The Minister for Internal Affairs, Justice and Peace, Diosdado Cabello, said that the extremist opponents Carlos Vecchio, David Smolansky, Juan Guaidó, Leopoldo López and Julio Borges are the ones who lead a network of human trafficking on the border between Mexico and the United States:
“If the US wants to solve the migration issue, they have to go after the coyotes who do politics, have offices and hide them behind NGOs,” he said.
In a new podcast by Tania Díaz, broadcast by Venezolana de Televisión, she said that “They are criminals who take people. Vecchio, Smolansky, Juan Guaidó, Leopoldo López, Miguel Pizarro and Julio Borges are behind that network of coyotes.”
«It’s not that I’m going to go to the Darien from here in Venezuela and leave, no, no, if you go to the Darien and you’re not in contact with the coyotes, you don’t get in. The coyotes? (Carlos) Vecchio, (David) Smolansky, (Julio) Borges, (Leopoldo) Lopez, Juan Guaido, (Miguel) Pizarro and others,» he said, referring to the fact that migration is a business for those sectors of the extreme right wing.
For her part, the deputy to the National Assembly (AN), Tania Diaz, called on mothers not to let their children be manipulated by sectors of the right wing: «They are using your children as a weapon of war and it is important for the families to know this,» she said.
She also confirmed that the far right uses the issue of migration as a business. At the same time, was made a distinction between what is happening right now in Colombia and pointed out that Colombians are coming to Venezuela fleeing the war, while Venezuelans left for economic reasons as a result of the sanctions and blockade.
Álvaro Uribe protects the “Niño Guerrero” in Colombia:
On the other hand, he accused the former Colombian presidents, Álvaro Uribe Vélez and Iván Duque, of protecting the fugitive from Venezuelan justice, “El Niño Guerrero” and the rest of the “Tren de Aragua” (Aragua Train) crime gang in Colombia. The minister also reiterated that former presidents Álvaro Uribe and Iván Duque financed the “so-called trains.”