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Khaleda Zia, a dominant figure in Bangladesh’s politics for four decades and leader of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), died on Tuesday in Dhaka at the age of 80, bringing to a close the long and bitter rivalry with Sheikh Hasina that shaped the country’s political life.

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Zia died at 6:00 a.m. local time (00:00 GMT) at Evercare Hospital, where she was receiving treatment from an international medical team. Her health had steadily declined after years marked by cirrhosis, diabetes and prolonged confinement. Her death comes one year and four months after the collapse of the government led by Hasina, and five days after her son and political heir, Tarique Rahman, returned from exile.

She died free and cleared by the courts, though physically weakened by years of imprisonment. Zia’s political career began abruptly after the assassination of her husband, General and President Ziaur Rahman, in 1981. She stepped into the leadership of the BNP and emerged as a central figure in street protests against the military dictatorship of H.M. Ershad. Her reputation for defiance was cemented in 1987, when she challenged a military curfew and declared, “I am ready to die.”

Deeply saddened to learn about the passing away of former Prime Minister and BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia in Dhaka.

Our sincerest condolences to her family and all the people of Bangladesh. May the Almighty grant her family the fortitude to bear this tragic loss.

As the… pic.twitter.com/BLg6K52vak

— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) December 30, 2025

That posture carried her to power in 1991, when she became the first woman to serve as prime minister of Bangladesh. Her government expanded free education for girls and advanced economic liberalization policies that reshaped the country’s labor demographics. At the same time, her tenure deepened political polarization.

In 2001, Zia returned to office at the head of a coalition that included the Islamist party Jamaat-e-Islami, securing a large parliamentary majority while drawing criticism abroad for empowering religious radicalism. Allegations of widespread corruption within her inner circle followed, focusing on the political office known as Hawa Bhaban, from which her son Tarique was accused of operating a “parallel government.” These accusations later became the basis of judicial cases against her.

Her exit from power in 2006 marked the start of a sustained decline. After months of street violence and an army-backed emergency administration, Zia suffered a decisive defeat in the 2008 elections to Hasina’s Awami League. The BNP’s decision to boycott the 2014 elections left the party outside parliament and exposed Zia to renewed corruption prosecutions that resulted in her conviction.

Bangladesh's former prime minister Khaleda Zia, who many believed would sweep elections next year to lead her country once again, died on Tuesday aged 80, her Bangladesh Nationalist Party said.https://t.co/Ki6tLDnlT9 pic.twitter.com/aY7RkhVsWt

— AFP News Agency (@AFP) December 30, 2025

Imprisoned in 2018 in an abandoned colonial-era jail, Zia became a symbol of passive resistance as her health deteriorated. She repeatedly rejected government proposals that would have allowed her release in exchange for exile in London. “I have nowhere to go. This is my country and here I will die,” she told those close to her during the most critical moments of her detention.

Her refusal to leave the country sustained her political standing until the 2024 student uprising. After her release, in her final public appearance, Zia called for restraint toward her political opponents, saying, “No to destruction, no to revenge. Let us build a society based on peace.”

Khaleda Zia leaves a Bangladesh in transition, approaching national elections scheduled for 2026, and a political legacy that defined the country’s nationalist identity and decades of confrontation at the highest levels of power.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

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Dozens of businesses were destroyed on Monday by a fire at a densely populated market in San Pedro Sula, Honduras’ second-largest city, after flames broke out in a stall storing fireworks, according to preliminary reports from the Fire Department.

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Firefighters said the blaze originated in a business that kept rockets and firecrackers, allowing the fire to spread rapidly through the market. An officer participating in the firefighting operations told reporters, “Fireworks should never have been stored here in the market; look at the tragedy that has just occurred. Many families will be left on the street before the end of the year. This is lamentable.”

The same source said that many vendors have failed to comply with Fire Department orders prohibiting the storage of hazardous products such as gunpowder-based items. Authorities said the total number of businesses affected by the fire has not yet been determined.

Fire officials also reported repeated resistance during safety inspections. According to the officer, when authorities have carried out checks in markets to verify compliance with safety measures, some business owners “have even pulled machetes on authorities when they were asked not to keep gunpowder, to prevent this type of incident.”

🤝🔥 #LoÚltimo | Sampedranos se unen para salvar lo rescatable de los negocios que fueron consumidos por las llamas, tras el incendio que afectó más de 100 locales en SPS

Entre cenizas y pérdidas, la ayuda ciudadana se hace presente en la zona, mientras el Cuerpo de Bomberos… pic.twitter.com/fxolf6Eyc5

— Diario La Prensa (@DiarioLaPrensa) December 30, 2025

Preliminary information indicates that the fire spread across businesses located on a site of approximately 10,000 square meters. Firefighters stressed that authorities should apply stricter oversight of vendors who sell fireworks and firecrackers in popular markets.

After the fire was reported, Honduras’ president-elect, Nasry ‘Tito’ Asfura, announced that he would donate 1.5 million lempiras, about 56,818 U.S. dollars, to support those affected. “We will be watching over them, including the injured,” Asfura said in statements to the television channel Hable Como Habla (HCH) in Tegucigalpa.

Asfura urged affected merchants to “organize themselves” to facilitate the delivery of the funds and ensure their distribution “is fair.” “These are my own resources to serve the people,” he added. Asfura won the presidency under the banner of the conservative National Party.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

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By Misión Verdad  –  Dec 29, 2025

The maximum pressure operation launched by the Trump administration against Venezuela—centered in the Caribbean during the last quarter of 2025—is a strategic failure and a comprehensive defeat: diplomatically, militarily, legally, and symbolically.

What began as a multisectoral offensive to fracture the Venezuelan state and force a regime change in favor of its economic subordination has resulted in a crisis of legitimacy for Washington, a consolidation of a certain degree of regional and global resistance, and the exposure of criminal practices that threaten to destabilize the US power apparatus from within.

The offensive and its components: military coercion, false narrative, extrajudicial lethality
The strategy was deployed on three intertwined fronts, under the premise of US exceptionalism and the permanent invocation of an alleged “existential emergency.”

In military terms, tens of thousands of troops were concentrated in the Caribbean Basin—the largest presence since the Cold War. Operation Southern Spear was presented as a “humanitarian mission” by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

However, the contrast between the rhetorical facade and the operational practice is abysmal: without verification processes, gradual warnings, or captures, the US Armed Forces have carried out over 20 airstrikes against small boats allegedly linked to drug trafficking. These strikes have left a toll of over 100 civilians dead—among them Venezuelan, Colombian, and Trinidadian fishermen and crew members—in just four months.

The total absence of military courts, proportionality reviews, or accountability mechanisms turns each operation into an act of extrajudicial execution.

This pattern is not accidental; it is rooted in an institutional architecture that, as Parker Yesko’s research demonstrates, has normalized systematic impunity since Iraq and Afghanistan.

To give just one example: The September 2 strike—where two survivors, already out of action and clinging to the wreckage of their boat, were killed in the water—was not an operational deviation, but the materialization of a deliberate policy. Former military legal advisors (JAGs) have denounced orders such as “leave no survivors,” issued or validated by Hegseth. Under Title 18, §2441 of the US Code, these actions constitute conduct that can be classified as a war crime.

The Pentagon’s refusal to release the full video of that attack, despite having already released over 20 edited clips, reinforces the hypothesis that this is not a tactical failure, but a deliberate concealment strategy, where illegal violence is the central instrument of geopolitical control.

Geopolitical costs: hemispheric isolation and multipolar counterweight
Far from isolating Venezuela, the escalation has produced an unprecedented convergence in Latin America. Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico—three actors with divergent political agendas and historically tense relations with Caracas—have clearly condemned the military deployment.

Brazilian President Lula described it as a threat to regional peace, and Colombian President Petro suspended intelligence cooperation and condemned the attacks as assassinations. Meanwhile, Mexico demanded an immediate end to all armed pressure.

This regional triangulation does not respond to ideological affinities but to a shared perception of strategic risk. The US operation threatens Venezuelan sovereignty and undermines the principle of nonintervention that has sustained the South American security architecture since the Santiago Declaration (1986) and the Treaty of Tlatelolco.

The impact transcends the hemisphere. Russia and China have reaffirmed their support for Venezuela as part of a structural dispute over the configuration of the world order.

Speaking at the Security Council, Russian UN Ambassador Nebenzya condemned “unprecedented pressure” and warned that any attack would be an “irreparable mistake.” Meanwhile, Beijing insisted that Venezuela’s internal affairs should be resolved without sanctions or intervention.

This convergence is not circumstantial; it reflects the consolidation of a multipolar axis that offers alternative financial, energy, and diplomatic routes to unilateral dependence on Washington.

In this context, the Caribbean offensive not only fails to isolate Venezuela but accelerates its integration into value chains and alliances that erode US hegemony in the Global South. This is a strategic paradox that underlines the blindness of imperial planning.

Political costs: institutional breakdown and erosion of consensus
The operation has generated a governance crisis within the United States, fueling an institutional conflict that transcends partisan polarization. The bipartisan Congress has questioned the legality and transparency of the operations. A clause in the National Defense Authorization Act withholds part of the Pentagon’s budget until the full video of the September 2 attack is released. The measure was approved with 77 votes in favor and only 20 against, demonstrating widespread rejection.

Even senators like Lindsey Graham, a longtime advocate of armed intervention, implicitly acknowledged the overtly military nature of the operation by comparing it to the 1989 invasion of Panama. Meanwhile, Rand Paul condemned the violation of due process, and Chris Van Hollen called the second attack a “very likely war crime.”

These criticisms are not due to a sudden “humanist turn” but to a logic of internal dispute. In a context of deep fragmentation of the Republican Party—between MAGA, neoconservatives, and moderates—and with a presidential approval rating at historic lows (36%), the operation in the Caribbean has become a symbolic battleground.

As Senator Chris Murphy pointed out, the briefing given by Hegseth and Rubio lasted barely 50 minutes, with little time for questions and no clarity on the ultimate goal—to overthrow Maduro, to control the oil, or both. This exposes a strategic vacuum that undermines even the internal coherence of the executive branch.

The militarization of foreign policy, far from consolidating support, has generated an institutional boomerang effect. Each escalation increases the risk of litigation, formal investigations, and legislative obstacles that threaten to paralyze the White House’s energy, budgetary, and sanctions agenda.

Failure to achieve the core objectives: there is no surrender, no fracture, no subordination
The stated and underlying objectives of the US operation have not only failed to materialize but have actually backfired. The “psychological pressure” exerted against the Venezuelan Armed Force (FANB) and political leadership has not created fractures. On the contrary, it has strengthened institutional cohesion and the government’s internal legitimacy.

Maduro remains in power with significant popular support, evidenced in the recent regional and municipal elections, and with a growing capacity for diplomatic projection.

Trump’s rhetorical openness to “dialogue” in November, which disappeared in December (we will see soon in January), was not a sign of a willingness to understand but a tacit recognition of stalemate. When coercion does not produce surrender, the language of dialogue is instrumentalized as a last tactical resource to reposition oneself without de-escalating.

In economic terms, the “maximum pressure” strategy has also failed to achieve its central objective: control over strategic resources. Although Washington has seized oil tankers carrying millions of barrels of crude, this does not alter Venezuela’s ownership structure or energy sovereignty.

The US corporations, such as ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips, have not returned to Venezuela, and any future negotiations will necessarily have to go through the current government.

Trump’s admission: “They took all our oil… We want it back”—is not bravado, but desperation. It is a confession that the strategy of strangulation has not generated concessions, and that the only possible way is the direct recognition of the interlocutor that was intended to be eliminated.

In that sense, the operation has achieved exactly the opposite of its intention. It has not weakened Venezuela, but has forced the US to confront it as a sovereign power on an equal footing—a symbolic defeat of the first order.

The symptom of a decline
This disaster is structural, not circumstantial. It reflects the collapse of a strategy based on unilateralism, blackmail, and legalized piracy—a strategy that no longer resonates even with Washington’s traditional allies.

Yesko’s investigation into war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan demonstrates that systematic impunity is an entrenched pattern. What is new is that, today, the pattern is being broken in real time, with public condemnations, leaks, and demands for accountability from within the system.

Russia Reaffirms Unwavering Support for Venezuela Amid US Imperialist Aggression

The difference lies not in the violence—which remains brutal—but in the world’s ability to name it, document it, and resist it.

Trump’s crude verbalization on December 16—”give back our oil, our land, our assets”—is no minor provocation. It is the brutal transparency of an imperial doctrine that no longer needs to pretend.

However, this frankness is not a sign of strength, but narrative exhaustion. When the story of the “fight against narcoterrorism” fades in the face of the evidence of hundreds of murdered civilians, all that remains is the naked confession of recolonization.

The problem is that the world no longer accepts that script. What the US has achieved is not the subjugation of Venezuela, but the construction of a new balance of power: a more sovereign region (for the time being), a more cohesive Global South, and an empire that, by exposing its war crimes as a tactic, has shed its last mask of moral exceptionalism.

The US disaster in the Caribbean is evidence that the era of unipolar hegemony has entered its terminal phase.

(Misión Verdad)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/JRE/SF


From Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond via This RSS Feed.

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Caracas, December 30, 2025 (venezuelanalysis.com) – The United States’ Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has reportedly bombed a target inside Venezuelan territory.

According to CNN, citing “sources familiar with the matter,” the CIA carried out a drone strike against a “remote dock on the Venezuelan.” US officials allegedly believed the facility was being used for drug storage and shipping.

There was reportedly no one present on site during the attack, which is only specified to have taken place “earlier this month.” A New York Times report, likewise relying on anonymous sources, presented similar claims and added that the strike took place last Wednesday.

US President Donald Trump first alluded to a purported strike inside Venezuelan territory during an interview on Friday, claiming that US forces had destroyed a “big facility where ships come from” two days earlier.

Trump elaborated on a Monday press conference, adding that the site was along the Venezuelan shore and that there was a “big explosion in the dock area where they load the boats up with drugs.”

US agencies have not confirmed the attack, with the CIA, the White House and the Pentagon refusing comment. Analysts relying on open source data tracked no signs of an explosion on the Venezuelan coast in recent days.

For its part, Venezuelan authorities have not released any statements on the matter.

If confirmed, the land strikes would mark a significant escalation in the US’ military campaign against Venezuela. Since August, the Trump administration has amassed the largest build-up in decades in the Caribbean and launched dozens of strikes against small boats accused of narcotics trafficking, killing over 100 civilians in the process.

Trump has repeatedly vowed to bomb purported drug targets inside Venezuelan territory while escalating regime change threats against the Nicolás Maduro government. The White House allegedly approved lethal CIA operations in the country in October.

Despite recurrent “narcoterrorism” accusations against Maduro and other high-ranking Venezuelan officials, Washington has not provided court-tested evidence to back the claims. Specialized agencies have consistently shown Venezuela to play a marginal role in global drug trafficking.

In recent weeks, Trump has turned his discourse toward Venezuelan oil, claiming that the Caribbean nation had “stolen” oil rights from US corporations during nationalization processes in the 2000s and 1970s.

The US president ordered a naval blockade against Venezuelan oil exports, with US forces seizing two oil tankers carrying Venezuelan crude in international waters earlier this month. A third vessel reportedly refused to be boarded and headed toward the Atlantic Ocean. According to Reuters, US forces have been ordered to enforce a “quarantine” of Venezuelan oil in the next two months in order to exacerbate the South American country’s economic struggles.

A group of UN experts issued a statement on December 24 condemning the US’ maritime blockade as “violating fundamental rules of international law.”

“The illegal use of force, and threats to use further force at sea and on land, gravely endanger the human right to life and other rights in Venezuela and the region,” the experts affirmed, while urging UN member-states to take measures to stop the blockade and the vessel bombings.

The attempted blockade builds on widespread US economic sanctions, particularly targeting the Venezuelan oil industry, the country’s most important revenue source. US coercive measures have been classified as “collective punishment” and found responsible for tens of thousands of civilian deaths.

For its part, the Maduro government has condemned US “acts of piracy” in capturing oil tankers and blasted the Trump administration’s actions as blatant attempts to seize Venezuela’s natural resources.

Caracas has received diplomatic backing from its main allies, with China and Russia both condemning Washington’s military escalations as violations of international law. However, a recent UN Security Council meeting convened by Venezuela produced no resolutions.

The post CIA Claimed to Have Launched Strike on “Remote Dock” on Venezuelan Coast appeared first on Venezuelanalysis.


From Venezuelanalysis via This RSS Feed.

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US forces attacked a boat in the eastern Pacific on Monday, killing two more people in another deadly attack as part of Operation Southern Spear, under the pretext of combating drug trafficking.

“On December 29, at the direction of Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, Joint Task Force Southern Spear conducted a lethal kinetic strike against a vessel operated by designated terrorist organizations in international waters,” reported the Southern Command.

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According to the Southcom post, which refers to the two victims as “narco-terrorists,” intelligence confirmed that the vessel was traveling along known drug trafficking routes in the eastern Pacific and was involved in drug trafficking operations. The video released shows a small boat, and no visible debris remains after the explosion.

Since August 14, the U.S. Department of Defense has ordered the deployment of air and naval units to the southern Caribbean, ostensibly to “combat drug trafficking” and “curb the trafficking of synthetic drugs.” This operation has been questioned and denounced as illegal, and is seen as a direct attempt to pressure Venezuela and control the South American country’s natural resources.

Since September 2, more than 30 vessels have been destroyed and at least 107 people have died in the lethal attacks carried out by the United States in the Caribbean and the eastern Pacific.

On Dec. 29, at the direction of @SecWar Pete Hegseth, Joint Task Force Southern Spear conducted a lethal kinetic strike on a vessel operated by Designated Terrorist Organizations in international waters. Intelligence confirmed the vessel was transiting along known… pic.twitter.com/69ywxXk30N

— U.S. Southern Command (@Southcom) December 29, 2025

The actions of the United States in the Caribbean Sea and the eastern Pacific, along with the escalation of aggression and threats against Latin American nations, primarily Venezuela and Colombia, have been condemned internationally by countries, organizations, and political leaders, including members of Congress and legal experts in the U.S. Despite this, the White House has maintained its pressure in the region, escalating the threat by seizing ships transporting Venezuelan oil in Caribbean waters.

Governments and organizations have emphasized the need to preserve Latin America and the Caribbean as a zone of peace, as proclaimed at the Second Summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) in Havana in 2014, and have warned that Washington’s military deployment and hostility generate instability in the region and violate international law.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

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The security minister of the Zionist regime of Israel, Itamar Ben-Gvir, proposed a new illegal bill that would prohibit the Adhan, the call to prayer in mosques. This move would violate the Palestinians’ freedom of worship and reinforce the apartheid system they suffer under Israeli occupation.

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The representative of the occupying regime verbally attacked religion, referring to the rituals of the Palestinian population as “noise from mosques” and “unreasonable noise.”

The bill aims to prohibit religious services without “special” permits from the Zionist entity, which would base its decisions on the proximity of the temples to its illegal settlements in Palestinian territories.

Furthermore, Tel Aviv threatened to impose “fines” of 50,000 shekels (US$15,660) for the installation or operation of loudspeakers without a permit. Violating the “conditions of the permit” would result in a fine of 10,000 shekels (US$3,100).

Tens of thousands of displaced families in #Gaza — many sheltering in tents and overcrowded schools — face rain, flooding, and deteriorating living conditions.

As winter deepens the hardship, UNRWA teams continue working to support people wherever they are.#UNRWAworks pic.twitter.com/KbhQAO4tRg

— UNRWA (@UNRWA) December 22, 2025

Israeli attacks on prayer within the Palestinian religion are repeated. In 2017, the Tel Aviv regime also sought to prohibit the use of loudspeakers, a measure approved in its first reading by the Knesset but not enacted.

In 2024, Ben-Gvir ordered a ban on mosques broadcasting the call to prayer, arguing that it “disturbed” Israeli settlers, and also confiscated the loudspeakers.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

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Colombian President Gustavo Petro announced a 23.7 percent increase in the minimum wage for next year, which will affect approximately 2.4 million employees. In a nationally televised address, the president detailed that the minimum wage will be 2 million pesos (approximately US$540 at the current exchange rate) in 2026.

He specified that the minimum living wage, that is, the wage that covers not just individual but family needs, will be 1,746,882 pesos (about US$471), plus a transportation allowance. He also noted that real wages, not nominal wages, would thus experience an 18.7 percent increase.

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Furthermore, he warned that the wealthiest sector would likely express discontent with the increase.

“There will be insults, people will say we’re wrong, they’ll say the economy will grind to a halt, they’ll say many employees will lose their jobs. But right now, up to this moment, we have the lowest unemployment rate of the entire century,” the Colombian head of state declared.

He asserted that the measures will reduce poverty. “I believe employment will increase because demand will increase, and businesses will sell more; therefore, they will need more workers,” he stated.

According to the president, the 18.7 percent increase is more than what was achieved during the three years of his administration. “In the last year, we raised real wages more than the sum of the previous three years, and we practically doubled real growth to 36 percent,” he explained.

While he expressed confidence that the measure will reduce inequality, he acknowledged that there will be upward pressure on prices. “Of course there is a struggle in Colombia to distribute wealth. The problem is that this government is doing the opposite of what all previous governments did, which is to concentrate wealth at the top, in a group, a club of privileged individuals,” he emphasized.

Petro asserted that the goal is to democratize wealth for working people, who make up the majority of the Colombian population. “If the people of Colombia live better, the conditions for peace will be built,” he stated.

The increase in the minimum wage for next year was decided via presidential decree because business associations and labor unions could not reach an agreement on the issue. The former proposed a 7.2 percent increase, while the latter wanted a 16 percent increase.

The measure will take effect on January 1st.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

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Iran’s Foreign Ministry on Monday denied rumors circulating on social media claiming the withdrawal of the Iranian diplomatic mission from Venezuela, calling them “psychological warfare.”

“The rumors about the withdrawal of Iranian diplomats and companies from Venezuela are not true and are part of the psychological warfare against Venezuela, something that has also happened to Iran before,” said Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baqai.

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The ministry also called the news about the alleged withdrawal of Iranian companies from Venezuelan development projects misleading. The origin of this information dates back nearly a year, the ministry condemned, and denounced the United States’ operations against the South American country as a “recurring pattern” in recent months. “The measures adopted by the U.S. against Venezuela contradict these international principles and norms,” it emphasized.

Baqai also denounced Washington’s attempts to plunder Venezuela through the imposition of “neocolonialism” and its pursuit of interests related to its “oil resources” under the false pretext of fighting drug trafficking.

The Iranian spokesman emphasized that the actions of the United States are “an alarm bell” for the entire international legal system and the UN Charter, stating that they represent “very serious consequences for international relations and various countries.”

The military escalation promoted by the Donald Trump Administration in the Caribbean Sea represents a grave and growing threat to regional stability and the international legal order. What began as a controversial strategic decision has evolved, with the intensification announced on December 16, into a de facto policy of maritime occupation and use of force.

This presence not only alters the geopolitical balance but has also been marked by acts of extreme severity, such as the summary executions of more than ninety people on board. of vessels, facts that in themselves constitute crimes against humanity and demand a strong response from the international community.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

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The Bolivarian National Armed Forces of Venezuela (FANB) destroyed eight aircraft and four camps used for drug trafficking in the Alto Orinoco municipality, Amazonas state (south), bordering Brazil.

As part of the Strategic Operation Bolivarian Shield “Independence 200,” the Bolivarian National Armed Forces (FANB) dealt a decisive blow against transnational drug trafficking organizations.

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Venezuelan Armed Forces Deal Another Blow to Drug Trafficking

The head of the Strategic Operational Command, Domingo Hernández Lárez, reported that the operation was carried out under the direct instructions of the Constitutional President and Commander-in-Chief of the FANB, Nicolás Maduro, in a frontal offensive against the trafficking of narcotics and psychotropic substances.

“Venezuela will not be a platform for transnational crime. These illegal products are not produced, processed, or consumed here, and we will certainly not be a transit point for them,” he emphasized.

According to reports, the aircraft were operating on clandestine airstrips, flagrantly violating the Law for the Comprehensive Defense of Airspace, as well as the Law of National Security and Defense.

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Una publicación compartida por Armada Bolivariana 🇻🇪 (@armada_ve)

These aircraft lacked authorized flight plans, visible identification, and transponder systems to transit through national airspace.

Earlier, Hernández Lárez reported the destruction of another drug trafficking aircraft in Apure state (south), bordering Colombia.

Venezuela has now disabled a total of 39 aircraft so far in 2025 and 430 since 2012, “consolidating an insurmountable barrier against organized crime,” the Venezuelan National Armed Forces (FANB) confirmed.

In addition, law enforcement in the South American country has seized more than 70 tons of drugs so far this year.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

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An indefinite general strike called by the Bolivian Workers’ Central (COB) has now entered its second week. The strike has been in response to Supreme Decree 5503, a law condemned by unions and peasant organizations for being part of an “IMF-imposed adjustment” that is deteriorating the standard of living of the working population. Miners have been at the forefront of these protests.

Since last Monday, December 22, thousands of miners have been marching on La Paz. Wearing helmets and carrying tools, they have set up roadblocks and blockades around Plaza Murillo, the central square of the national government. The police have responded with repression, tear gas, and barricades, leading to hours of clashes and the arrival of reinforcements from other union sectors, including teachers, factory workers, and neighborhood committees.

The mobilizations also reached Cochabamba, El Alto, and several strategic road corridors. Road blockades have been reported.

#ENVIDEO📹 | Diversas organizaciones sociales y sindicales, afiliadas a la Central Obrera Boliviana #COB 🇧🇴, marcharon por sexto día en rechazo al Decreto Supremo 5503 del Gobierno de Rodrigo Paz pic.twitter.com/QnrUTA0XhX

— teleSUR TV (@teleSURtv) December 28, 2025

Despite the protests, President Rodrigo Paz defends the decree as a “necessary measure” to eliminate fuel subsidies, which would result in an 86% increase in the price of gasoline and a 160% increase in the price of diesel.

Social organizations condemn the adjustment for including the elimination of taxes on large capital, the opening to foreign investments through a 30-day automatic approval mechanism, and a legal regime that guarantees 15 years of protection to transnational companies, particularly in the mining and energy sectors.

According to unions and critical economists, the decree was enacted after meetings with delegations from the DFC, EXIM Bank, USTDA, and the US State Department, fueling accusations of alignment with external interests over Bolivia’s strategic resources.

The COB reaffirmed at a Christmas plenary session that it will not lift the strike while the decree remains in effect. The leadership argues that the movement must be sustained through factory assemblies, struggle committees, and territorial coordination, in a scenario reminiscent of the historical Bolivian labor movement.

The government is attempting to counter the popular pressure through negotiations with transport workers, mining cooperatives, and sectors of the middle class, in addition to political and mainstream media campaigns against the protesters.

Bolivian Unions Reject Paz’s Economic Measures

Meanwhile, a subnational electoral process scheduled for March 2026 is underway, and the Supreme Electoral Tribunal is evaluating the annulment of the legal status of the Morena party, led by the mayor of El Alto, Eva Copa, amid internal fragmentation within the MAS party.

This conflict is not only about the gas price hike but also about Bolivia’s economic model, the control of natural resources, and the framework of state regulatory sovereignty. For labor unions, the struggle will determine whether Bolivia enters a cycle of accelerated privatization of lithium, rare earth elements, and public companies. For the government, it represents a test of strength to maintain its economic program.

The miners, once again at the forefront of Bolivian history, are not backing down. Now, the entire country is watching to see if this latest social conflict will be resolved through dialogue, in the streets, or in a larger crisis.

(Telesur)

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/AU/SF


From Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond via This RSS Feed.

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The Venezuelan company Primazol categorically denied the rumors circulating on social media about an alleged external attack, including unfounded speculation about US intervention, related to the fire that occurred in the early morning of December 24 at one of its facilities in Maracaibo, Zulia state.

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In a statement released on December 29, the company reported that the incident was brought under control promptly thanks to the immediate intervention of its personnel and the Fire Department, who activated established safety protocols. “The incident was brought under control promptly, without any injuries,” the company stated.

The fire, which occurred in a company warehouse, resulted only in material losses. Currently, cleanup and assessment efforts are underway in coordination with the relevant authorities. “With over 14 years of experience in the country, at Primazol we reaffirm our commitment to industrial development, the safety of our team, respect for the community, and fulfilling our responsibilities,” the statement added.

The company emphasized that the information circulating on digital platforms lacks verification and does not correspond to official data. With over fourteen years of experience in the country, Primazol reaffirmed its commitment to industrial development.

The company also highlighted its focus on the safety of its personnel, respect for the community, and strict adherence to its corporate responsibilities. Furthermore, it expressed its gratitude for “the trust, solidarity, and support of our clients, partners, and trade associations” during this incident.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

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The Bolivarian Government officially launched the 2026 National Planting Plan, aiming to plant 10 million trees across the country next year, under the slogan “one tree per family.” The initiative seeks to strengthen ecological balance and food sovereignty by coordinating efforts between the State, communes, and citizens.

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The launch event took place on Chuquisaca Hill in the Macarao parish of Caracas and was attended by President Nicolás Maduro; the president of Mission Tree and the National Parks Institute (Inparques), Rosinés Chávez; the Minister for Ecosocialism, Ricardo Molina; and the Vice President for Science, Technology, Ecosocialism, and Health, Gabriela Jiménez.

“Every family, school, student, and teacher must get involved. We are going to establish a nursery in each commune, including medicinal, fruit, ornamental, and forest plants,” the president declared, while instructing the creation of community nurseries in the country’s 5,336 communes. Among the prioritized species are mahogany, ceiba, and the Caracas walnut.

Rosinés Chávez described the project as “a gift to Mother Earth” and emphasized the commitment of Venezuelan youth to planting at the national level. For his part, Ricardo Molina stressed that “this isn’t done solely by a ministry or a mayor’s office; it’s done with the people,” and highlighted that Venezuela has more than 220 native fruit species.

Minister Gabriela Jiménez added that the Chuquisaca Plan, as this initiative is also known, not only aims at reforestation but also at rescuing the ancestral medicinal knowledge of Indigenous, Caribbean, and Amazonian peoples, protecting the nation’s agrobiodiversity, which includes more than 240 varieties of fruit trees.

The day culminated with a symbolic planting led by President Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores, marking the formal launch of the plan that will guide Venezuela’s environmental agenda in 2026.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

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By Joe Emersberger – Dec 23, 2025

From bad ideology to disgrace

I discovered Noam Chomsky’s books when I was in my twenties (during the late 1980s) and deeply admired him for decades. The only intellectual I ever admired more than Chomsky was Bertrand Russell, who I discovered at a much younger and more impressionable age.

During the early 2000s, the internet was a shiny new thing, and I was thrilled to join the Znet Sustainer Forum. Forum members could interact directly with Chomsky and other leftist writers. It was one of the many ways Chomsky propped up alternative media, something he had done for decades. Before the internet, Z Magazine was one of the places where I found relief from the suffocating reactionary conformity of the corporate media. Sunday morning political talk shows were especially soul-crushing to watch. Every month I’d look forward to getting Z Magazine in the mail so I could 1) confirm that I wasn’t crazy for being disgusted with establishment news media 2) arm myself with facts and arguments. Needless to say, any alternative news magazine or radio show at the time that featured a contribution by Chomsky would get a big boost.

I noticed that, unlike some writers in the Znet forum, Chomsky did not come off as an arrogant jerk. He was very approachable and generous with his time. Years later, I began interacting with him directly by email and, until about 2011, always agreed with his replies. Later, when we disagreed I never felt belittled or disrespected by him. On the contrary, he was very encouraging of my writing. I should note that a few of Chomsky’s friends, Ed Herman and John Pilger, with whom I never became disillusioned, were similarly pleasant and generous in responding to writers like me who had nothing approaching their stature.

Early warning signs: Haiti
During my time in the Znet forum in the early 2000s I recall Chomsky making a few negative remarks about former Haitian president Jean Bertrand Aristide while Aristide was serving his second term in office.

Aristide’s first term was cut short in 1991 by a U.S.-backed military coup that Chomsky very strongly denounced. Bill Clinton, who Chomsky once referred to in the Znet forum as a “thug”, allowed Aristide to return to Haiti in 1994. Chomsky was scathing in describing the outrageous concessions Clinton had wrung from Aristide: forcing Aristide to accept impunity for the military that had spent three years murdering thousands of his supporters, forcing Aristide to accept that his three years in exile count as time served in office, and forcing Aristide to adopt neoliberal economic policies that were the opposite of Aristide’s winning campaign platform in 1990.

After returning to Haiti in 1994, to a significant extent, Aristide flouted the agreement Clinton imposed on him. Murderers from military junta were prosecuted and the Haitian military abolished. Aristide’s close ally Rene Preval completed a full term as president, then Aristide was elected again in 2000. That same year Aristide’s political allies won a resounding victory in legislative elections.

A U.S.-led vilification campaign against Aristide immediately went into action. Aristide was accused of rigging the elections of 2000 and of arming his supporters to terrorize his opponents. These bogus allegations were repeated not just by the U.S. government and western media but by prominent NGOs like Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Christian Aid and Reporters without Borders.

On February 29, 2004 US troops kidnapped Aristide and flew him out of Haiti. He ended up exiled in South Africa for several years as the US made it clear it strongly opposed his return to Haiti. Influenced by Chomsky, and all the NGOs listed above, I had believed there must be significant truth to the allegations against Aristide. Then the 2004 coup happened and I started to doubt what I had casually accepted. The more closely I looked into the allegations, the more I realized they were totally false. Independent researchers Yves Engler and Anthony Fenton quickly produced a short but very effective book that debunked the lies that had facilitated the coup. A few years later, in 2010, Peter Hallward wrote an even more thorough debunking in his book “Damming the Flood: Haiti, Aristide, and the Politics of Containment”. A blurb from Chomsky on the front cover reads “very convincing, a marvellous book”. I totally agree. I thought Chomsky had learned important lessons from the 2004 coup, as I had. I was wrong.

In 2012, when I asked Chomsky if he would add his name to a letter defending Aristide from persecution, he declined. Chomsky said the activists he consulted on Haiti were “uneasy with the depiction of Aristide”. Admittedly, though I agreed to sign, I also had some issues with the letter, but not that it was too flattering of Aristide. After everything that had been done to Haiti and to Aristide since 2004, how could that possibly have been a concern?

I continued admiring Chomsky but concluded he had significant blind spots due to his anarchist ideology. Any government, even one as weak and minimalist as Aristide’s, would always be viewed with suspicion by Chomsky. His fierce denunciations of the US would often be undermined by unfair criticism of governments under U.S. attack. This defect in Chomsky’s thinking was exacerbated by his free speech absolutism.

Nicaragua, Venezuela, free speech absolutismelite impunity
In his 1989 book Necessary Illusions, Chomsky did a wonderful job documenting the grim details of Ronald Reagan’s terrorist war on Nicaragua. Chomsky described the U.S.-backed Nicaraguan newspaper La Prensa as a propaganda tool of the U.S. as it attacked Nicaragua. He said La Prensa “barely pretended to be a newspaper”. Nevertheless Chomsky insisted that the Nicaraguan government let La Prensa stay open: “Advocates of libertarian values should, nonetheless, insist that Nicaragua break precedent in this area, despite its dire straits…”. In his 1988 book “The Culture of Terrorism” Chomsky also wrote that if “true internal freedom were permitted in Nicaragua, as surely it should be” then its government would bear the huge “burden” of a media terrain dominated by its US-backed enemies, but “none of this implies that the burden should not be borne”.

I’m embarrassed that it took me years to realize what toxic nonsense Chomsky had advocated. La Prensa was helping US-backed terrorists kill Nicaraguans. Chomsky’s free speech absolutism is contradictory and reactionary. Insisting on impunity for La Prensa required ignoring the voices of Nicaraguans that the newspaper silenced forever by getting them killed. Jump ahead to 2021 and La Prensa was still a mouthpiece for US-backed subversives, and Chomsky signed aletter that essentially called on Nicaragua to capitulate to those subversives. The letter also had the audacity to refer to the 1990 election, won by the US-backed candidate thanks to the terrorist war waged on the country, as “free and fair”.

Chomsky’s opposition to libel laws similarly amounts to supporting impunity for the most dangerous (I.e. wealthiest) liars who silence people by using speech to get them killed, driven into hiding, or brought to financial ruin.

In 2007, Venezuela’s government under Hugo Chavez refused to renew the broadcast license of a TV network, RCTV, that had supported a U.S.-backed coup that had succeeded in ousting Chavez for two days in 2002. Chomsky objected to the non-renewal calling it a “tactical mistake”. Remember that at this point, Venezuela had not even shut down RCTV. It was still able to broadcast via satellite,

A reasonable criticism was the opposite of Chomsky’s – that it was a “tactical mistake” on Venezuela’s part not to immediately (not years later) shut down all the TV networks(not just RCTV) that had backed the 2002 coup. However, a concern for any government (unless it is as strong as China or Russia) is western public opinion, especially the opinion of “progressive” elements in the west who might oppose US aggression. A government like Venezuela’s cannot be completely indifferent to how it’s portrayed in the West. Chomsky’s role has been to encourage governments under U.S. attack to be suicidally weak or else face harsh attack from the western left.

In 2011, Chomsky invoked judicial independence and humanitarian grounds to support Venezuelan judge Lourdes Afiuni. She was jailed after letting a businessman who had been jailed for corruption escape Venezuela. Chomsky’s insistence on Venezuela letting a corrupt judge walk did not stop him from, years later, blasting Venezuela’s government for, as he put it “allowing virtually free rein to capital for enrichment”.

On Venezuela, it appears the most reactionary voices ultimately swayed Chomsky the most. During one email exchange with Chomsky, I was shocked that he suggested Boris Muñoz to me as a credible source on Venezuela. In a 2012 article, Muñoz spread a claim that Hugo Chavez’s cancer was a hoax “orchestrated in complicity with the government of Havana”. I explained to Chomsky how damning that was of Muñoz, but I don’t think it sunk in.

At home, Chomsky was similarly contradictory: denouncing elite savagery while also opposing the mildest punishment for the elite. In 1969 Chomsky was so disgusted by glorification of the Vietnam war that he wrote in his book American Power and the New Mandarins “We have to ask ourselves whether what is needed in the United States is dissent – or denazification.”

But in 1969, Chomsky also told MIT that he vehemently opposed Walt Rostow being denied a teaching position. Rostow returned to academia in 1969 after working as National Security Advisor for Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. Chomsky recalled his actions to a sympathetic biographer (Robert Barsky) as follows:

I went to see the President of MIT in 1969 to inform him that we intended to protest publicly if there turned out to be any truth to the rumors then circulating that Walt Rostow (who we regarded as a war criminal) was being denied a position at MIT on political grounds (claims that were hardly plausible and turned out to be utterly false).

In one interview Chomsky said he might have resigned from MIT had Rostow been denied a job. So despite US savagery that prompted Chomsky to call for denazification of the US, he strongly objected to top US Nazis suffering career consequences for their crimes.

Libya, Syria, Ukraine: Chomsky gets worse
In 2011, Chomsky supported the UN Security Council resolution that imposed a no fly zone on Libya but then objected that the resolution was violated by NATO to overthrow Gaddafi’s government. So he objected to the most predictable thing happening as he should have known from his own extensive writing on western duplicity and criminality. Nevertheless he said it would be “rash” to predict the consequences of Gaddafi’s ouster. In fact, Gaddafi’s ouster very predictably led to an ongoing nightmare that western media easily swept under the rug..

In Syria, Obama initiated US support for a dirty war to oust the Assad government that, long after Obama left office, yielded a big victory for the U.S. and Nazi Israel. An Al-Qaada terrorist (who is also a former high ranking member of ISIS) is now the dictator of Syria. In 2016, Chomsky said he didn’t know how Obama’s actions in Syria could have been any better:

And for Syria, … it’s just very hard to think of any recommendations. I mean, I don’t know what Obama could’ve done that’s better [than] what he did do

In 2018 Chomsky signed a letter with numerous other western intellectuals (David Graeber, Judith Butler, David Harvey et al) that called on the US military to bomb Syria in defence of Kurdish anarchists that the authors claimed were the USA’s “leading allies against ISIS in Syria”. The idea that the U.S. was in Syria to fight ISIS was worthy of a rightwing neocon.

It is amazing how controversial it became among western leftists – thanks in no small part to Chomsky’s destructive influence- to defend Assad’s government against what was obviously a joint U.S. and Israeli supported effort to overthrow it.

Today, the situation in Syria is complex as Vanessa Beeley explains. But it’s a chaotic horror show characterized by partition, plunder, and sectarian atrocities that benefits “Israel”.

Chomsky would hit new lows after Russia invaded Ukraine. In a 2022 interview, Chomsky gushed about the “great courage” and “great integrity” of Ukrainian President Zelensky who he called “an honourable person”. Remember that Chomsky could not bring himself to sign a letter defending Aristide in 2012 because he didn’t want to be overly positive about the former Haitian president who was twice overthrown by the U.S. But Zelensky – head of the notoriously corrupt U.S.-backed government that honours Nazi collaborator Stefan Bandera – Chomsky showered with praise.

Chomsky’s Sneaky Zionism
On Palestine, Chomsky’s approach was to win many decent people over with his very detailed analysis of Israeli crimes, but underneath the copious documentation and indignation his position remained Zionist. In a 2014 article for The Nation he advocated the two state delusion, and arrogantly warned Palestinians against pressing for more – even the right of refugees to return to the lands from which they were expelled.

In 2004 Chomsky talked about “the destruction of Israel” like that would be a bad thing:

The call for a “democratic secular state,” which is not taken seriously by the Israeli public or internationally, is an explicit demand for the destruction of Israel, offering nothing to Israelis beyond the hope of a degree of freedom in an eventual Palestinian state.

Given the live-streamed Holocaust in Gaza we’ve been witnessing since Oct 7, 2023 the Zionist nature of Chomsky’s approach has never been so thoroughly discredited. Nazi Israel must be overthrown. Period.

Anti-Stalinism: the original sin of western leftists
It wasn’t until 2023, a few months before the genocide got underway in Gaza that I was willing to say that I no longer respected Chomsky. It took me way too long. Why?

Part of the reason is anti-Marxism. Both Bertrand Russell and Noam Chomsky, the biggest influences on me intellectually for decades, were dismissive of Karl Marx. See this piece by Roderic Day for examples of Chomsky’s dismissiveness towards Marx. It was not until I shrugged off their influence on me that I could undertake a proper study of Marx. It is no accident that prominent western intellectuals tend to be either anti-Marxist or promote a version of Marxism that is compatible with western imperialism. See Gabriel Rockhill’s discussions about that with Nick Estes and Justin Podur. The liberal faction of the western elite has put way more effort than I ever imagined into developing a “compatible left”. Bertrand Russell was part of a CIA-funded anti-Communist front group.

But many of the Marxists I’ve met in my life were also anti-Stalin because they uncritically followed the line the USSR took after Stalin died. I swallowed a consensus that almost everyone from Marxists to every kind of anti-Marxist seemed to take: that Stalin was a great evil and perhaps even comparable to Hitler. As I lost confidence in Chomsky I explored the work of Domenico Losurdo and Michael Parenti who brilliantly refuted that nonsense. It turns out leftists like Chomsky – who can not even defend Jean Bertrand Aristide, Daniel Ortega, Hugo Chavez or Nicolas Maduro – are also not reliable sources on Stalin. Lesson, belatedly, learned.

Vijay Prashad and Noam Chomsky’s The Withdrawal: Book Review

Epstein seduces Chomsky
The images shown below speak more eloquently than I ever could about how deeply Chomsky was sucked into Jeffrey Epstein’s world. Are US elites happy to see Chomsky disgraced? The kinds of liberal removed who cultivate a compatible left are probably not happy.

In her book “The Cultural Cold War”, Frances Stonor Saunders explains that CIA liberals had to keep their activities secret from Republicans who didn’t want any kind of left at all to exist. So I imagine among the US elite reactions are mixed: from displeasure to ambivalence to glee.

As for Chomsky, despite his anti-state rhetoric, his ideology made him comfortable with US power and with Zionism. He was so comfortable he often said things like “It’s a very free country, the United States, maybe the freest in the world”. In the end, he got so comfortable he destroyed his own reputation.

(Substack)


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China and Nicaragua gave a new boost to their bilateral relationship and cooperation this week with the opening last Wednesday by the Chinese embassy of a consular services office in Managua, aimed at facilitating immigration and document procedures.

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During the office’s inauguration ceremony, Laureano Ortega, Presidential Advisor for Investment Promotion, Trade, and International Cooperation, emphasized that the opening of the office represents a new step in strengthening cooperative relations and will expedite procedures for Nicaraguans traveling to China.

“It will also strengthen the exchange between companies, businesspeople, and investments; all documents that need to be authenticated, notarized, and all registration procedures can be carried out at this office,” the presidential advisor stated.

Ortega emphasized that the new consular office has the support and assistance of the Nicaraguan government in fulfilling its objectives and expanding bilateral ties.

“This is further proof that this fraternal relationship, this strategic partnership, as it has already been termed by our leaders, is progressing successfully, achieving its goals, and expanding cooperation in all fields,” the official stated.

For his part, the Chinese ambassador to Nicaragua, Qu Yuhui, highlighted that the opening of the office will prevent Nicaraguans from having to travel to third countries to conduct business related to trips to China.

The diplomat recalled that in early December, both countries commemorated the fourth anniversary of the reestablishment of diplomatic relations, a period in which, he affirmed, significant progress has been made.

“We will take advantage of this fourth anniversary of the re-establishment of diplomatic relations between China and Nicaragua as a new starting point for us to continue working hand in hand and to further boost exchange between us,” he emphasized.

The new consular office will offer services related to passports, notarized documents, and Chinese visas, which will also be available online.


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The government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela expressed its full solidarity with the people and government of the United Mexican States following the tragic train accident that occurred this Tuesday on the Interoceanic Corridor of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec.

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On behalf of President Nicolás Maduro Moros and the Venezuelan people, Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yvan Gil issued a message on his social media account, stating, “We express our full solidarity with the people and government of the United Mexican States in light of the tragic accident that occurred today, involving a train on the Interoceanic Corridor.”

The official statement also noted, “We extend our deepest condolences to the families of the victims and offer our prayers for the speedy recovery of the injured.”

The Interoceanic Corridor, a strategic project of the Mexican government, connects the ports of Coatzacoalcos, on the Gulf of Mexico, with Salina Cruz, on the Pacific, and is key to boosting the logistics and economy of southern Mexico. The accident has generated regional concern and numerous expressions of international support.

Venezuela reaffirms its commitment to Latin American solidarity and its support in times of adversity.


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Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel, on behalf of the island’s government, sent a message on his Facebook profile offering deepest condolences to the Mexican people and government following the tragic derailment of the Interoceanic Train in southern Mexico, which left numerous dead and injured.

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In his message, he stated: “We have learned of the tragic derailment of an Interoceanic Train in southern Mexico, which has caused numerous deaths and injuries. We send our heartfelt condolences to the Mexican people and government. Our full solidarity.”

The accident, which occurred on one of the key railway lines in the south of the country, has generated a wave of shock both nationally and throughout the Latin American region. Cuba reiterates its commitment to the brotherhood among the peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean, expressing its support in this time of tragedy.

This show of solidarity is part of a long diplomatic and humanitarian tradition of the Caribbean island, which has been internationally recognized on numerous occasions.

The Cuban Head of State’s message underscores the value of unity among sister nations in emergency situations.


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Venezuela is poised to become the fastest-growing economy in Latin America and the Caribbean by 2025, with Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth projected at 6% by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), following a 9% increase in 2024. These figures place the South American country well above the regional average, estimated at 2.4%, and mark eighteen consecutive quarters of sustained economic growth.

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This economic performance is based on a structural transformation driven by the Bolivarian Economic Agenda, whose central pillars include food sovereignty, industrial diversification, and regional integration. President Nicolás Maduro stated that this progress is due to the collective mobilization of millions of Venezuelans—workers, business owners, entrepreneurs, farmers, fishermen, and community members—amidst a context of unilateral sanctions imposed by the United States and its allies for more than a decade.

Economic growth in Venezuela no longer depends exclusively on the oil sector. In the second quarter of 2025, non-oil GDP expanded by 4.41%, reflecting progress in multiple sectors. Livestock production increased by 7% year-on-year in the first half of the year, while the pharmaceutical industry registered growth of 27.32%. Furthermore, iron production surged by 223%, and commercial transactions expanded by 30%, demonstrating a revitalization of domestic demand.

Mining has also shown outstanding performance: gold production grew by 158% in the public sector and 52% in the private sector. At the same time, the country has achieved unprecedented fiscal discipline, with tax revenues in the first half of 2025 reflecting responsible management, according to data from the National Integrated Customs and Tax Administration Service (SENIAT) and the Central Bank of Venezuela (BCV).

Food sovereignty has become a central pillar of economic resilience. Thanks to state support for cooperatives and the activation of agricultural land, Venezuela achieved 98% domestic food coverage, with 90% of products of national origin.

More than 1,085 new food products were introduced to the market. Rice production grew by 70%—driven by the planting of 25,000 new hectares—while vegetable cultivation increased by 63%, cereals by 60%, tubers by 58%, fruits by 51%, and legumes by 9%.

In the state of Guárico, 150,000 hectares of corn were planted, a historic record. Strategic reserves exceed 100 days of national coverage.

In the energy sector, Venezuela maintained stable crude oil production at 1.084 million barrels per day in July 2025, with an average of 1.053 million bpd in the first seven months of the year, representing an 18.4% increase compared to 2024, according to the OPEC Monthly Oil Market Report (August 2025).

Venezuela is also strengthening its integration into a multipolar world order, forging closer energy and trade ties with China, Russia, Iran, and Colombia.


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Composed of representatives from the country’s three major political parties (National, Liberal, and Libre), the CNE has until midnight tomorrow to issue the final declaration of the elections held four weeks ago, which were marred by numerous irregularities.

Ochoa, of the ruling Liberty and Refoundation Party (Libre), denounced that his colleagues from the two-party system on the electoral body, Ana Hall (Liberal) and Cossette Lopez (National), are deliberately delaying the special recount of thousands of ballots containing inconsistencies.

He accused both council members of having no intention whatsoever of counting the more than 400 tally sheets from the Central District, the municipality that includes Tegucigalpa—the one with the largest electorate in Honduras—given the virtual victory of the Libre mayor and candidate for reelection, Jorge Aldana.

Although he admitted that the winning candidate goes by a narrow margin, the mayor of the capital city asserted that the right-wing National Party’s “tough hand” intends to impose its candidate, Juan Diego Zelaya, through fraud, without finalizing the recount from all the polling stations.

“Proceeding with the general declaration of elections without processing the 435 pending tally sheets from the Central District is fraud, an act of corruption and violence that usurps and steals the popular will of our capital, Tegucigalpa,” the Libre council member emphasized on his X account.

“They are pushing this process to the limit to do what was done at the presidential level. A declaration without all the tally sheets is illegal,” Ochoa pointed out.

jdt/jha/edu

The post Honduran officials warn of forced attempt to finalize elections first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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The study by Synopsis Consultores, which assessed public opinion during Milei’s two years in office, ranks the abusive cuts to pensions and the failure to address their legitimate demands in third place, and in fourth place the annoyance generated by the libertarian leader’s aggressive and insulting rhetoric.

Concern about government corruption grew significantly in 2025 compared to 2024, particularly due to the dissemination of several scandals, such as the multi-million dollar scam involving the fake cryptocurrency $Libra, which the president promoted and which placed him and his sister at the center of a criminal and congressional investigation.

Another act of corruption that drew considerable public attention was the 10 suitcases brought into the country through Aeroparque Airport without being inspected or going through customs by a businessman friendly with the libertarian government.

The issue involved bribes stemming from inflated invoices for the purchase of medications for the disabled is also a concern; according to the investigation, 3 percent of these bribes went to Karina Milei, the Secretary General of the Presidency.

The reelection bid of former national deputy Jose Luis Espert, who was forced to resign, was another scandalous fiasco for the libertarians.

After vehemently denying it, Espert was forced to admit that he received large sums of money from a drug trafficker extradited to the United States.

jdt/mem/mh

The post Unemployment and corruption, two big concerns for Argentinians first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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“The measures taken by the United States government to obstruct the free trade of Venezuelan oil resources and to target ships transporting fuel to Cuba are neither new nor directly related to the current military deployment in the Caribbean and the naval blockade against Venezuela,” he stated in a post on the social network X.

“They are part of the clear objective of destroying the Cuban Revolution, overthrowing the legitimate Bolivarian and Chavista government, and forcibly usurping the region’s critical and strategic natural resources,” he asserted.

He also stated that it is for this purpose that they intensify their policy of pressure and suffocation against the island daily, with a direct impact on the national power grid and, consequently, on the daily lives of the Cuban population.

jdt/mem/bbb

The post Cuba unmasks true intentions of US escalation first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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The event is organized by Raices Negras Cultural Foundation and will take place in San Francisco Plaza, located in front of the Departmental Government building, according to Radio Nacional.

The program will include displays of typical Pacific cuisine and traditional drinks, as well as the sale and exhibition of handicrafts, Afro beauty services, and artistic expressions inspired by the coast.

The traditional Inculturated Mass will also take place, a moment of reflection that connects faith with local customs. In the afternoon, attendees can enjoy a special listening session of Pacific Coast vinyl records, taking a sonic journey back to the 1960s.

Musically, renowned folk groups from Valle del Cauca, Cauca, Narino, and Choco will perform.

According to the Ministry of Commerce, Industry, and Tourism, Cali Fair is consolidating its position as one of the most important cultural and tourist events in the country.

jdt/mem/ifs

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“At this time, faced with the threat of US imperialism, we stand in solidarity with the Venezuelan working people in the face of a possible invasion under the pretext that Venezuela is a drug-exporting country,” the Marxist-Leninist organization stated in remarks regarding the march held the previous day in solidarity with Venezuela.

They asserted that neither President Donald Trump nor the US government have ever hidden their interests in Venezuela, whose true objective is its natural resources—oil, gas, water, minerals, gold, iron, and rare earth elements.

“Their unprecedented imperialist pronouncements, demanding that Venezuela return the oil and other resources that were ‘stolen’ from the United States, reveal their intentions and show their imperialistic perspective that they own the world’s resources,” according to the Puerto Rican communist group.

For Teccs, the hypocrisy of offering a $50 million reward for the constitutional president of Venezuela, Nicolas Maduro, under the pretext that he is a drug trafficker, is the greatest act of brazenness by a fascist government that recently pardoned former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez, who was sentenced to 45 years in prison for smuggling over 400 tons of cocaine into the United States.

“We are well aware of the history of how the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has been involved in drug trafficking, from the Vietnam War to Afghanistan, from Colombia to Wall Street; the Iran-Contra affair and the role of Colonel Oliver North exemplify Washington’s complicity with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA),” argued the Puerto Rican communist organization.

It recalled that U.S. agencies have historically viven out drugs in African American and Latino communities in that nation; meanwhile, we see how Trump, in his anti-immigrant campaign, promotes racism and xenophobia and uses his imperial power to seize the natural resources of our countries.

jdt/mem/nrm

The post Puerto Rican communists decry US aggression against Venezuela first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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The measures obstruct the free trade of Venezuelan oil and target ships bound for Cuba.

On Monday, Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez accused the United States of seeking government changes in Cuba and Venezuela through a naval blockade against Venezuelan oil tankers in the Caribbean Sea, which directly impacts the island.

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Rodriguez asserted that Washington intends to destroy the Cuban Revolution and overthrow the Bolivarian government by intensifying its policy of maximum pressure and economic strangulation.

He denounced that the U.S. measures obstruct the free trade of Venezuelan oil resources in the Caribbean and target ships bound for Cuba, which worsens the country’s energy crisis.

After the attack on the tanker Skipper, which was carrying crude oil destined for the island, the Foreign Minister has severely accused the U.S. of specifically targeting Venezuelan oil destined for Cuba.

Since 2000, Caracas and Havana have maintained an agreement whereby Venezuela pays for Cuban professional services, including doctors and teachers, with oil, which strengthens their economic alliance.

🚨 According to Cuba’s 2025 UN report, from March 2024 to February 2025 the U.S. blockade caused US$7.556 billion in damages — a 49 % increase compared to the previous year. And still there are people that say that the US policy against Cuba is fictitious. pic.twitter.com/HDW8ICvhmX

— Lianys Torres Rivera (@lianystr) December 2, 2025

Cuba needed between 110,000 and 120,000 barrels of oil per day in 2025, of which 40,000 came from domestic production, while the rest had to be imported to sustain the energy system and daily life.

Venezuela, which previously supplied 100,000 barrels per day, sent an average of 27,000 this year, creating an energy gap that has caused prolonged blackouts and industrial paralysis in Cuba.

Moscow contributed 6,000 barrels per day in 2025, while Mexico reduced its shipment from 23,000 to nearly 2,500 barrels. Since Cuba lacks sufficient foreign currency to purchase oil on international markets, long lines at gas stations and a production crisis have arisen nationwide.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | Cuba: The Acosta Dance Company announced that two productions by dancer and choreographer Carlos Acosta will be staged in the United Kingdom in 2026. pic.twitter.com/JX9e0mvyYx

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 26, 2025

teleSUR: JP

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From a preliminary selection of seven nominees, the jury, presided over by maestro Digna Guerra and musicians Marta Bonet, Cesar Lopez, Beatriz Corona, and Jose Maria Vitier, unanimously awarded the distinction to the artist.

“I believe this prize is a well-deserved prize because Amaury’s work has been deeply rooted in our people for many years, with numerous musical and literary contributions,” jury president Digna Guerra told Prensa Latina.

“Is that true? Look, April Fool’s Day was yesterday,” the artist joked incredulously upon receiving the news by phone.

“We all congratulate you, and it is a true privilege for us to have you among the National Music Award recipients of our institution,” said the President of the Cuban Book Institute Indira Fajardo.

“Thank you so much, I’m very excited, my heart is racing,” responded the renowned composer.

Jazz musician Cesar Lopez told this agency that the selection was difficult due to the quality and artistic careers of all the candidates.

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The post Amaury Perez Vidal, new winner of Cuba’s National Music Prize first appeared on Prensa Latina.


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This article by Manuel Cosme originally appeared in the December 26, 2025 edition of El Sol de México.

The Participatory Budget that the 16 boroughs of Mexico City will use next year will be 2.304 billion pesos, which is 160.7 million pesos more than in 2025. This money will address the needs of the neighborhoods, towns, and districts.

Iztapalapa is the borough that will receive the largest amount of the Participatory Budget with 310 million 927 thousand pesos, followed by Gustavo A. Madero with 253 million 579 thousand pesos , both demarcations are the ones that have the largest population of Mexico City.

The Cuauhtémoc borough has the third place in the distribution of these resources with 178 million 543 thousand pesos, followed by Coyoacán with 150 million 476 thousand pesos and Venustiano Carranza is in fifth place with 148 million 550 million pesos.

The districts that will receive the least participatory budget are Milpa Alta, Cuajimalpa and Magdalena Contreras with 82 million 486 thousand pesos, 95 million 570 thousand pesos and 93 million 501 thousand pesos, respectively.

Article 17 of the Expenditure Budget decree stipulates that the resources received by the municipalities are for movable, immovable and intangible assets and public investment.

This year, the IeCM awarded recognition to the 10 innovative projects carried out with the Participatory Budget whose characteristics are innovation, replication, sustainability, equity, inclusion and that encourage social cohesion.

Actipan orchard improvement

The first place was awarded to the improvement of the Actipan orchard, in the neighbourhood of the same name, located in the Benito Juárez borough; the second place corresponded to the maintenance and reforestation of the Santa Fe ravine, in La Loma, Álvaro Obregón borough; in third place are the works of canopy and meeting space that were done in the esplanade of the Pilares de Santa Cecilia, Tláhuac borough.

The 10 projects will be added to the Participatory Budget’s Bank of Good Practices projects, so that they can serve as inspiration and reference in future consultations.

María Fernanda Fragoso and Juan Jesús Jiménez, who received the recognition, urged the residents to participate by presenting their projects in the next Citizen Consultation of the Participatory Budget to be held in 2026.

Erika Estrada, an electoral councilor, opined that the winning projects demonstrate that innovation does not always mean great technologies, but rather new forms of organization, caring for the common good, and imagining environments, and above all, they are an example that with creativity and effort it is possible to dream of new solutions and make them a reality.

Electoral Councilor Maira Melissa Guerra Pulido, a member of the Citizen Participation and Training Commission, acknowledged the effort of the participants to ensure that their proposals received the approval of the residents during the voting.

“The most interesting thing is that their projects have been chosen as replicable. What they proposed here also solves problems in my neighborhood. And that is extremely useful,” he concluded.

The municipalities will distribute the Participatory Budget they receive as follows: half will be distributed proportionally among the neighborhoods, towns and districts , the remaining 50 percent will be assigned according to the poverty index; the crime rate; the status of an Indigenous community; the status of a rural community; the population according to the most recent census carried out by the National Institute of Statistics and Geography; and the floating population in the municipalities that are impacted by that factor.

Participatory Budget Consultation. Polling station at the Guelatao Social and Sports Center Photo: Laura Lovera, El Sol de México

This budget is an instrument through which citizens exercise their right to decide on the application of the resources granted by the local government so that its inhabitants can optimize their environment with proposals for projects of works, services, equipment and urban infrastructure.

The resources will be primarily directed towards strengthening community development, coexistence, and community action that contributes to rebuilding the social fabric and solidarity among neighbors and residents.

The participatory budgeting model was first used in Mexico City in 2011 as a direct democracy mechanism, allowing residents to propose and vote on specific projects to improve their neighborhoods, towns, and districts. It will have been in place for 15 years in 2026.

Currently, the municipalities allocate four percent of the budget to projects for works, services, equipment, urban infrastructure and community improvements.

The process for choosing how that budget is used is organized annually by the Electoral Institute of Mexico City (IECM) and includes several stages: among them the registration of projects by residents, technical assessment of feasibility, and finally, the citizen vote to choose the winning projects, which are then executed by the mayoral offices.

The post Mexico City’s Participatory Budget Will Increase to 2.3 Billion Pesos for 2026 appeared first on Mexico Solidarity Media.


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