Venezuelan opposition leader Edmundo González has landed in Guatemala, four days after the inauguration of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro to a third term
Dozens of Venezuelans gathered on Thursday in Guatemala to protest against the expected inauguration of Nicolas Maduro for a third term and to show solidarity with opposition leaders. Waving Venezuelan flags and holding candles,
Mexico, Colombia and Brazil are all pushing back on Trump's deportation of migrants in handcuffs or on military planes.
Guatemala.- Venezuelan opposition leader Edmundo González Urrutia, who asserts victory in the disputed July 2024 presidential election, arrived in Guatemala on Tuesday as part of a broader tour seeking international backing for his return to Venezuela.
Edmundo Gonzalez, Venezuelan opposition leader, arrives in Guatemala days after Nicolas Maduro's inauguration. Key meeting with President Arevalo planned.
Venezuela’s president-elect speaks on the need for global pressure against the Maduro regime and the Trump administration's approach to the crisis.
The director of WOLA’s Venezuela Program, Laura Dib, joins the podcast to discuss the political, human rights, and diplomatic reality following Nicolás Maduro’s January 10 inauguration. Maduro’s new term begins amid severe tensions,
The legitimate President of Venezuela, Edmundo González Urrutia, was received in Guatemala by Dionisio Gutiérrez, President of the Liberty and Development Foundation. The meeting took place at Dr. Gutiérrez's residence in Guatemala City,
GUATEMALA CITY — Venezuelan opposition leader ... had promised to return to Venezuela to take office. But last Friday, when Maduro was sworn in, he called it off saying the necessary security ...
Restrictions on diplomats In a recent escalation of diplomatic tensions, Venezuela has implemented restrictions on Dutch, French, and Italian diplomats, linking these actions to their alleged "hostile actions" against the Venezuelan government and purported support for extremist groups.
In Mexico City, some migrants have built tent cities and slept on the streets. In a country long sympathetic to migrants, neighbors are protesting.
The Trump administration won’t be able to remove every undocumented migrant inside the United States, and the success of its promised mass deportation plan is "going to be based on what Congress gives us," the administration’s new "border czar" Tom Homan told ABC News.