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Venezuelan Opposition Leader Edmundo Gonzalez Leaves Country for Spain Amid Election Uncertainty
Venezuelan opposition leader Edmundo González Urrutia has left the country and sought asylum in Spain. The move comes after a disputed presidential election on July 28, in which incumbent Nicolas Maduro was declared the winner by the country's electoral authority. However, the opposition claimed that González had won by a comfortable margin, citing tens of thousands of tallies published by the opposition. González had been in hiding for a month, ignoring three successive summons from the authorities. The Venezuelan government had filed a warrant for his arrest, but González was able to leave the country on a Spanish air force plane, with the agreement of the Venezuelan government. Spain's foreign minister stated that the government is committed to the political rights and physical integrity of all Venezuelans.
The government of Spain is committed to the political rights of all Venezuelans.
Spain's doors to a sister country like Venezuela will always be open, just as the doors of the Spanish embassy residence have been to Edmundo González.
EU will maintain its support of the Venezuelan people in their democratic aspirations.
Venezuelans voted for change. Maduro's post-election repression has killed or jailed thousands, and winning candidate @EdmundoGU remains the best hope for democracy.
There is an absolute fracture in that extremist opposition.
That is not the peace that we Venezuelans want. There was a [voting] result that was violated by Maduro and the [national electoral council] and we have to continue fighting so that the victory of [González] is respected, no matter where he is.
The important thing is that he was elected, that his election was proven and that popular sovereignty must be respected.
My departure from Caracas was surrounded by episodes of pressure, coercion and threats that I wouldn't be allowed to leave.
I trust that we will soon continue our fight to achieve our freedom and the restoration of Venezuela's democracy.
Let this be very clear to everyone: Edmundo will fight from outside alongside our diaspora.
It's up to you to decide if you want to continue your career, with your family in Venezuela.
When it's my turn to hand over power, I'll hand it over to a Chavist, Bolivarian and revolutionary president.
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sources
- 1.DW News
- 2.The Times of India
- 3.The Washington Post
- 4.CNN
- 5.CNA News
- 6.BBC
- 7.Al Jazeera
- 8.The New York Times
- 9.Le Monde
- 10.The Guardian
- 11.CTV News
- 12.France 24
perspectives
- 1.US Foreign Policy
- 2.Election
- 3.Protests
- 4.Authoritarianism
- 5.Electoral Fraud
- 6.Sabotage
- 7.Power outage
- 8.Venezuela under Maduro
- 9.Spanish Foreign Policy
countries
- 1.Argentina
- 2.Belgium
- 3.Bolivia, Plurinational State of
- 4.Brazil
- 5.China
- 6.Colombia
- 7.Dominican Republic
- 8.Algeria
- 9.Spain
- 10.United Kingdom
- 11.North Macedonia
- 12.Mexico
organizations
- 1.National Election Commission
- 2.European Union
- 3.Spanish Air Force
- 4.Instagram
- 5.Spanish Embassy
- 6.Argentine Embassy
- 7.Democratic Unitary Platform
- 8.Twitter/X
- 9.Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project
- 10.Carter Center
- 11.Chavista Government
- 12.European Commission
persons
- 1.Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia
- 2.Nicolás Maduro
- 3.María Corina Machado
- 4.Jose Manuel Albares
- 5.Delcy Rodriguez
- 6.Pedro Sánchez
- 7.Jose Vicente Haro
- 8.Josep Borrell
- 9.Franco Casella
- 10.Genevieve Glatsky
- 11.Joel Garcia
- 12.Juan Pablo Guanipa