President Nicolás Maduro to Noboa: If you mess with Venezuela, you will dry up

The interference incurred by the Ecuadorian president, Daniel Noboa, by referring to “concerns for Venezuela” and meddling in its political processes in a shameless manner was denounced this Wednesday by the president of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro.

From the solemn session of Opening of Judicial Activities, corresponding to 2024, at the Supreme Court of Justice (TSJ), the Venezuelan president emphasized that the concern of the Ecuadorian ruler should be oriented towards his own country and not towards Venezuela:

You have to be worried about your (own) country, Noboa, you who do not govern your country, you who came to open the doors to the Southern Command, to the devil. I don’t know you Noboa, you are very young, you are threatening Venezuela from Ecuador. I only tell you: Do not open the doors of your country to the devil,” he urged.

President Nicolás Maduro insisted when he invited him to think carefully when it comes to messing with Venezuela: “Think carefully when you are going to mess with Venezuela. Noboa, look at me in the eyes, because whoever messes with Venezuela dries up, and you’re going to dry up, stops messing with us, do worry about your country, you have a mess and you don’t know what to do.

Victories of the Constitutional TSJ:

In his speech, the head of state also recounted many of the victories achieved by the Supreme Court of Justice. “This Supreme Constitutional Court today is more legitimate, more powerful than ever before, so they managed to defeat and pulverize all those unprecedented policies,” said the head of state when recalling the scenario in which an attempt was made to carry out a judicial coup in the country.

He recalled how an attempt was made to impose the parallel State, for which “the first step they (the oligarchy of surnames with the North American empire) took and to impose a destabilizing model, the first thing they did in an unconstitutional and illegal way was to try to name In this way, there is a lack and fictitious Supreme Court of Justice that they called “legitimate TSJ”.

Due to the resistance of the Constitutional TSJ, the Dignitary appreciated that this instance was planted in its institutional and moral strength, to demonstrate where the Supreme Court of Justice truly stood, recognized by all Venezuelans.