believes Bernardo Arevalo’s election is legitimate, but it’s caught “in the crossfire.”
By the end of an Israeli ground invasion, “you will see that we are standing exactly in the place that we stood one week ago.”
The government is sitting on a powder keg, Uriel Pineda warns, while Abrao insists: The spirit of democratic resistance must be maintained.
Ernesto Medina: “Incompetence and ineptitude: there are no students, they have no budget, and they cannot create a real university”.
He expressed his concern about the “enormous censorship” in literature, journalism or any area that raises a voice against the Ortega regime.
“I believe that Nicaraguans feel they’re in a box they can’t escape from, where there’s no option for how to change the country.”
Human Rights Watch official says the international community must “seek alternatives” to stop the impunity Ortega supporters operate with.