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1976
 
 

The death toll from the fire that devastated the Wang Fuk Court residential complex in Hong Kong has increased to 161, following new forensic identifications that clarified the number of victims recovered from the site, authorities confirmed.

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Police Commissioner Joe Chow said the revision came after genetic tests established that remains previously counted as a single victim in fact belonged to a married couple. He stressed that forensic work is still ongoing and that the final number of fatalities may change as examinations continue. According to Chow, the identification process remains particularly challenging due to the condition of some of the recovered remains.

Chow also reported that the removal of protective netting and bamboo scaffolding from building facades began on Friday. For safety reasons, these operations are currently limited to four of the seven buildings affected by the fire. The collection of material evidence is still underway, and officials have not set a deadline for completing the process.

Hong Kongers offered flowers and bowed outside a funeral parlor to pay tribute to a firefighter who was among the 160 people killed by the city's deadliest fire in decades. https://t.co/YvVG2MlI9D

— The Associated Press (@AP) December 19, 2025

The fire erupted on November 26, when netting covering bamboo scaffolding between the ground floor and first floor of Wang Cheong House caught fire. The blaze spread with unusual speed across the complex, eventually reaching six additional towers.

In response to the scale of the tragedy, the Hong Kong government established an Independent Commission of Inquiry, chaired by a magistrate, to determine the causes of both the ignition and the rapid spread of the fire. The commission’s mandate includes reviewing procedures used in building renovation contracts, assessing the adequacy of existing regulations, examining potential criminal responsibility, and issuing recommendations to the government. The final report is expected within nine months.

In parallel, the Independent Commission Against Corruption arrested the current chairman of the owners’ corporation and his predecessor on Wednesday as part of a broader investigation linked to the disaster.

Wang Fuk Court was built in 1983 under a public affordable housing program and consists of eight 31-story towers with nearly 2,000 apartments. According to the 2021 census, the complex was home to 4,643 residents.

In a moving funeral service on Friday, the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region bid a final farewell to Ho Wai-ho, the firefighter who lost his life while combating last month's #TaiPo fire, which has so far claimed the lives of 160 residents of #HongKong. #大埔 #大埔火災pic.twitter.com/bRXyHLt11f

— China Daily (@ChinaDaily) December 20, 2025

At the time of the fire, the buildings were undergoing renovation works valued at 330 million Hong Kong dollars and were fully covered with bamboo scaffolding and safety netting. Subsequent investigations found that some of the netting used did not meet required fire-resistance standards and that highly flammable expanded polystyrene panels had been installed. These findings contributed to the rapid spread of the fire and raised suspicions of improper cost-cutting and failures in procurement processes.

In September, the leadership of the owners’ corporation was renewed, and the Labour Department carried out inspections that resulted in sanctions. The most recent official inspection took place one week before the fire.

More than twenty people have been arrested on suspicion of manslaughter and offenses related to public administration, including individuals connected to contracting companies.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

1977
 
 

The United States has launched what it described as a “large-scale attack” against Islamic State (IS) targets in central Syria, following an ambush last week that killed two U.S. soldiers and an American interpreter near the city of Palmyra.

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In a brief statement released on Friday, U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said that American forces had initiated “a large-scale attack against IS infrastructure and weapons storage facilities in Syria.” The command stated that the operation was carried out in response to the attack against U.S. forces and their allies on December 13.

Shortly after the announcement, U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth confirmed the operation on social media, saying it had been named Operation Hawk Eye Attack. “This is not the beginning of a war, it is a statement of vengeance,” Hegseth wrote.

Tonight, U.S. and Jordanian forces struck 70+ ISIS targets in Syria with 100+ precision munitions. Peace through strength. pic.twitter.com/XWWvfqBBFT

— U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) December 20, 2025

He added: “As we said immediately after the brutal attack (of December 13), if you attack Americans anywhere in the world, you will spend the rest of your short and anguished life knowing that the United States will pursue you, find you, and eliminate you mercilessly.”

According to an anonymous U.S. official cited by The New York Times, dozens of suspected IS positions across several areas of central Syria were targeted using fighter jets, attack helicopters and artillery barrages. The official said the bombardment was expected to last several hours.

Night strikes in Syria⚔️🚨

U.S. and Jordanian forces carried out strikes on over 70 ISIS targets, using more than 100 precision-guided munitions. pic.twitter.com/5tyvH256yK

— China pulse | 中国脉搏 🇨🇳 (@Eng_china5) December 20, 2025

The December 13 ambush, carried out by a lone gunman, took place near Palmyra and resulted in the deaths of two U.S. service members and an interpreter. They were the first Americans to die in Syria since the fall of the government of Bashar al-Assad last year.

In a separate statement posted on the social media platform X, CENTCOM described the operation as the most extensive U.S. military action in Syria since the collapse of the Syrian government. The statement confirmed that the overnight strikes were directly linked to the deaths of three Americans, including two military personnel, in the Palmyra attack.

The attacks come a week after three Americans, including two US soldiers, were killed in Syria’s Palmyra. https://t.co/BdDzaLeHla

— Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) December 20, 2025

Sources cited in regional reporting said that U.S. troops stationed at the Al-Shaddadi base, located south of the northeastern city of Al-Hasaka, also participated in the operation. The attacks reportedly included airstrikes and missile launches and were supported by fighter aircraft from the Jordanian Armed Forces.

U.S. authorities have repeatedly justified their military presence in Syria on security grounds, arguing that it has prevented Islamic State from regaining strength in the country.

The latest strikes highlight the continuation of U.S. military operations in Syria following last year’s political shift, as Washington maintains actions it says are aimed at targeting Islamic State infrastructure and responding to attacks on its personnel.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

1978
 
 

On Friday, Venezuelan Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello stated that, thanks to the popular-military-police fusion, Venezuela is a territory of peace and will continue to be so, despite the external threats facing the country. Hours earlier, the US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) announced its 28th strike near the Venezuelan coast since September 2, elevating the number of assassinated civilians to 104.

“This year, 2025, we can tell the country that we have fulfilled our commitment to our people and to the Revolution. We have followed the instruction given to us by President Nicolás Maduro to lead these institutions to guarantee the peace and tranquility of Venezuelans,” Minister Cabello said at a ceremony for the delivery of new vehicles to different security forces.

“Today, Venezuela is a territory of peace and it must remain so,” Cabello added, noting that “police officers are ready and willing to defend the homeland from any threat: internal or external, whatever it may be called, be it the most powerful empire in the world, our police officers are present to defend the homeland like never before in a perfect popular-military-police fusion.”

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A post shared by Ministerio Relaciones Interiores, Justicia y Paz (@minjusticia_ve)

Fight against gangs and internal enemies
Minister Cabello reported that Venezuela guarantees the comprehensive provision of security agencies to maintain the effectiveness of the work they carry out in the fight against drugs, gangs, and internal enemies of the homeland. He noted that gangs disguise themselves in many ways: “Criminal gangs, drug traffickers, terrorists, and conspiracy groups as well.”

To these, the most far-right political sector of Venezuela has joined “to generate unrest, doubt, and fear in our people.” However, the people have been able to overcome and, despite the threats that currently loom over the nation, “the people are happy in the street, at peace.”

Lowest crime rate
He highlighted that thanks to the coordinated, systemic, and comprehensive work among all the security forces, the homicide rate has been significantly reduced.

“Crime rates in Venezuela are now among the lowest in the world. Countries that constantly attack Venezuela cannot withstand comparison,” he said, citing the relevant statistics.

Compared to 2024, the homicide rate has decreased, with 340 fewer murders recorded to date.

Regarding drug trafficking, Venezuela has achieved “the largest drug seizure in its history, except for the year following its break with the DEA. Almost 70 tons of drugs seized.”

“This year, 2025, we can say: Mission accomplished,” he added.

US extrajudicial killings
Meanwhile, on Thursday night, US SOUTHCOM announced a new “kinetic strike,” a euphemism for what US and United Nations experts have labeled as extrajudicial executions.

In two strikes against two different small boats sailing in Eastern Pacific waters, five new assassinations were confirmed, making the kill list surpass the 100 mark and reach 104 civilians killed.

President Maduro Says Trump’s Actions Reveal True Intentions for Venezuela, Calls for Great Colombia Unity Amid More Killings at Sea (+Petro)

The current level of strikes and assassinated civilians in the Eastern Pacific, since September 2, now surpasses the Caribbean Sea death toll. Fifty-six civilians executed in the Eastern Pacific represent 54% of the total, with 17 reported strikes in that area.

With recent statements coming from the White House claiming ownership of Venezuelan oil, the accusations of Venezuela being a narco-terrorist state seem distant. According to experts, the shift in the US killing spree to the Pacific Ocean also supports Venezuelan claims of the operation being a regime change operation masked with the “war on drugs” narrative.

(Últimas Noticias) by María Milagros Sánchez with Orinoco Tribune content

Translation: Orinoco Tribune

OT/JRE/SF


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

1979
 
 

United Nations human rights experts expressed their “deep concern” on Friday over the ruling by Peru’s Constitutional Court upholding Law 32107, which limits the prosecution of crimes against humanity committed before 2002. They described the measure as a “dangerous setback” in compliance with international obligations.

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The law establishes a statute of limitations for these crimes if they occurred before Peru ratified the Rome Statute and other international human rights instruments. This would prevent the prosecution of crimes committed during the internal armed conflict (1980–2000), which left more than 69,000 dead.

In a joint statement, the experts recalled that “as a peremptory norm binding on all States, the prohibition of a statute of limitations for crimes against humanity is not contingent upon the ratification of treaties.” They emphasized that Peru is bound by general international law and that “domestic interpretations cannot prevail over norms designed to protect humanity from the worst crimes.”

The statement was signed by the Special Rapporteur on justice and reparation (Bernard Duhaime), the Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions (Morris Tidball-Binz), the Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and courts (Margaret Satterthwaite), and the UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances.

#Peru | The National Consortium for Public Ethics (PROETICA) published the 13th National Survey on Perceptions of Corruption, which reveals that 85% of Peruvians consider Congress the most corrupt institution.https://t.co/QRKDM8csVS

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 12, 2025

Two weeks ago, the Peruvian Constitutional Court ratified the law, rejecting the constitutional challenges filed by the Public Prosecutor’s Office and the Lima Bar Association. Prior to its approval, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights had urged Peru not to enact it, considering that it violates its international obligations.

The law was promoted by parliamentary groups aligned with former President Alberto Fujimori and a bloc comprised of former high-ranking members of the Armed Forces.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

1980
 
 

By Pablo Meriguet – Dec 17, 2025

Two weeks after elections in Honduras, no winner has yet been declared yet. As the irregularities grow, both the Liberal Party and LIBRE have denounced electoral fraud is being committed in favor of the far-right candidate.

After a five-day hiatus and more than two weeks since the elections, the Honduran National Electoral Council (CNE) has resumed counting votes in an electoral process that has been widely questioned by various political forces on the left and right in Honduras. According to the CNE, several technical problems are hindering the count.

According to official data, the candidate of the National Party of Honduras (PNH), right-wing Nasry Asfura (backed, among others, by US President Donald Trump) maintains a slight but sustained lead (40.53%) over television presenter Salvador Nasralla of the Liberal Party of Honduras (PLH) (39.21%).

Thus, Asfura would have 1,302,264 votes in his favor, while Nasralla would have 1,258,580. For her part, the ruling party’s candidate, leftist Rixi Moncada of the Liberty and Refoundation Party (LIBRE), obtained 19.3%.

Moncada and LIBRE denounced that the electoral process was marred by foreign interference (pressure from Trump) and irregularities in the process. But it is not only the ruling party that has severely questioned the elections.

Nasralla denounces “fraud”
Candidate Nasralla said in an interview with CNN that “fraud in the vote count” had been committed: “Today they are stealing from the place where the ballot boxes with the votes are located. Representatives of the National Party turned off the cameras and prevented representatives of the Liberal Party from entering.”

He also directly accused the PNH, which governed Honduras between 2010 and 2022, of being behind a possible fraud plot: “[The CNE] must review vote by vote the ballot boxes that we have claimed from the Liberal Party of Honduras, which are more than 14,000 (2,773 in a special count that begins today at 7 a.m.) of the 19,167 in which they cheated. If they do not, voters in Honduras and around the world will know that the Honduran elections are not decided by the people with their votes, but by the organized crime that ruled from 2010 to 2022.”

Likewise,a congressional commission has severely questioned the way in which the vote count has been conducted and announced that if the irregularities are proven, they will not validate the November 30 election: “We denounce the existence of an ongoing electoral coup… We absolutely condemn the interference of US President Donald Trump.”

Defense of the results
For its part, the observer mission of the Organization of American States called for the recount to resume immediately. “The mission urgently calls on the electoral authorities to immediately begin the special recount and to seek all possible means to obtain the official results in the shortest time possible… The current delay in processing and publishing the results is unjustifiable,”said Eladio Loizaga, head of the mission, during a special session of the OAS Permanent Council.

The President of the CNE, Ana Hall, defends the actions of the institution she presides over andaffirms that the highest electoral body is being intimidated: “Today, I have ratified that I reject the intimidation tactics that are being used and that I will stand in the way of those who seek to prevent the declaration of the General Elections.”

Trump’s Interference Invalidates the Presidential Election in Honduras

The specter of fraud
Candidate Asfura, who currently holds a slight lead, has requested that the review of the records be made public and televised: “Let there be no doubt about the results, [so that the new government] can work in peace and tranquility.”

Asfura knows that the delay in officially announcing the results, in addition to allegations of fraud by his two main opponents, undermines the legitimacy of his possible victory. It is one thing for one of Honduras’ three major political parties to reject the results. It is quite another for two parties, which together account for almost 60% of the votes cast, to do so.

It has not been many years since a large part of the political spectrum denounced alleged electoral fraud in 2017 that gave victory to Juan Orlando Hernández (2014-2022) of the PNH, the same party that today supports Asfura. After the elections, there were major demonstrations that left dozens injured and several dead. Despite this, Hernández took office as president and completed his term after a series of questions about the persecution of left-wing leaders.

After his term,Hernández was investigated, charged, and sentenced to more than 40 years in prison in the United States for being part of a drug trafficking network that allegedly trafficked several tons of drugs into the country. Despite this, Trump pardoned Hernández, who is currently out of prison in the United States.

President Castro denounces attempted coup
According to Honduran President Xiomara Castro, Juan Orlando Hernández’s release could have more serious implications. As she stated in X, Hernández’s upcoming entry into the Central American country is intended to launch a “coup d’état”: “I report with historical responsibility that, based on verified intelligence information, Juan Orlando Hernández, pardoned in the US, is planning his entry into the country to proclaim the winner of the elections while an attack is underway aimed at breaking the constitutional and democratic order through a coup against my government.”

She also called on the Honduran people to defend the Republic and the constitutional order: “In light of this grave situation, I urgently request the conscious and peaceful support of the Honduran people. I call on the people, social movements, collectives, grassroots organizations, activists, and citizens to gather urgently and peacefully in Tegucigalpa to defend the popular mandate, reject any coup attempt, and make it clear to the world that a new coup is brewing here.”

Several demonstrations by LIBRE activists and other social movements have taken place. In response, the police have deployed heavy-handed repression, which was condemned by Castro, who has requested an investigation and the dismissal of the law enforcement officers who participated in the repression.

(Peoples Dispatch)


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

1981
 
 

The United Nations (UN) has issued a warning about the severe malnutrition crisis in the Gaza Strip, where nearly 80% of the population faces acute food insecurity, and 101,000 children could suffer from acute malnutrition by October 2026. The situation, exacerbated by restrictions imposed by Israel, limits the sustained entry of humanitarian aid and essential food supplies.

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“To end this catastrophe, large-scale supply deliveries must be allowed, and humanitarian workers must be permitted to do their work,” stated Philippe Lazzarini, Commissioner-General of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA). The agency emphasized that, despite the ceasefire in effect since October 2025, humanitarian needs exceed current response capacity.

According to UN Secretary-General António Guterres, “needs are growing faster than aid is arriving,” highlighting the inadequacy of current flows. Although there has been a slight improvement in distribution since the ceasefire, with 67% of households receiving food and bread in November, only “basic survival needs” are being met.

"#Gaza remains in a man-made hunger crisis.

The latest report from @theIPCinfo underscores how fragile the gains have been since the ceasefire began in October. While #Gaza Governorate is no longer classified as being in famine, 1.6 million people still face high levels of… pic.twitter.com/q59BGjV7aO

— UNRWA (@UNRWA) December 19, 2025

The Integrated Food Security Classification (IPC) revealed in August that half a million people—a quarter of Gaza’s population—were living in famine-stricken areas. The organization attributes the crisis to humanitarian restrictions, the forced displacement of more than 730,000 people, and the destruction of 96% of agricultural land, which is now inaccessible.

Furthermore, Israel has obstructed humanitarian aid access, violating the ceasefire agreement that stipulated the daily entry of 600 trucks. Arbitrary bureaucratic processes and restrictions on the passage of commercial and aid trucks have perpetuated the shortages. The UN and NGOs warn that their operations could collapse if these obstacles are not removed.

Data from the IPC indicates that among the 101,000 children aged 6 months to 5 years at risk of acute malnutrition by October 2026, more than 31,000 will present with severe cases. Additionally, 37,000 pregnant or breastfeeding women will require treatment for acute malnutrition. In all Gaza governorates, no child between 6 and 23 months meets the minimum dietary diversity requirements.

Winter is closing in on #Gaza.

Tents are collapsing under rain, children are freezing and exhausted families have nowhere left to go.

Humanitarians are delivering against all odds.

Restrictions must be lifted so we can reach more people before this winter claims more lives. pic.twitter.com/ti2OJFnu4P

— UN Humanitarian (@UNOCHA) December 13, 2025

The crisis has been exacerbated by recent winter storms, which flooded 55,000 homes and caused three child deaths from hypothermia in December, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

Guterres reiterated his call for a lasting ceasefire, the immediate lifting of Israeli restrictions, and the removal of bureaucratic obstacles to ensure unimpeded humanitarian access.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

1982
 
 

The United States has turned Paraguay into a “military base” through the signing of the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) on Monday, December 15, 2025, according to political analyst Ana Prestes.

The pact, signed by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Paraguayan Foreign Minister Rubén Lezcano, is part of the new US National Security Strategy, which, according to Prestes, revives elements of the Monroe Doctrine by considering Latin America as its “backyard.”

President Maduro: Venezuela will never be the backyard of any supremacist empire

The analyst pointed out that this agreement is part of a broader Washington strategy to militarize South America and consolidate its influence in the region, especially in a context where it faces resistance in countries like Colombia. Rubio, who has maintained close ties with Paraguayan President Santiago Peña since his time as a senator, has already visited Asunción several times in 2024 and hosted Peña at the White House in August to sign an agreement on asylum and immigration.

#Opinion Por: Gabriel Vera Lopes | Paraguay y EE. UU. firman un inédito acuerdo militar que permite el despliegue de tropas estadounidenses → https://t.co/Cdjty2kEbN pic.twitter.com/4SgHkb0qUS

— teleSUR TV (@teleSURtv) December 19, 2025

Prestes also recalled that Rubio proposed handing over the administration of the Itaipu binational hydroelectric dam (Brazil-Paraguay) to US artificial intelligence companies, which, in her words, would mean “using our water and energy from South America.”

Furthermore, she highlighted that the recent police operation in Rio de Janeiro, which left 121 dead on October 28, was followed by a declaration from Paraguay of “zero tolerance for narco-terrorists on its borders,” a stance she described as aligned with US interests.

According to the analyst, the US is intensifying its presence in Argentina, Panama, Guyana, Ecuador, and El Salvador to reactivate military bases and joint exercises, in a dynamic that seeks to “encircle the region through the new national security and militarization strategy.”


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

1983
 
 

The Bolivarian Government of Venezuela launched an ambitious Ecosocialist Training Plan aimed at increasing the capacity of the country’s nursery workers, with the goal of establishing 2,000 community nurseries and producing 10 million trees by 2026, announced the Minister of Popular Power for Ecosocialism, Ricardo Molina, this Friday during an event at Vinicio Adames Park, commemorating the 200th anniversary of the Chuquisaca Decree.

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400 nursery workers have already committed to participating in this plan, which seeks to strengthen community involvement in environmental protection and consolidate a national network of environmental defenders.

“The intention is to have environmental defenders who can contribute to the establishment of 2,000 community nurseries,” stated Molina, while presenting the progress report of the Great Mother Earth Mission to President Nicolás Maduro.

Among the key achievements, the minister reported that a scientific update of the status of the 44 national parks was completed, which will allow for the design of a structured, comprehensive, and systemic plan for their conservation and maintenance. Additionally, the Watershed Operations Committee was formed, tasked with identifying priority areas for reforestation and environmental intervention.

Regarding disaster prevention, Molina noted that 428 community risk maps were created, developed directly by the communities themselves.

“Every community needs to have its own risk map to know how to respond, what the vulnerabilities are in their territory, and what affects downstream areas,” he explained, with the goal of reaching 5,336 maps nationwide.

Another significant milestone is the design of community weather stations, in partnership with the “Humberto Fernández Morán” Science and Technology Mission. “We already have the design, and we will manufacture them in 2026, using local science and technology,” the Minister of Ecosocialism affirmed.

Furthermore, he highlighted the progress made in combating the illegal wildlife trade, with 66 cases reported and resolved, actions aimed at protecting the nation’s biodiversity.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

1984
 
 

The Bolivian Workers’ Central Union (COB) declared a national strike and widespread mobilization in rejection of Supreme Decree 5503, popularly known as the “gasolinazo,” which eliminates fuel subsidies and facilitates the transfer of strategic resources to private entities without legislative oversight.

The measure, promoted by the government of Rodrigo Paz, has sparked massive protests in several cities across the country. The COB instructed its more than 65 unions not to negotiate with the Executive Branch until the neoliberal decree is repealed.

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“The intention to dialogue is over. If the government wanted to see us in the streets and on the highways, that’s where they’ll find us,” stated Mario Argollo, a miner from Huanuni and the COB’s executive secretary, speaking from Oruro.

Argollo announced the indefinite strike and warned that there would be no dialogue with the government until Supreme Decree 5503 was repealed. After specifying that the strike would be a mobilized and phased action, he affirmed that the people were already in the streets and “we cannot remain indifferent.”

This Friday, drivers in La Paz and El Alto began a 24-hour strike with blockades at strategic points, significantly impacting urban mobility. With land transportation paralyzed, the cable car became the main alternative, generating long lines at its stations. Similar protests were reported in Potosí, in the southwest of the Andean country.

ABROGACIÓN: Central Obrera instruyó paro nacional y movilización de sus más de 65 sindicatos para exigir la abrogación del decreto de nuevo política económica neoliberal. Marchas y un paro del transporte en varias ciudades: Mario Argollo. Strio. Ejecut. COB: @teleSURtv pic.twitter.com/b5XUStsGMD

— Freddy Morales (@FreddyteleSUR) December 19, 2025

Supreme Decree 5503 represents an 86% increase in gasoline prices and a 162% increase in diesel prices compared to subsidized prices, a policy that had been in effect for more than two decades. Transport workers reported that, as a result of the unpopular measure, fares have risen to between 4.50 and 5.50 bolivianos, generating widespread rejection from both authorities and the public.

Santos Escalante, a transport union leader in La Paz, confirmed that the strike will last 24 hours and indicated that they may call for road blockades starting next week. Meanwhile, Lucio Gómez, a national leader in the sector, announced that a national meeting will be held this Saturday in Cochabamba to assess the possibility of general mobilizations with road closures.

Central Obrera Boliviana declara huelga nacional y prohíbe a sus sindicatos negociar con el gobierno en tanto no se abrogue el decreto de nueva política económica que anula subsidios y abre la entrega de recursos estratégicos a privados. @teleSURtv

— Freddy Morales (@FreddyteleSUR) December 19, 2025

The Vice Minister of Transportation, Hugo Criales, said that drivers will be invited to a dialogue with representatives from federated, independent, cooperative, and transport associations. He asserted that the elimination of subsidies was “inevitable” and that the population is facing the changes “with resignation.” However, Economy Minister José Gabriel Espinoza maintained that there is no justification for increasing public transportation fares, despite the removal of subsidies.

In addition to the impact on fuel prices, with the resulting increases in transportation fares, the decree establishes the expedited transfer of strategic natural resources without legislative oversight, a provision that has been rejected by social and labor organizations that consider it a surrender of national sovereignty.


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

1985
 
 

This Friday, in Vinicio Adames Park, located in Hoyo de la Puerta, Miranda State, the President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro Moros, led a commemoration ceremony for the Bicentennial of the Chuquisaca Decree, signed on December 19, 1825, by the Liberator Simón Bolívar during his time in Bolivian territory.

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Venezuela Reclaims Its Sovereign Control Over Energy Resources

Considered the first regional environmental legislation, the decree underscores the need to protect nature and promote the rational use of natural resources.

The Head of State reiterated the Decree’s relevance as a historical and political benchmark for the promotion of Ecosocialism in Venezuela, in line with the fifth objective of the Plan de la Patria (Homeland Plan), a legacy of Commander Hugo Chávez. “This decree is foundational for our ecosocialist vision and for the defense of Pachamama, Mother Earth, which fundamentally began with the Southern Campaign,” he stated.

During the event, the Minister of Popular Power for Ecosocialism, Ricardo Molina, presented the progress report of the Great Mission Mother Earth Venezuela, launched on July 10 of this year. 1,262 Ecosocialism Councils have been established nationwide, and another 1,200 are in the process of being formed before the end of 2025.

“We have promoted the strengthening of communal government bodies and the creation of Ecosocialist Councils in each commune,” Molina reported.

271 forest and fruit tree nurseries have also been recovered and activated throughout the country. This year, the goal was to produce 5 million plants, a figure that has almost been reached with trees already distributed across the country. In this regard, President Maduro pledged to participate in a special tree-planting event: “In 12 days we can go to the fields and mountains. I’ve been invited to plant those 200,000 trees and reach 5 million trees planted for life.”

By 2026, the Bolivarian Government projects having 2,000 community nurseries and doubling annual tree production, with a goal of 10 million trees. This strategy is part of public policies focused on environmental education, ecosystem conservation, and promoting popular participation through Mission Tree and the Councils of Ecosocialism.

During his visit to Vinicio Adames Park, the President expressed his satisfaction at seeing “these green spaces for the healthy enjoyment of the Venezuelan people.”


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

1986
 
 

In a massive rally outside the headquarters of Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) in La Campiña, Caracas, Venezuelan Executive Vice President Delcy Rodríguez demanded over $35 billion in reparations from the United States government for what she described as the theft and plundering of CITGO and the illegal withholding of its dividends since 2019.

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“Washington owes the Bolivarian people,” stated Rodríguez, who also serves as Minister of Hydrocarbons. She denounced the dispossession of national assets abroad as a form of “economic piracy” that has had serious consequences for the stability of Venezuelan citizens.

During her speech, the Vice President categorically rejected any negotiations regarding Venezuelan hydrocarbons conducted under pressure or threats. “The nation’s hydrocarbons are not subject to negotiation under threats or foreign extortion schemes,” she said, specifying that any acquisition of oil or gas by international actors must be carried out under legal protocols and with the corresponding payment.

Rodríguez urged the U.S. government to conduct a “realistic assessment” of the impact of the economic blockade and unilateral sanctions imposed on Venezuela. She also demanded a public apology and “reparation for damages” for the effects of these coercive measures, which, she stated, seek to strangle the national economy.

📌Desde #Caracas, la vicepresidenta de #Venezuela🇻🇪, Delcy Rodríguez, denunció frente a PDVSA La Campiña las agresiones de #EEUU🇺🇸, afirmando que Washington "le debe al pueblo bolivariano" y no a la inversa.

🔴 Rodríguez detalló un "saqueo" de más de 35.000 millones de dólares,… pic.twitter.com/q65XBE4EIp

— teleSUR TV (@teleSURtv) December 19, 2025

The vice president emphasized that the defense of Venezuelan oil is part of a broader struggle for self-determination, sovereignty, and regional peace. She highlighted the role of workers in the hydrocarbon sector, whom she described as “aware and mobilized,” and reiterated her support for President Nicolás Maduro.

“National unity is the main shield against attempts to seize our energy resources,” Rodríguez stated, while describing Washington’s strategy of encirclement as an “absolute historical error.” She concluded his remarks by assuring that Venezuela will continue its economic recovery without yielding to “imperialist blackmail” and will deliver a nation free from tutelage, with full respect for its energy sovereignty.

DV_ Encuesta Diciembre 17D (1)Download

According to a recent poll cited at the event, 97% of Venezuelans oppose foreign appropriation of the country’s resources, which reinforces popular support for the government’s stance against external pressures.


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1987
 
 

The Teatro Nacional de Cuba’s Avellaneda Hall in this capital will host performances on December 19, 20, 21, 26, 27, 28, 29, and 30, and on January 1, 2026.

The money collected from the December 19-20 shows will be donated by the company, declared a Cultural Heritage of the Nation, to the victims of Hurricane Melissa in the country’s eastern region, BNC’s General Director, Viengsay Valdes, told Prensa Latina.

Two renowned principal dancers, Anette Delgado and Dani Hernandez, will open the season this Friday and will delight ballet-goers again on December 21.

The remaining performances will feature Laura Kamila and Yankiel Vazquez on December 20 and 29, Nadila Estrada and Alejandro Alderete on December 26, and Gabriela Druyet and Anyelo Montero on December 27 and January 1.

Kamila, Estrada, and Alderete will have the opportunity to debut in the leading roles of Don Quixote, a so attractive and complex classic that no major competition exists where at least a fragment of it is not performed: be it a variation or the pas de deux.

Meanwhile, two exceptional dancers, Argentinian Marianela Nunez and Cuban Patricio Reve, will perform with the BNC on December 28 and 30. Nunez is a principal dancer of the Royal Ballet of London, while Reve is a current guest artist of the British company and a principal dancer at the Queensland Ballet in Australia.

jdt/iff/otf/msm

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1988
 
 

While the Syrian government and the international community are working to consolidate stability in the Middle East, Israel persists in undermining it, Alabi stated during a Security Council session dedicated to examining the report of the mission that visited Syria and Lebanon.

According to the Syria TV website, the Syrian diplomat denounced Israel for violating international law and Security Council resolutions while Damascus respects them.

Alabi emphasized the need for Syrian security forces to be present on the border with Israel to reinforce state control over that area.

In that context, he noted that the security situation in Syria has improved significantly and that more than three million refugees and displaced persons returned to their homes after the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s government on December 8, 2014.

Since 1967, Israel has maintained control of the main water resources in southern Syria following the occupation of the Golan Heights, a strategic plateau rich in freshwater.

From the end of 2014 to the present, Tel Aviv’s military actions against Syrian territory have intensified as part of a campaign launched in 2018 under the pretext of combating the presence of Iran and allied militias.

jdt/arm/mem/fm

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1989
 
 

“This is the beginning of the erosion of democracy and the Rule of Law. Without checks and balances among powers, a dangerous path is opened. I hope the right wing is not tempted,” legislator Lorena Fries, of the Frente Amplio (Broad Front-FA), wrote on her X profile.

Fries added that the proposal breaks with one of the pillars of the system, which is precisely the existence of the three branches of the State and the controls between them.

The bill was introduced by independent lawmaker Gapar Rivas, a former member of the conservative Partido de la Gente (People’s Party), and proposes that if Parliament rejects a presidential message or introduces modifications that alter its essence, the president would be empowered to dissolve it.

In that case, the president could continue governing by decree with the force of law for the next six months.

“The initiative is extremely serious and, if approved, would imply a great deterioration for democracy. Chile does not need it,” FA lawmaker Emilia Schneider stated on social media.

The proposal generated rejection from members of parties of several political tendencies.

jdt/iff/otf/car

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1990
 
 

The perpetrators were members of the Viv Ansanm gang coalition, who brought activities in the Arcahaie commune to a standstill.

The Haitian National Police intervened and neutralized six gang members in the ensuing exchange of gunfire, the online newspaper Haiti Libre reported.

Local media outlets noted that since 2014, gang members have attacked the port, schools, universities, police stations, prisons, ministries, bank branches, community warehouses, and the National Printing Office, which published its first work in 1804.

They also set fire to a 96,000-square-meter warehouse in the free trade zone. They also attacked private cars, a religious seminary, Haiti’s first Baptist church, which had been established for over 180 years, and more than a dozen pharmacies.

In April 2024, demonstrating their seriousness, they burned down the house of Frantz Elbé, then commander-in-chief of the Haitian National Police.

Their record became more notorious when they opened fire on a Spirit Airlines plane during its landing maneuver, forcing it to crash in the Dominican Republic with a flight attendant injured.

arm/mem/joe

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1991
 
 

In a statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs considered the decision an important step forward that helps alleviate the burden on the Syrian people and paves the way for a new stage of recovery and stability.

The statement expressed Damascus’s gratitude and appreciation to the United States, as well as to brotherly Arab countries and other friends who, through their positions and diplomatic efforts, supported the efforts to end these sanctions, for the sake of regional stability and respect for the sovereignty and unity of the Syrian Arab Republic.

The statement also highlighted appreciation for the Syrian people, both within and outside the country, who continued to defend their homeland’s right to a dignified life and helped to bring the suffering of its citizens and their legitimate demands to light in various international forums.

According to the statement, Syria considers this measure a starting point for the reconstruction and development phase and urged all Syrians, both within the country and abroad, to join the recovery efforts.

It also reiterated its call to investors from brotherly and friendly countries, as well as Syrian businesspeople, to explore the available opportunities and participate in the reconstruction process.

jdt/arm/mem/fm

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1992
 
 

The details were revealed in a report published by the international body, which details the actions of the so-called Rapid Support Forces (RSF) against the Zamzam camp in the Darfur region.

The sources stated that the RSF attacked the camp as part of their siege of the city of El Fasher, the provincial capital of North Darfur state.

Zamzam is considered the largest camp for internally displaced people in Sudan, having sheltered some 500,000 people before the April attacks.

Since mid-April 2023, Sudan has been embroiled in an internal war, following a power struggle between Army Chief, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, and the RSF leader, General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.

jdt/iff/otf/fvt

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1993
 
 

In a statement, the organization held international organizations operating in the Gaza Strip, Israel, and the United States responsible for the lives of the residents who died due to a bomb explosion.

It stated that leaving the inhabitants of the territory to die amid unexploded ordnance raises questions about the role of these groups and is a clear violation of the Geneva Convention and its annexes.

Civil Defenders criticized the work of the so-called US Coordination Center in Gaza.

The organization underscored that despite several conversations we have held with them, we have seen no impact or results to date.

Julius van der Walt, Chief of the United Nations Mine Action Programme in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, stressed last week that “more than two years of intense Israeli attacks” have resulted in widespread contamination with explosive materials in the coastal enclave.

Van Der Walt noted that this situation not only affects its inhabitants but also the delivery of humanitarian aid and makes reconstruction efforts extremely dangerous.

iff/otf/rob

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1994
 
 

The official delivered a new fleet of motorcycles and pickup trucks, along with other supplies such as uniforms and boots made by the armed forces themselves, to guarantee the safety and tranquility of the people and the operational readiness of the officers.

Approximately 300 pickup trucks equipped with cameras, and motorcycles were received by the Bolivarian National Police, the General Directorate of Military Counterintelligence, the Extortion and Kidnapping Command, Special Operations, the Presidential Honor Guard Special Forces, and the Anti-Drug Command.

In addition to the Commando Action Groups, Tactical Operations Unit, Caracas Police, Directorate of Special Actions, Fire Department, Civil Protection, among others, the Minister of the Interior, Justice, and Peace emphasized the national government’s significant effort to ensure all agencies are adequately equipped, an effort, he stressed, undertaken by the Bolivarian Revolution under the direct instructions of President Nicolás Maduro.

Cabello highlighted the systematic fight against armed gangs, a “dedicated and joint” effort by all security forces, and underscored the popular, military, and police unity deployed throughout the country.

Among the most notable aspects of the year, the Vice President mentioned the reduction of 340 homicides compared to 2014, which he attributed to “joint efforts,” and asserted that Venezuela has one of the lowest crime rates in the world.

jdt/ro/jcd

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1995
 
 

Nasralla is locked in a tight race against the also right-wing National Party (PN), whose candidate, Nasry Asfura, leads the preliminary count by the National Electoral Council (CNE) by a margin of just 33,000 votes.

The Liberal candidate and well-known television presenter said that his party has agreed to review the 2,792 ballot boxes with inconsistencies selected by the CNE for the special recount, which began the previous day and represents approximately 500,000 votes.

However, he demanded that, after this step and without delays or acts of corruption, the electoral authority proceed to inspect the 8,845 polling stations challenged by the Liberal Party (PL), which represent approximately 1.8 million ballots affected by biometric failures and other technical errors, he explained.

“Open the ballot boxes, and if more votes are cast for the National Party (PN) because of changes made within the electoral warehouse or for any other reason, I will accept it, but until the votes from those 8,845 polling stations that we have challenged in a timely manner are counted, we will not accept any result,” he warned.

According to his calculations, after reviewing and counting these inconsistencies, the Liberals would obtain 149,155 more votes than the Nationalists.

In the opinion of the Liberal presidential candidate, the law empowers the National Electoral Council (CNE) to order special reviews in these cases, and he reiterated that the objective is to guarantee transparency and that the final result faithfully reflects the popular will.

jdt/ro/edu

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1996
 
 

“In the context of the Istanbul agreements, the bodies of 1,000 dead personnel were handed over to Ukraine. Russia received the bodies of 26 Russian soldiers killed in action,” Medinsky wrote on his Telegram channel this Friday.

Russia and Ukraine previously agreed to continue medical exchanges of seriously wounded or sick soldiers.

Moscow reported that it is ready to send 3,000 other bodies of deceased soldiers to Kiev.

Additionally, Russian authorities proposed a prisoner swap with Kyiv on a 1,200-for-1,200 formula.

Delegations from Russia and Ukraine resumed in May direct talks in Istanbul, Turkiye, for the first time in more than three years.

Two more rounds of negotiations have taken place since then, the most tangible results of which have so far been the acceleration of prisoner swaps between the belligerent parties and the repatriation of thousands of bodies of deceased combatants.

jdt/iff/mem/gfa

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1997
 
 

As Washington intensifies its political, economic, and military attacks against Venezuela, opposition to imperialism is also growing inside the United States—particularly among working-class and immigrant communities who experience the costs of imperialism directly. From cuts to social programs and housing insecurity to mass deportations and ICE raids, many are drawing connections between repression at home and US intervention abroad.

Elizabeth Blaney is a key figure in the Los Angeles tenant movement, a co-founder and co-director of Unión de Vecinos and part of the broader Los Angeles Tenants Union (LATU). With decades of experience organizing in Boyle Heights against displacement and gentrification, Blaney has also been deeply involved in international solidarity with Venezuela.

This conversation took place in the context of her participation in the recent People’s Assembly for Peace and Sovereignty held in Caracas. In it, she reflects on grassroots opposition to war and how the Bolivarian Revolution has helped radicalize housing struggles in the Los Angeles tenant movement.

How are organized working-class communities reacting to the latest imperialist military escalation against Venezuela?

Among the working-class base we organize with, there is absolutely no support for the war against Venezuela. In East Los Angeles, where I’m from—and in Los Angeles more broadly—the population is majority Latino, African American, and Asian. Most people in our communities are immigrants. Many come from countries that have experienced violence as a direct result of US intervention. Because of that, they understand the situation and recognize the real motivations behind what the US government is doing here in Venezuela. There is strong opposition to war and a clear demand for the United States to get out of the Caribbean.

People also understand that war funding comes directly at their expense. We’ve lost school programs, social services, and benefits. Starting in January, many people will lose Medicaid support. There is a widespread understanding that public resources are being redirected to fund wars. So, beyond solidarity or morality, there is also a concrete economic reason that people oppose war…. They know that they are already paying the price.

This has translated into organization. People want to learn more and get involved in the growing anti-war movement, and our leadership has participated in solidarity protests across Los Angeles. The ongoing ICE raids have also deepened understanding of what is happening to Venezuela: witnessing family members, friends, and neighbors abducted by ICE has generated fear, but also a growing disposition to resist.

Many people now understand that retreating into fear only strengthens the state. They also recognize that the same violence the US government deploys against them is being used against the people of Venezuela and Palestine. This has led to a broad rejection of imperialist aggression—people overwhelmingly oppose the imperialist military buildup in the Caribbean and the Israeli genocide, which is funded and enabled by the United States.

You participated in the recent “People’s Assembly for Peace and Sovereignty” [December 9-11] in Caracas. Getting to it was not easy, since most airlines stopped flying to Venezuela after Trump closed the airspace. Despite these obstacles, the Assembly took place and was a huge success. What can you tell us about it?

Hundreds of people were stranded in airports or had their flights canceled at the last minute because of Trump’s illegal attempt to control Venezuelan airspace. As a result, many delegates who were scheduled to attend didn’t make it.

Despite this, the conference went forward, with between 600 and 800 delegates from around the world present. In that sense, it was a success. Some people traveled through five or six countries just to get here. That level of commitment shows how deeply people oppose US aggression and support the call for peace!

Politically, what stood out most was how clearly delegates connected US aggression against Venezuela to its global impact. People discussed how sanctions and seizures—such as the illegal confiscation of oil tankers bound for Cuba and other countries—directly affect energy access and economic stability elsewhere. This makes it clear that what’s happening in Venezuela is an international issue.

There were also discussions about how war funding drains resources from working people in the United States and promotes speculation in financial and housing markets globally. One session focused specifically on housing, examining how imperialist war drives up rents and housing prices, worsening conditions for tenants worldwide.

Beyond peace, the Assembly’s debates emphasized people’s sovereignty and who has the right to control resources. The conclusion was clear—those resources belong to the Venezuelan people. If they are stolen from Venezuela, nothing prevents similar theft elsewhere.

The Peace Assembly helped develop a shared understanding of how to defend Venezuela’s sovereignty while preparing for what comes next globally. Now the analysis has to go back to our communities.

Members of the Unión del Barrio in an LA concentration against the US military deployment in the caribbean. (Unión del Barrio)

You’ve said on other occasions that the Bolivarian Process, despite being demonized by the media establishment, has helped radicalize housing struggles in Los Angeles. How has that experience shaped your organization?

I’m part of the Unión de Vecinos, the East Side chapter of the Los Angeles Tenants Union. We’ve been engaged in internationalist solidarity work for many years. We first came to Venezuela in 2019 and have returned several times since, not only to oppose sanctions but to strengthen the tenant movement in Los Angeles and to be fellow travelers in the march toward socialism.

In July 2023, we organized a brigade of about 25 tenant organizers from across California. For many participants, it was a transformative experience. What people in the United States often don’t grasp is that in Venezuela, there is a real socialist project. Of course, it is not perfect and has contradictions, but it is a true emancipatory project with tangible advances. Housing rights, free university education, and free healthcare already exist here in ways they do not in the US.

Seeing this reality firsthand shifted how our organizers think. It made it clear that socialism is not just an abstract demand but something that can be built in practice. Over the past two years and across our 15 chapters, this experience has fueled profound debates about what it means to build a socialist project in Los Angeles.

We don’t see ourselves as just a housing movement. It is about tenants’ ability to survive, remain in their neighborhoods, and collectively shape their communities. This broader vision was strongly influenced by what we learned in Venezuela. Following a process of internal debates, the LA Tenants Union collectively declared itself a socialist organization in August. That decision would not have been possible without the internationalist exchange with Venezuela.

Another crucial lesson has been learning about participatory democracy. In the United States, democracy is reduced to voting every few years or speaking at meetings with no real power. In Venezuela, democracy is practiced as an ongoing process through communal assemblies and popular consultations. For our organizers, seeing Venezuela’s communal assemblies, which are the communes’ highest decision-making body—with “voceros” [spokespeople] accountable to them—has been especially influential. We are strengthening that model across our chapters.

This work goes beyond visits. We’ve built ongoing relationships with Venezuelan movements like the Movimiento de Pobladores, the Movimiento de Inquilinos, and the Simón Bolívar Institute through regular exchanges and political education initiatives. Reciprocal solidarity is central to our political formation and our ability to challenge dominant narratives in the United States.

At a recent event in El Panal Commune, the Simón Bolívar Institute launched the “Solidarity Committee with the Peoples of the US.” What does this initiative represent for grassroots movements in your context?

Solidarity requires sustained commitment and concrete action. This initiative creates a space where analysis and action converge in a spirit of reciprocal solidarity. At the launch, around ten or eleven organizations from the United States were present, all rooted in working-class communities, in addition to El Panal communards and spokespeople from the Instituto Simón Bolívar. That matters, because this isn’t just about organizations—it’s about the people they represent and organize.

The initiative strengthens our responsibility as organizers and working-class people in the US to fight fascism at home, while opposing imperialism abroad. It also demonstrates that we are not fighting alone. Through this work, we will also be deepening ties with movements in Mexico, Honduras, and Argentina, where people are facing similar crises, particularly around housing. Bringing these struggles together strengthens all of us.

Finally, how have the current ICE raids reshaped the political landscape inside the United States, and how do people connect this repression to US imperialist aggression abroad?

The raids and kidnappings being carried out by the US government against immigrants are a turning point. In practice, the Supreme Court has legalized racism, allowing federal agents to detain people based on skin color, language, or where they gather for work, without due process.

This has sparked resistance well beyond traditional activist circles. While working-class communities have always resisted, many people who were never politically active before are now organizing. Neighborhoods are forming patrols, blocking streets, warning residents, and physically slowing ICE operations.

This has opened space for deeper political conversations. People are increasingly connecting what is happening in their neighborhoods to US aggression abroad. They are asking: if the government can do this here—deporting people, including Venezuelans, or sending migrants to third countries—what stops it from escalating further against countries like Venezuela?

As a result, international solidarity no longer feels distant or abstract. More people are recognizing the shared enemy and taking action in solidarity with Venezuela. That political awakening is one of the most significant developments of the present moment.

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1998
 
 

By Zophia Edwards, Corey Gilkes & Tamanisha John – Dic 12. 2025

Amidst US bombs and drug myths about Venezuela as a pretext for regime change, the subordinated position of Caribbean states’ economies within the global economy precludes an unequivocal anti-imperialist position.

It is no exaggeration to say that for over half a millennium the Caribbean has been a stage for imperial incursions. In the past two months, the US has increased its military presence in the Caribbean Sea, including carrying out an airstrike campaign, while claiming that these operations are necessary to protect US citizens from illicit drug trafficking allegedly occurring off the coast of Venezuela. As of November 15th, the US military has launched eleven deadly air strikes on small boats in Caribbean waters and eleven on South America’s Pacific Coast, killing over eighty people. In these operations, the US Navy also raided a tuna fishing boat, detaining the fisherfolk on board for several hours before releasing them.[1] To date, the US government has not provided any proof of its claims that the people it publicly executed are trafficking drugs. These extrajudicial killings have struck fear into the hearts of millions of ordinary people across the region, especially the fisherfolk who depend upon traversing the sea for their livelihoods. 

Meanwhile, Caribbean countries have either blatantly come out in support of the imperial violence at their doorsteps or been hesitant to respond. When these attacks began, Trinidad and Tobago (T&T) as well as Guyana expressed enthusiastic support for US militaristic incursions and extrajudicial murders.[2] As tensions escalated, the Guyanese government attempted to backpedal from its original position. However, the T&T Prime Minister, Kamla Persad Bissessar, has maintained a pro-US stance. PM Persad Bissessar is on record saying, “I have no sympathy for traffickers, the US military should kill them all violently.”[3] This position by the T&T government was reiterated even after the US murdered two of its citizens, Chad Joseph and Rishi Samaroo, in these airstrike campaigns. T&T allowed the US warship, USS Gravely, a guided-missile destroyer, to dock in the country’s capital between October 26-30 and for US military agents to “address shared threats like transnational crime and build resilience through training, humanitarian missions, and security efforts” on T&T soil.[4] The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) – the intergovernmental regional organization – has dragged its feet to take a position, waiting a whole month on October 18, to release a presser wherein it reaffirmed the region as a “zone of peace,” with Trinidad and Tobago excepting itself from this stance. 

The foot dragging is sinister when it is known for a fact that the US propaganda of conducting “anti-narcotics” operations is/are a ruse. These hostile US military aggressions in the Caribbean Sea and on South America’s Pacific Coast are part of a broader US imperial geopolitical strategy aimed at toppling the government of Venezuelan President, Nicolás Maduro. The aim, as Trump has publicly intimated,[5] is to get the Venezuelan government to grant the US more beneficial access to Venezuela’s resources. One might ask: Why are governments, like Trinidad and Tobago, enabling US imperial terror in the region? And why have CARICOM governments not taken an unequivocal anti-imperialist position? The answer lies in the subordinated position of these states’ economies within the global economy. Caribbean states are historically structured to be neoliberal, pro-imperial, and anti-democratic – while political elites are beholden to enacting external interests. Moreover, internal political dynamics – in terms of racial and class struggles – are also a factor, influencing the timing and intensity of these Caribbean governments’ responses to present US imperial terror. 

Debunking the Myth of the Venezuela Narco State
The first order of business is dispelling the myth that Venezuela is a ‘narco-state.’ US officials have framed the current operations—boat strikes, deployments of destroyers and aircraft—as counter-narcotics efforts designed to stem the flow of illicit drugs from Venezuela to the US. However, the Caribbean route is not among the primary conduits for major volumes of cocaine and methamphetamines into the US. Most trafficking flows of narcotics to the US are overland, through Central America and via Pacific routes.[6] It is no surprise therefore that the US government has not provided any proof of its claims that the people it has extrajudicially murdered in the Caribbean Sea or on South America’s coast are engaged in drug trafficking. Additionally, the scale and nature of force being used are far beyond what traditional interdiction operations require – with the Trump administration claiming that interdiction has not worked, hence deadly air strikes are necessary. 

In addition to the lack of evidence of a Venezuelan route being key to drug trafficking into the US, there is also no credible proof linking the Maduro government to organized drug trafficking, despite the Trump regime’s claims, which are parroted uncritically by many Caribbean media and politicians. Within the US’s own intelligence establishment, one report explicitly states: “the Maduro regime probably does not have a policy of cooperating with TDA [Tren de Agua] and is not directing TDA movement to and operations in the United States.”[7] The report goes on to say: “Venezuelan intelligence, military, and police services view TDA as a security threat and operate against it in ways that make it highly unlikely the two sides would cooperate in a strategic or consistent way.” These facts stand out, especially given the evidentiary long and sordid history of the US’s leading role in drug trafficking in the Americas, and the US as the #1 supplier of weapons to those involved in the global drug trade in the region. 

The US government’s real motive is to destabilize and topple the Maduro government in Venezuela, in favor of a regime that undermines Venezuela’s sovereignty. Frantz Fanon, Walter Rodney and many others remind us that capitalist imperialism depends upon neocolonial puppet governments occupied by a predatory elite who facilitate accumulation by extractivism, dispossession, and exploitation. Positioned to usurp Maduro in Venezuela by imposition and not elections, is 2025 Nobel “Peace” Prize winner, María Corina Machado. Machado is a key US ally, Trump admirer, supporter of Israel and its bombing of Gaza, and an overall admirer of repressive regimes in Latin America – including El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele and Brazil’s former president, Jair Bolsonaro. Machado has been begging for foreign military intervention in Venezuela to remove the Maduro government while professing that her administration, if granted power through non-electoral means, intends to open up Venezuela’s doors to foreign exploiters. If the current iteration of US imperial antagonism in the region leads to regime change in Venezuela, the US is poised to have control over the resources in the southern Caribbean – namely Guyana and T&T – as well as on the South American Coast: again, namely Guyana and then Venezuela. This will give the US direct control over shipping routes in the region, as it prepares for a wider economic confrontation with China. Hence, these alleged “anti-narcotics” operations which have taken the lives of over eighty Caribbean and South American people, are just a smokescreen for deeper US geopolitical interests. 

Dependency and the Character of the State
Caribbean states are disregarding the lives of the Venezuelan, Latin American, and their own Caribbean populations using external security narratives, largely because there is a true dictatorship of foreign capital in the region. As US Vice-President JD Vance let slip, places like the Caribbean countries were always intended to remain extractive workstations, not autonomous, functioning nations.…at all.[8] T&T, for example, has long been dependent on oil and gas extraction for the bulk of its national income. However, the country has been experiencing a decline in natural gas and crude oil production over the past decade and the country’s liquefaction complex and petrochemical plants producing ammonia, methanol, and other key exports – which depend upon gas input – have been suffering.[9] Combined with the collapse in energy prices in 2014, this situation has produced a decline in foreign exchange inflows and government revenues.[10] With the demand for US dollars far outstripping the supply, T&T is facing one of the most severe foreign exchange crises in the Caribbean, causing uproar across the working, middle, and upper classes of society alike.[11] As such, the T&T government is desperate for the resuscitation of its flailing oil and gas sector. 

The T&T government spent decades developing a “Dragon” gas deal, where Shell would lead operations that funnel gas located in Venezuelan waters to T&T, where it can be exported as LNG. This deal, considered by the T&T state to be the lifeline that would save the local economy from collapse, has become a weapon in Washington, DC’s arsenal against Venezuela. In the midst of the extra-judicial killings in the region, the US has revoked licenses approving the deal and re-approved them under new terms meant to ensure the involvement and profits of US companies. The continued structural dependency of T&T on foreign capital and imperial markets renders its misleaders susceptible to these coercive measures to ensure that Caribbean states align with US capitalist imperialist policies.

Economic coercion is an important part of the context for Kamla Persad Bissessar’s support for imperialism, but her position cannot be traced to this alone. Persad Bissessar and the educated elite and comprador class she represents come out of some of the “best” primary, secondary, and tertiary educational institutions locally and internationally. Are these elites supposed to provide independent, critical thinkers who would decolonize “post” colonial societies? Are they only unwitting agents of imperialism or are they willing participants? From the time of many states’ flag independence, foreign interventions have secured for the local Caribbean elites’ (or comprador classes) party longevity and/or political dominance, and/or visas and dual citizenships, and/or the ability to accumulate wealth for themselves by exploiting the people and land within their countries. As Frantz Fanon’s Wretched of the Earthand Walter Rodney’s How Europe Underdeveloped Africa detailed,these elites lack the sort of creativity and vitality to independently develop into an industrial bourgeoisie. They therefore turn to propping up foreign entities and dependent economic relations. Consequently, Caribbean state-making and the establishment of territorial statuses in the context of US and European imperialist capitalism has reproduced institutions that are unresponsive to Caribbean people. 

Whether through hopes of securing or acquiring foreign investment, or due to rank economic blackmail that threatens foreign investments elites through sanctions and other restrictions – many Caribbean states choose to serve US and Western imperialism as an almost ‘practical’ strategy of economic ‘stability.’ However, such imperial service only guarantees continued underdevelopment and economic beggary. Herein, T&T’s misleadership is positioning the country as a beggar to the US and reinforcing US sanctions on Venezuela, which makes it hard for Venezuela to sell its own oil and gas to states that need it, including T&T. Worse still, the US does not want China to remedy this situation between Venezuela and Trinidad. So not only are some Caribbean leaders and party supporters encouraging naked US imperialism cloaked in the deceptive language and rhetoric of “anti-drug trafficking” and “protecting the region,” they are also upholding a condition of dependency of the region on the US, advancing US attempts to subvert Chinese influence in the region, and in the process supporting direct attacks on states in the region’s right to self-determination and sovereignty. 

Moreover, local internal racial and class dynamics are also shaping the timing and intensity of Caribbean governments responses to US aggression in the region. In the post-WWII construction of party politics in T&T, middle-class parties carried forward the colonial divisions between the predominantly African and Indian segments of the population that multiracial worker movements had fought so hard to overcome. Kamla Persad Bissessar, as leader of the party popularly known as the one representing “Indian interests,” is advancing and exploiting this racial wedge to garner support for her pro-imperial policies. This party has actively engaged in criminalizing poor African communities as well as Venezuelan migrants, while downplaying the fact that the many poor and marginalized Indians are similarly caught in the net of US imperialism. Persad Bissessar and her party affiliates’ own ideas of “purity” mixed with class notions of entitlement merge with the supremacist foundations of US local and foreign politics.

It’s bad enough that a Prime Minister — a lawyer — supports extra-judicial murders in violation of International Law, but how does one align with a political ideology that produced people like Senator James Reed, who, circa 1919, openly dismissed dealing with “a removed from Liberia, a removed from Honduras, a removed from India…each (having) votes equal to that of the great United States.” Before one argues that this was long ago, consider what right-wing political commentator Ann Coulter told Vivek Ramaswamy why she’d never vote for him regardless of how his views match hers. We acknowledge that political leaders, seeking re-election, opt for the path of least resistance which in this case means not offending the mighty United States. But this cannot just be naïveté.

It is in this context that Kamla Persad Bissessar has broken with even the basic understanding of what CARICOM is, and is astonishingly peddling the idea that each island seeking its own interest is somehow more progressive than banding together as one bloc! In other words, she and those who support her stance have embraced regional colonial divide-and-conquer tactics. The US has always stood in opposition to a unified body in the region. As then US diplomat Charles Whittaker put it: “A strongly federated West Indies might be detrimental to American interests.” As such, they undermined the West Indian Federation in the 1950s and sabotaged the New International Economic Order throughout the 1970s. The Caribbean misleaders proclaiming disunity as strength subscribe to political ideologies that interlock with a particular brand of politics in the West that has been openly Euro-nationalist and imperialist. Hence, at a time when many resource-rich countries are forming partnerships and alternative trading and security blocs, the political misleaders in the Caribbean calling for further fragmentation should warrant deeper investigation.

Venezuela Condemns US Piracy Before UN as Killings Resume; US Debate Heats Up, and Trinidad Lends Airports to US Military Operations

Media, Political Misleadership, and How the State Weaponizes “Security”
It is important to clarify that crime does exist in the Caribbean region, just as it exists elsewhere throughout the world. The size of Caribbean countries are also important to note, because though it is true that the amount of drugs flowing through the Caribbean are low relative to the global drug trade, the little that does pass through is indeed wreaking havoc, given the geographical and population sizes of these countries. The increase in guns and violent crime associated with the global drug trade in places like T&T has become a critical factor affecting everyday life for ordinary people there. This context has enabled the T&T government to justify and legitimate US military aggression in the name of “fighting” the drug trade in the region. Thus, most people cheering on the US military are simply desperate for a sense of safety. However, it is precisely this need for safety that is being weaponized — to increase unsafe conditions as new US-produced military weaponry and technologies become even more commonplace in the region. 

There is a direct and indirect connection between (geo)political and economic decisions made by successive generations of ruling elites in the Caribbean, and North American narratives of crime, which have –going back to the 19th century in some countries – allowed (and made space for) imperial aggression in the region. Over a number of decades, the United States has taken advantage of crises caused by rising violent crime to pursue its own security interests – even though rises in violent crime in the region is directly linked to US imported and manufactured weapons, and US consumer demands for items that the US state deems “illegal.” To establish and maintain US dominance — and the accompanying cheap labor[12] from the surplus populations which exist in a region notorious for high levels of unemployment and underemployment — the US has deployed constant applications of violence, packaged as maintaining “law and order” in the drive to “progress” and “catch up” with the West. It’s no coincidence that modern policing began in the Caribbean as militarized slave patrols in St Lucia.[13] Then, like now, the purpose is the same: protect wealth from the workers who created it. However, the real effectiveness lay in conditioning the exploited to adopt the values of the elites. To date, Western elite definitions of progress and development for the wider working people in the Caribbean region dominate, even as the dependent status of Caribbean economies make this impossible for the majority of the people in the region. Thus, US reliance on expanding its military apparatus for economic growth is justified through the construction of permanent threats that the US supposedly has to “defend” itself against.

Another such narrative, like the need to “promote democracy” in Venezuela, is also within this vein of western imperialist propaganda. The US and western imperialists maintain that Venezuela is not a democracy, despite thepresence of robust, active citizen’s assemblies and communes, as well as elections that occur under the presence of election observers – including from the US. Nonetheless, the western imperialist narrative maintains that Venezuela is not democratic and thus their people can be bombed for some purported “greater good.” Meanwhile, these same imperialist narratives call genocidal Israel a democracy deserving of “protection” and “defense,” as it exterminates Palestinians and decimates Palestinian land. This propaganda – not analysis based on any facts – readily frames western imperialism as “defensive,” “pro-security,” and “pro-safety” and those not in line with it as “aggressive” and “undemocratic.”[14] In lockstep with imperialists, local political figures too have long used or encouraged the use of dehumanizing language when discussing criminalized people and communities. When the T&T Prime Minister, Police Commissioner, and other influential authority figures refer to human beings as “carcasses,”[15] “pests,” “fleas” or “cockroaches,” the message sent is that these are not citizens or members of society and therefore, not worthy of certain basic courtesies and legal obligations, including the right to life. When this sort of thinking is widespread, issues of social justice fall by the wayside. Instead, heavy often murderous attacks on real or alleged drug runners who come from poor, precarious, vulnerable communities become justified while the power brokers, bankers and their institutions[16] that launder money do not get so much as a paper weight dropped on them.

Likewise, the local and international media is playing a significant role in the unfolding crisis. Save for a few columnists, the local media has been disgraceful, little more than sycophantic stenographers for egregious narratives coming from Washington. Initially, the local media conducted little to no critical research into the many available sources discrediting[17] false allegations connecting the Maduro administration to drug cartels. They parroted language that criminalized the victims of the attacks without presenting any evidence proving that they were guilty of violating any laws. They were silent on the voluminous literature connecting the CIA and the US military to colonial land and resource grabs that violate international and local laws.[18] They also proliferated the myth that Nicolas Maduro “lost” or “rigged” elections in Venezuela, contrary to information provided by election observers. The lack of critical and independent journalism is a clear dereliction of duty, supporting imperialist narratives and providing cover for extrajudicial murder.

Conclusion
The neoliberal era shortly after many states’ independence extended the life of bourgeois colonial thought in the Caribbean, interpreting the human “firstly, [as] a figure that is homo economics, and, secondly, a figure that can only operate within the field of white supremacy and capitalism.”[19] In this environment, Caribbean resistance weakened, having to establish itself alongside the intensification of neoliberal processes – foremost amongst them being state repression and militarist aggression supported by the US hegemon – so that Caribbean peoples could be definitively integrated into a Western capitalist system as “bottom labor-exporting economies,” whose labor commodification was masked by discourses on ‘growth’ and ‘development.’[20] It is in analyzing the characteristics of Caribbean states and governance within them – including how they interpret ‘development’ – that helps us to answer why so many states elect to do imperial service: Caribbean neocolonial (puppet) states are fundamentally anti-democratic with no real regard for Caribbean life within them. 

The T&T government’s deliberate facilitation of US imperial aggression in the region mirrors the position of several African states. The post-genocide Tutsi-dominated regime of Paul Kagame in Rwanda, leveraging its image as a victim of colonialism and genocide, justifies domestic repression of Hutus and expansionist military ventures in neighboring states, notably the Democratic Republic of Congo in close alliance with the United States, France, and Israel. In exchange for U.S. and western military, financial, and political backing, Rwanda facilitates imperial access to Congo’s mineral wealth—coltan, gold, and tin—channeling profits both to Western capital and Rwandan elites. Thus, Rwanda functions as a pro-U.S. imperial proxy, advancing the global system of resource extraction and accumulation on behalf of Western powers. In addition, Rwanda along with a growing list of African states, including Ghana, Eswatini, and South Sudan have accepted the terms of bilateral agreements with the US government to receive people who have been criminalized and deported under the Trump regime’s attack on communities racialized as non-white in the US.[21] By enlisting themselves to be locations for the outsourcing of US racist incarceration policies, they are enabling the geographical expansion of the US military industrial prison complex to more and more corners of the world. These Caribbean and African misleaders will go down in history as active enablers and facilitators of the very imperial greed, oppression, and exploitation that the masses have been resisting since the days of direct colonial domination.

Only invigorated mass resistance that takes power away from Caribbean neocolonial (puppet) elites engaged in imperial service can rectify these conditions. Global Africans in the Caribbean and around the world must claim power and reclaim movement histories that fought back against capitalist imperialism. 

Endnotes

[1]https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/venezuela-says-u-s-warship-raided-a-%E2%80%A6

[2]https://www.caribbeanlife.com/trinidad-guyana-us-moves-venezuela/

[3]https://newsday.co.tt/2025/09/03/kamla-says-kill-all-traffickers-as-tru%E2%80%A6

[4]https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/26/world/us-warship-docks-trinidad-venezeul%E2%80%A6

[5]https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/oct/17/trump-maduro-venezuela

[6]https://www.unodc.org/unodc/data-and-analysis/world-drug-report-2025.ht%E2%80%A6

[7]https://static01.nyt.com/newsgraphics/documenttools/32f71f10c36cc482/d9%E2%80%A6

[8]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U1bd-D1PIZg&pp=ygUZIGogZCB2YW5jZSBnbG9i%E2%80%A6

[9]https://www.finance.gov.tt/2020/03/16/effect-of-the-oil-price-collapse-%E2%80%A6

[10]https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/scr/2014/cr14271.pdfhttps://www.imf.org/en/Publications/CR/Issues/2024/06/04/Trinidad-and-T%E2%80%A6.

[11]Chamber of Industry and Commerce 2025; University of the West Indies Campus News 2024.

[12]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BAJgGFtF44A

[13]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kavkiH9YHag&pp=ygUaanVsaWFuIGdvIHBvbGlj%E2%80%A6

[14] See, for example, the Trilateral Commission’s “The Crisis of Democracy” in which influential thinkers who shaped US policy complained that decolonising countries were exercising too much democracy, which needed to be contained, leading to the proliferation of NGOs all over the peripheralized world.

[15]https://trinidadexpress/.com/news/local/kamla-state-resources-won-t-be-wasted/article_5d0c61fd-d633-4dd3-8e3e-6995a454c774.html

[16]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kcpZPGOksp0

[17]https://www.dea.gov/sites/default/files/2025-07/2025NationalDrugThreatA%E2%80%A6https://static01.nyt.com/newsgraphics/documenttools/32f71f10c36cc482/d9%E2%80%A6

[18]https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/455652.Dark_Alliancehttps://www.versobooks.com/en-gb/products/1628-whiteout?srsltid=AfmBOor%E2%80%A6https://www.betterworldbooks.com/product/detail/the-politics-of-heroin-%E2%80%A6https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxbW0CCuT7E

[19] Bogues, Anthony. 2023. “Sylvia Wynter: Constructing Radical Caribbean Thought.” BIM: Arts for the 21st Century11(1): 33–41, p.37.

[20] Henry, Paget. 2000. “Caribbean Marxism: After the Neoliberal and Linguistic Turns.” In Caliban’s Reason: Introducing Afro-Caribbean Philosophy, Africana Thought, New York: Routledge, 221-46, p.228.

[21]https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/more-african-nations-are-receiving-t%E2%80%A6

Zophia Edwards is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Johns Hopkins University. She is the author of Fueling Development: How Black Radical Trade Unionism Transformed Trinidad and Tobago (Duke University Press). She is also a member of the Global Pan-African Movement North America.

Corey Gilkes is an independent researcher who writes from an anticolonial perspective, applying factual revisionist historical analyses to interpret current events. Gilkes has published pieces in trinicenter.com, wired868com, globalcommment.com, and his own blog page at coreygilkes.wordpress.com. He is also currently working on four book projects.

Tamanisha John is an Assistant Professor at York University. She is a member of the Black Alliance for Peace (BAP), Caribbean Solidarity Network (CSN), and the Anti-Imperialist Scholars Collective (AISC). @tamanishajohn (Twitter and Instagram)

(Pambazuka News)


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

1999
 
 

Trump accuses Canada of imposing tariffs of 400% on U.S. dairy products.

On Thursday, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney revealed that the United States raised dozens of issues in trade talks with Canada and Mexico. Each country has “several matters on the table” toward the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) of 2026.

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Despite Washington’s negotiations, Canada will not accept the elimination or reduction of protections for the dairy sector, he said and defended the regulated production system, which has been in place for 50 years and is recognized by the USMCA.

The regulated production system limits tariff-free imports of U.S. dairy products to 3.5% of the total demand. President Donald Trump criticizes it and accuses Canada of imposing tariffs of 400% on U.S. dairy products.

Meanwhile, Carney acknowledged that sectoral agreements to reduce tariffs imposed by Washington on Canadian steel, aluminum, and energy are unlikely, which continues to strain bilateral relations.

🚨BREAKING

A new OECD report states that Canada subsidizes/distorts its milk price by 28%

The world is going to crush us for this. pic.twitter.com/RjgaB2f2b3

— Tablesalt 🇨🇦🇺🇸 (@Tablesalt13) November 3, 2025

The Canadian primer minister indicated that the list of trade demands presented by Washington is only part of what will be discussed in the renegotiation of the USMCA in 2026, where “everything” will be included in negotiations.

U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer presented Washington’s negotiating priorities for the USMCA to Congress, which included eliminating the Canadian management system and protectionist measures in the culture and media sectors.

In October, Canada and the United States were close to an agreement on steel exports, which are subject to a 50% tariff. However, a critical Canadian advertisement on tariffs, broadcast on U.S. television, provoked Trump to suspend the negotiations.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | The Presidents of the United States, Canada, and Mexico held a private meeting after the 2026 World Cup draw, reaffirming their commitment to collaborate on trade issues amid increasing regional tensions. pic.twitter.com/OP547xgUFH

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 9, 2025

teleSUR: JP

Source: EFE


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

2000
 
 

Less than 2% of the population residing in Gaza professes Christianity.

On Friday, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, arrived in Gaza to visit the Church of the Holy Family, the only Catholic parish in the Palestinian enclave, which was attacked in July by the Israeli occupation army.

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Pizzaballa traveled with Auxiliary Bishop William Shomali and a delegation to oversee the humanitarian response and the rehabilitation work at the Gaza parish. The cardinal, considered a papal candidate before the election of Leo XIV, will also preside over Christmas Mass on Sunday.

His visit reaffirms the parish’s connection with the diocese and the Latin Patriarchate’s commitment to accompanying its faithful in hope and prayer during the difficult times for the Christian community.

Pope Leo XIV has spoken on several occasions with the parish priest of Gaza, the Argentinian Gabriel Romanelli, who leads the local Catholic community amidst the humanitarian crisis.

Video showing the funeral of the victims of a tragic Israeli strike on Gaza’s Holy Family Catholic Church, the only Catholic church in Gaza. Three individuals lost their lives.
July 17 2025 #palestine #gaza #Eastern_christians #Christianity pic.twitter.com/gB30s3wW3N

— Eastern christians (@Easternchristns) July 17, 2025

During his last visit in July, Pizzaballa was accompanied by Theophilos III, his Greek Orthodox counterpart, after an Israeli attack that killed three people in the church. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told U.S. President Donald Trump that the attack on the church was “a mistake.”

According to the latest available data, less than 2% of the population residing in Gaza professes Christianity. Around 400 Christian faithful from Gaza will spend their third Christmas as refugees in the Holy Family parish, surrounded by ruins and nightly gunfire.

Romanelli explained that there will be no outdoor celebrations because the war continues. He noted that the electrical system is down, the water pipes are destroyed, and half of the essential medicines are lacking.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | Middle East: The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) continues to deliver humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip. pic.twitter.com/2D81Pgo6rH

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) November 5, 2025

teleSUR: JP

Source: EFE


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