rss

joined 2 months ago
MODERATOR OF
 

By Roger D. Harris and John Perry  –  Dec 30. 2025

2025 saw progressive governments in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) delegitimized and displaced. Right-wing forces have seized on drug-related crises to attack the so-called Pink Tide governments, driving a reactionary backwash and putting new, neoliberal administrations in power. The irony is that the rise in drug use and crime is driven by neoliberalism’s failure to meet social needs. But this has been successfully cloaked.

A further irony is that governments with the strongest records in limiting the social damage caused by illegal narcotics have been the principal targets of US destabilization campaigns. 

  • Contrary to Trump’s ludicrous mistruths, reports from the United Nations, the European Union, and even the US Drug Enforcement Agency certify that Venezuela is essentially free of drug production – no cocaine or marijuana production, and certainly no fentanyl.
  • With its community-based policing, Nicaragua is one of the safest countries in the whole region. In contrast, neighboring Costa Rica – under aggressively neoliberal administrations – is beset by a “tsunami of cocaine” and crime “amid a backdrop of growing inequality, high unemployment, and an erosion of investment in education,” according to a special report in the Los Angeles Times.
  • Cuba, despite over six decades of punishing Yankee blockades, is arguably the most gang-and drug-free country in the hemisphere.

Despite the reactionary backwash, more than half the region’s population is still governed by progressive administrations, of which the largest countries are Brazil, Mexico and Colombia. 

This could change in 2026, with presidential elections in Colombia and Brazil, where right-wing challenges threaten progressive gains. As the Financial Times observes, “Brazil’s global balancing act is trickier than ever.” Peru, where left-wing President Pedro Castillo was deposed and imprisoned two years ago, may also continue rightwards in elections scheduled for April. Of the current Pink Tide governments, Mexico appears best insulated from an imminent reversal. 

The “Donroe” DoctrinePresiding over these developments is an increasingly assertive US hegemon, citing a “Donroe” corollary to the nineteenth century Monroe Doctrine as justification for the havoc it is wreaking. Now formalized in the National Security Strategy, it claims to “reassert and enforce the Monroe Doctrine to restore American pre-eminence” in LAC.  As Venezuelan Ambassador Samuel Moncada warned the UN Security Council, Venezuela is only the “first target of a larger plan” to divide and conquer the region “piece by piece.” 

Through a combination of elections, judicial maneuvers, and extra-parliamentary pressure, including direct interference by Washington, countries that were formerly left or left-leaning have swung sharply to the right. This trend was evident in LAC’s four major elections in 2025 – in Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, and Honduras. 

There were, however, crumbs of comfort for progressives. In Ecuador, the victorious President Daniel Noboa – whose win is likely attributable to electoral fraud – has since lost key popular referendums. In Bolivia, President Rodrigo Paz faces massive popular resistance as he moves to impose austerity economics. And in Chile, the defeated communist candidate Jeannette Jara did nevertheless secure 42% in December’s runoff vote. 

Progressive governments have also shown a degree of unity in opposing US aggression against Venezuela, although Mexico and Brazil have also had to contend with Washington’s direct pressures on them. In Mexico, this included overt military threats.

The rightward shift is starkly illustrated by Chile’s election, where the outgoing Gabriel Boric had been a “flash in the pan” and unfulfilled expectations have “reshaped the political horizon of the left.” In March, when José Antonio Kast takes office, Chile will have a “Nazi” in power – or at least a self-avowed defender of the Pinochet dictatorship and the son of an actual German Nazi. Kast’s first foreign visit after his win was to Argentina’s hard-right Javier Milei, restoring an alliance between the two major Southern Cone countries. Both have large, right-leaning middle classes that sustained dictatorships in the recent past. 

“Trump’s policies have intensified the extreme polarization in which the far right has replaced the center right,” notes Steve Ellner, retired professor at Venezuela’s Universidad de Oriente. 

Across the region, the right now arguably constitutes a significant Washington-aligned force encompassing not only Chile and Argentina but also Paraguay, Bolivia, Ecuador, Panama, and El Salvador. All support Washington’s military aggression against Venezuela and genocide in Palestine. As Vijay Prashad observes, this new right bloc shares the libertarian economic doctrines of the Pinochet-era “Chicago Boys” (Kast’s brother was one of them), dramatized by Milei waving a chainsaw to symbolize his attack on the state.

Crime and the criminalization of migrationBoth left and right agree that organized crime poses a major threat to LAC’s security. Although statistics show that most of the region is safer than a decade ago, violence has surged in some previously safe countries and reactionary forces have pushed crime as an issue in many others. “Polls show that in at least eight countries, including Chile, security is the dominant voter concern, driving many Latin Americans to demand iron-fisted measures and show a greater tolerance for tough-on-crime policies,” reports The New York Times.

The right’s response is captured by the phrase la mano dura (“the iron fist”), exemplified by the torturous prisons of Nayib Bukele’s El Salvador. Such approaches have proven more attractive to electorates in Chile, Honduras, and Ecuador than the community-based strategies advanced by the left – even though they are proven to work. Rafael Correa successfully reduced crime in Ecuador a decade ago. Xiomara Castro, too, achieved a significant decrease in Honduras, where the homicide rate dropped to the lowest level in 30 years. Left-leaning Mexico most dramatically reduced homicides by 37%.

The right’s alarming yet successful rhetoric links rising crime to drug trafficking and immigration. Trump-style measures have been sold to many Latin Americans yet, as Michelle Elner of CodePINK explains*,* in Cuba and Venezuela he is blocking migrants from entering the US “while systematically destroying the conditions that allow them to survive at home.”

This framing resonated even in Chile, which remains Latin America’s safest country despite an increase in gang-related crime. Kast successfully blamed the increase on Chile’s half million Venezuelan migrants, whom he threatens to deport, while also proposing to construct a US-style border wall.

The principal driver of the region’s crime is the drug trade. The unseen elephant in the room is the US – the world’s largest market for illegal narcotics as well as the leading money launderer of drug profits and the cartels’ gunrunner of choice. Yet Washington portrays itself as an ally in drug-related crime prevention, claiming to be tackling “narcoterrorism” not only in Venezuela but also in Colombia and Mexico. 

This is hypocrisy of the highest order. As Venezuelan writer Francisco Delgado Rodríquez points out: “the only culprits are cartels and bandits with Latin American surnames, and their US counterparts or partners never appear, defying common sense given that the volumes of drugs, weapons, and profits generated necessarily require organized structures of their own on US soil.”

Nicaragua-based analyst Stephen Sefton also notes “the central role of the US government in manipulating the regional structures of organized crime and money laundering.” In reality, “US government propaganda uses the alibi of fighting organized crime and drug trafficking to justify its extensive military presence in the region.”

Trump has elevated this hypocrisy to new heights by releasing a former Honduran president who was serving a 45-year US prison sentence for drug trafficking and links to violent crime. Trump’s administration has gone on to murder, on the high seas, over 100 supposed drug traffickers, offering no proof of their crimes, and has committed acts of piracy against commercial vessels leaving Venezuela. This is in open defiance of the Law of the Sea, which the US explicitly cites in a different context – its actions to maintain “freedom of navigation” in the South China Sea. 

The surge of drug-related crime, and even more of the rhetoric surrounding it, have coincided with the rise of a powerful Christian right. Once overwhelmingly Catholic, the region has seen rapid growth in conservative Protestant evangelical movements, particularly in Central America. Evangelicals constitute approximately 43% of the electorate in Honduras, 40% in Guatemala and Nicaragua, 37% in El Salvador, 29% in Panama, and 27% in Costa Rice and Brazil. Aligned with the populist right, these movements tend to promote social conservatism and pro-Zionism. 

Regional fragmentation In 2014, the 33 member states of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) declared the region a Zone of Peace, pointedly asserting its sovereignty and its opposition to US military infiltration. In opposition to any such accord, Washington instrumentalizes a “war on drugs,” which Cuba has described as “a pretext to conceal military, paramilitary, and interventionist operations.” 

Biden’s expansion of US military penetration continued seamlessly with Trump – only intensified further. This includes the deployment of a full naval armada off Venezuela’s coast, major military buildups in Puerto Rico and Panama, and the recruitment of Trinidad and Tobago, Dominican Republic, and Guyana into the offensive against Venezuela. 

Trump began his new term with mass migrant deportations and sweeping tariffs imposed on the region in January, a lurch toward xenophobia and economic parochialism. In response, Honduran President Xiomara Castro, then head of CELAC, called an emergency meeting, which was then canceled for lack of regional unity. The pan-Caribbean CARICOM has seen unity undermined by Trinidad and Tobago’s servile support of Trump’s armada. In response, Black Studies professor Isaac Saney asks, “Will the Caribbean accept fragmentation as its fate, or will this rupture provoke a renewed Pan-Caribbean struggle for a future beyond empire?”

Indeed, other regional organizations such as the progressive-oriented CELAC and even the US-dominated Organization of American States (OAS) have waned, especially given the latter’s anemic response to US military aggression in the Caribbean. The OAS’s controversy-ridden Summit of the Americas, scheduled for December, has been postponed to 2026. 

Among the region’s most progressive forces, the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America (ALBA) has faced setbacks, including the loss of Bolivia following the election of a right-wing president. The influential leadership of Ralph Gonsalves was also lost when he was voted out in St. Vincent and the Grenadines. 

“The level of fragmentation that we are seeing today among Latin American countries,” Foreign Policy observes, is “the most dramatic in the last half-century.”

President Maduro: Every Battle in 2025 Reaffirms Vitality of the People of Venezuela (+Defense Minister)

Great power competitionWashington’s push to consolidate hemispheric dominance is linked to efforts to counter China, now South America’s largest trading partner and the second largest for the overall LAC region.  China’s regional strategy sharply contrasts with Trump’s. China offers a win-win model of economic cooperation for mutual benefit, while the US proffers a zero-sum model of winners and losers.

China rejects excluding third parties from the region, while the US pledges to “deny non-Hemispheric competitors.” China emphasizes multilateral cooperation and shared Global South priorities, such as reforming international financial institutions, scientific collaboration, and high-tech investment. Beijing criticizes Washington’s “unilateral bullying.” 

Most LAC governments try to triangulate between Beijing and Washington, while also developing new trading partnerships with countries such as India. Under US pressure, however, Brazil and Mexico may impose new tariffs on Chinese goods, although trade with China remains crucial for both. Argentina’s President Milei accepted a US bailout, but nonetheless renewed a currency swap line with China. 

Washington is pressing its client states to take an anti-China stance, which it does not even take itself, by recognizing Taiwan and cutting formal diplomatic relations with the PRC. New rightist presidents in Bolivia and Honduras have promised to do so.

Furthermore, both the US and China need access to lithium, a vital mineral in advanced technology. Argentina, Bolivia and Chile possess around 60% of the world’s known reserves. But while China offers complementary investment and industrial partnerships in return for a share of such resources, the US offers military bases and threats. 

Despite the counter-hegemonic presence of China, the power of the US is such that it can threaten punitive tariffs on all the constituent countries and impose unilateral coercive measures on roughly 35% of the states in the Western Hemisphere. These sanctions, which are collective punishment, are illegal under international law. This is done with relative impunity and little prospect for relief for the victims. And victims there are of the so-called sanctions – especially those imposed on Venezuela and Cuba, which are under country-level embargoes or sectoral restrictions that constitute blockades because the measures are enforced against third countries.  

What Pax Americana looks likeHaiti represents the ultimate outcome of neoliberal whittling down of the state: a hollowed-out government, near-total loss of sovereignty to the US and its allies, and a vacuum in which criminal gangs operate with impunity. This is the logical outcome of enforced submission to empire. 

The US seeks to impose a similar subjugation on Venezuela precisely because Venezuela represents the hope of an alternative socio-economic order. Michelle Ellner rightly argues that Venezuela is a test case: 

“What is being refined now—economic siege without formal war, maritime coercion without declared blockade, starvation without bombs—is a blueprint. Any country that refuses compliance with Washington’s political and economic demands should be paying attention. This will be the map for 21st century regime change.”

Even if Venezuela had not a drop of oil to be exploited, it still would be in the crosshairs of imperialism as are Marco Rubio’s other two “enemies of humanity” – resource poor Cuba and Nicaragua. Havana, made more vulnerable by the blockade on Venezuela, is now teetering on the brink of a disaster not of its own making. Nicaragua, so far treated lightly, faces attacks on its tourism industry and the likelihood of punishing tariffs. Also in line for regime-change is Colombia, whose President Gustavo Petro has emerged as a continental conscience through his criticism of Washington’s deportation policies and his outspoken support for Palestine. 

Nonetheless, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro faces the hardest test, likely with worse to come. He embodies a nation and more broadly a region bravely resisting imperial domination with remarkable resolve. Anti-imperialists hope and believe that such resistance by Latin America’s progressive governments will sustain them during 2026 and beyond.

RDH/JP/OT


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

 

The Trump administration this week made abrupt cuts to the top federal disaster response agency, even as US communities face increased threats from natural disasters caused by the global climate crisis. Independent journalist Marisa Kabas reported on Wednesday that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) “has begun issuing termination notices” to staff at the agency’s Cadre of On-Call…

Source


From Truthout via This RSS Feed.

 

Attacks on Southern Transitional Council forces kill at least seven people.

On Friday, Saudi Arabia carried out airstrikes against positions of the UAE-backed Southern Transitional Council (STC) in Yemen’s Hadramaut province, marking a direct military escalation against the separatist group.

RELATED:

Why is Yemen’s Anti-Houthi Coalition Facing Instability?

The bombings took place in the Al-Khasah area near the Saudi border, killing at least seven people and wounding more than twenty.  Local media also reported ground clashes between STC forces and militias of the “National Shield,” which remain loyal to Hadramaut Governor Salem al-Khanbashi, a Saudi ally.

Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to Yemen’s Presidential Leadership Council, Mohammad Al Jaber, publicly accused STC President Aidarous al-Zubaidi of ordering a full closure of Aden International Airport, blocking the landing of a plane carrying an official Saudi delegation.

“We face persistent refusal,” Al Jaber said, referring to Riyadh’s efforts to resolve the crisis. The airport closure was decreed by Transport Minister Abdel Salam Humaid of the Aden-based Yemeni government, an STC ally.

In response, Governor al-Khanbashi – whom the Saudi-backed government recently granted full military powers in Hadramaut – announced the start of a “peaceful operation” to reclaim STC-held camps and military bases in the province.  “The operation is not a declaration of war or an escalation,” he stated, although his forces are already engaged with separatists on the ground.

🇾🇪🇸🇦 Clashes intensify in Hadhramaut: after #Saudi airstrikes on Khasha‘a, STC forces pulled back and National Shield units took control. Saudi jets also hit STC sites in Seiyun and Wadi Hadhramaut, as National Shield aims to push toward Al-Qatn, Shibam and eventually Seiyun. pic.twitter.com/YHZzeWTQ6o

— IWN (@A7_Mirza) January 2, 2026

A Split Between Former Allies

The conflict reveals a sharp divide within the former Saudi-led coalition that fought against the Ansar Allah movement, led by the Al Houthi family and supported by much of Yemen’s population.

While Riyadh backs the internationally recognized Presidential Leadership Council (PLC) government, the United Arab Emirates has militarily and politically strengthened the STC, which seeks the secession of southern Yemen.

Saudi Arabia views the STC’s growing presence in Hadramaut and Al-Mahra provinces – which border Saudi territory – as a threat to its national security.

In late December, Saudi coalition aircraft bombed a shipment of weapons from the UAE at Mukalla port in Hadramaut intended for the separatist group.

Yemeni government leader Rashad al-Alimi supported the decision to “end the Emirati military presence,” calling it an effort to “correct the course” of the coalition and “halt any support for elements outside the state.”

With active fighting in the south and Saudi airpower directly targeting a former ally, the Yemeni conflict grows more complex, further diminishing prospects for a unified peace and deepening the country’s divisions.

The United States bombed Yemen, Iran, Nigeria, Venezuela, Somalia, and Syria in 2025.
Will there be more war in 2026? pic.twitter.com/z5xUoqfdmQ

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 31, 2025

Sources:

Al Mayadeen – Al Jazeera


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

 

“Our deepest condolences for the human losses caused by the fire,” said the Cuban Foreign Affairs Minister on the social network X.

Then, Rodriguez displayed “solidarity with the people and government of Switzerland and with the families of the victims”. At the same time, he wished prompt recovery to the wounded.

The fire in the ski resort of Crans-Montana killed about 40 people and about 115 injuries of various nationalities, according to the latest confirmations.

According to reports, there are between 80 and 100 seriously injured people, so the number of deaths could increase.

The accident happened in a crowded bar at 01:30 local time in a bar called Le Constellation on New Year’s Eve in the Valais canton, in southwest Switzerland.

So far there is no certainty of the cause of the fire.

ro/jqo

The post Cuban FM expresses grief after fire in Crans-Montana, Switzerland first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

 

His Decree 941 creates a ‘Gestapo for Everyone’ and allows for arrests without a warrant.

On Friday, Argentine President Javier Milei reformed the National Intelligence Law through Decree 941, which that redefines responsibilities, reorganizes structures, and grants greater powers to the State Intelligence Secretariat (SIDE).

RELATED:

Buenos Aires Power Outage Hits Tens of Thousands Amid Heat Wave

The decree authorizes intelligence agencies to request support from security forces and allows for the arrest of individuals in cases of flagrant offenses or upon judicial request.

However, intelligence officers must immediately inform the competent police forces, without assuming repressive or judicial functions. The system’s objective is to “produce strategic intelligence” for decisions by the Executive Branch.

Additionally, Milei created the National Intelligence Community to coordinate intelligence production among state agencies, which integrates capabilities in defense, security, and foreign relations.

The National Information Community is also established. It comprises public agencies that generate relevant information for strategic analysis in areas such as cybersecurity and critical infrastructure.

The SIDE will operate entirely undercover, and its agents will be authorized to detain individuals. The measure was criticized by parties such as Fuerza Patria, the Socialist Party, the Civic Coalition, and the Left and Workers’ Front (FIT), which denounced the risk of political espionage.

El gobierno argentino de Javier Milei insistió en criminalizar la protesta social y presentó una apelación para mantener vigente su esquema de represión ante la Justicia, enfrentando críticas por limitar derechos constitucionales.#Argentina #Milei #ProtestaSocial #Represión pic.twitter.com/E37kMsy3Sn

— Jesus_z (@JesusTv476272) December 31, 2025

The text reads, “The Argentine government of Javier Milei insisted on criminalizing social protest and filed an appeal to maintain his repressive policies before the Court. He faces criticism for limiting constitutional rights.”

The restructuring comes after the promotion of accountant Cristian Auguadra as head of the SIDE, replacing Sergio Neiffert, who “lost the confidence” of presidential advisor Santiago Caputo.

Decree 941 establishes that all intelligence activities will be covert, also authorizing actions in response to leaks of classified information, which raises concerns about potential persecution of journalists.

Leopoldo Moreau, former president of the Bicameral Intelligence Commission (CBI), and Agustin Rossi, former head of the Federal Intelligence Agency (AFI), warn that a “secret police” with serious powers is being created, and that the military will negotiate the budget.

While Socialist Deputy Esteban Paulon announced that he will introduce a law project to repeal the emergency decree (DNU) championed by Milei, Civic Coalition Maximiliano Ferraro denounced that the changes turn the SIDE into a “Gestapo for everyone.”

AFI’s former Head, Agustin Rossi, argued that the reform allows for arrests without a warrant. He listed five critical points: arbitrary arrests, militarization of intelligence, budgetary subordination to the SIDE, weakening of the Ministry of Defense, and persecution of journalists for leaks.

#FromTheSouth News Bits | Argentina: The Senate approved a budget that cuts funding for key sectors such as education and science. pic.twitter.com/6luXKU9IiO

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) December 30, 2025

teleSUR: JP

Source: EFE – Pagina 12


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

 

Racketeering charges against 61 people indicted as co-conspirators in the Stop Cop City movement were dismissed on December 30, marking a significant victory for those facing prosecution in the years after the movement’s peak. The dismissal comes after more than two years of attempted prosecution that sought to convict protesters who opposed Atlanta’s sprawling police training facility…

Source


From Truthout via This RSS Feed.

 

Legra was rushed to the provincial hospital, where she died in the early morning, the president of the Cuban Film Institute (ICAIC), Alexis Triana, informed.

Adelaida Lopez Legra, known by her stage name Adela Legra, was born in 1939 in Guantanamo, where years later her talent was discovered by the multi-award-winning filmmaker Humberto Solas.

With this director, she landed her first film role, the lead in the medium-length film Manuela (1965), followed by the films Lucia (1968), Miel para Oshun (2001), and Barrio Cuba (2005).

Her name also appears in productions like Rancheador (1976), by Sergio Giral; El Brigadista (1977), by Octavio Cortazar; Aquella noche larga (1979), by Enrique Pineda; Vals de la Habana Vieja (1988), by Luis Felipe Bernaza; and Nada (2001), by Juan Carlos Cremata.

For her contributions to Cuban cinema, she received the Heredia Plaque, was honored at Havana Film Festival New York (2002) and at the 1st Gibara International Low-budget Film Festival (2003), and had the documentaries Adela un nombre de mujer (1999) and Quien me quita lo bailao (2000) dedicated to her.

The renowned actress will be laid to rest in the coming hours at El Calvario funeral home in the eastern province of Santiago de Cuba.

jdt/ro/vnl

The post Cuban actress Adela Legra passes away first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

 

In a statement issued by the Foreign Ministry, the Spanish government condemned the regulations for registering humanitarian NGOs operating in the occupied Palestinian territory, only to then revoke their licenses, expel them, and prevent them from carrying out their work.

With these measures, which have affected well-known Spanish and international NGOs, Israel is thus limiting their work and the ability of other actors to address the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza and meet the most basic needs of the Palestinian population, the statement said.

“This decision comes on top of the recent Knesset approval of the law that mandates cutting off the electricity and water supply to UNRWA facilities in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory, in addition to removing its immunities and privileges,” it noted.

Elsewhere in the statement, the Spanish government reiterated its “deepest concern about the severe impact these decisions will have on the already catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza and the Occupied Palestinian Territory.”

At the same time, it urged Israel to reverse “these unacceptable decisions that prevent essential humanitarian actors from working to save lives and address the urgent basic needs of the Palestinian civilian population and refugees in Gaza, the West Bank, and throughout the Middle East region.”

jdt/arm/ga/ft

The post Spain rejects Israel’s intention to expel NGOs first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

 

Since the beginning of 2025, the “Here is Brazil” program has carried out 37 operations, guaranteeing the return of that number of vulnerable Brazilian nationals, mostly from the United States.

This represents almost double the 1,600 repatriations of 2024.

Such mass deportations were one of the campaign promises of US President Donald Trump, with repercussions also for Brazilians, who had already witnessed the increase in these measures.

In the case of the latest repatriation, after initial reception at the international airport of Belo Horizonte, capital of the state of Minas Gerais (southeast), part of the group was transferred to a hotel with a special assistance structure.

There they received food, hygiene kits, psychosocial support, medical and psychological assistance, as well as guidance and help for their journey to their cities of origin.

According to the MDCH, those who already had family in the area or decided to travel directly were also received at the airport terminal itself.

jdt/arm/ga/ocs

The post More than 3,000 Brazilians repatriated or deported in 2025 first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

 

In the video message, Congolese Foreign Minister Therese Kayikwamba Wagner emphasized that the country is assuming an important responsibility in the service of international peace and security, describing the moment as one of dignity and commitment.

The DRC joins the Security Council as a non-permanent member after more than 30 years, and at a time when it is facing a situation of insecurity and aggression. Kayikwamba Wagner thanked all UN member states for the trust placed in the country.

She added that the country intends to carry out its term in a spirit of dialogue, committed to multilateralism and respect for international obligations.

VBased primarily on the principles of peace and security, and the prevention and resolution of conflicts, particularly on the African continent.

“It is not a reward, but a mission,” the minister stated, referring to their participation in this body, where she affirmed they will defend international law, sovereignty, and the territorial integrity of states.

The DRC was a member of the UN Security Council for two previous terms: 1982-1983 and 1990-1991.

jdt/arm/ga/kmg

The post DRC begins two-year term on UN Security Council first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

 

In the letter commemorating the 67th anniversary of the triumph of the Cuban Revolution, the Maldivian Foreign Minister expressed his desire to work closely with his Cuban counterpart to strengthen bilateral and multilateral ties in the coming years.

“On behalf of the Government and people of the Republic of Maldives, and on my own behalf, I wish to extend my warmest greetings to Your Excellency and the people of Cuba on the occasion of your Liberation Day,” he added.

Khalel took the opportunity to reiterate to Rodriguez the assurance of his highest regard.

Cuba and the Maldives established diplomatic relations on January 29, 1977, and the relationship between the two countries is characterized by a strong diplomatic partnership and mutual support in various areas.

jdt/arm/ga/lrd

The post Maldives expresses interest in strengthening ties with Cuba first appeared on Prensa Latina.


From Prensa Latina via This RSS Feed.

 

Washington alliance with Maria Corina Machado has strengthened Venezuelan national unity.

During an interview with Ignacio Ramonet on Thursday, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro assessed the impact on his country of the relationship between the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump and far-right activist Maria Corina Machado.

RELATED:

“To the People of the United States, I Say That Here in Venezuela, You Have a Friendly People”

The Bolivarian leader emphasized that the link between the United States and the traditional oligarchy has generated growing rejection of Machado among Venezuelans, leaving her politically isolated and without domestic backing.

“Currently, the United States has no allied political force in Venezuela because Machado – whom Venezuelans call ‘Sayona,’ in reference to a legend about a vengeful, malevolent female spirit – has an 85 percent disapproval rating,” Maduro said.

“Never, neither Machado nor what she represents would have the capacity to govern this country,” the Venezuelan leader stressed.

Maduro also commented on the U.S. military deployment in the Caribbean, stating that threats against his country have fostered a sense of national sovereignty among his compatriots.

“The world and U.S. public opinion must understand that the Global South peoples have a right to exist… They must understand that they cannot try to impose the Monroe Doctrine or any other doctrine,” the Bolivarian leader stated.

US TO KEEP STOLEN VENEZUELAN OIL

US president Donald Trump told a room full of journalists that the US will keep Venezuela's oil as well as the ships.

This brazen theft comes after US forces forcefully boarded a Venezuelan oil tanker seizing 1.9 million barrels of oil on… pic.twitter.com/4DxRGPzwj2

— Sovereign Media (@sov_media) January 2, 2026

“They cannot impose a new colonialist, hegemonistic and interventionist model. They cannot impose a model in which countries would have to resign themselves to being colonies of a foreign power, and we the people slaves of new masters,” he emphasized.

The Bolivarian leader also highlighted that Venezuelans have shown resilience in the face of U.S. aggression, which is currently expressed through a “cognitive warfare.”

“As an immunological reaction, 95 percent of Venezuelan society rejects the military threats against their country and the assault and theft of their oil,” he stressed.

In Venezuela, a feeling of national unity has been reinforced each time the United States kills fishermen in the Caribbean Sea or lends legitimacy to Maria Corina Machado, a far-right opposition politician who has not hesitated to call for foreign military intervention against her own nation.

“The struggle I am waging in defense of national sovereignty and peace has the support of more than 70 percent of the population,” Maduro said, noting that this sentiment extends far beyond traditionally patriotic citizens or militants of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV).

“The union among the people, police and military now encompasses all sectors. We are experiencing a national union like we have never had before,” the Bolivarian leader said.

“That is the natural immunological response of Venezuelan society to the illegal, disproportionate, threatening and warlike aggression we have suffered for 28 consecutive weeks,” he concluded.

During his New Year's interview with writer and journalist Ignacio Ramonet, the president of the Bolivarian Republic of #Venezuela Nicolas Maduro, let the people of the #US know that they have a friendly government and a friendly people in Venezuela. pic.twitter.com/LxQfSJio3N

— teleSUR English (@telesurenglish) January 2, 2026

teleSUR/ JF

Source: teleSUR


From teleSUR English via This RSS Feed.

view more: ‹ prev next ›