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The Argentine government responded to the Maduro regime, which called it a neo-Nazi: “What can you expect from a donkey other than a kick?” - Infobae
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El gobierno argentino le respondió al régimen de Maduro, que lo calificó de neonazi: “¿Qué se puede esperar de un burro más que una patada?”
El vocero presidencial, Manuel Adorni, dijo que Venezuela está gobernada por “dictadores” y “energúmenos”. Ayer, tras prohibir el uso del espacio aéreo a aviones argentinos, el canciller venezolano calificó de “neonazi, sumiso y obediente” al Ejecutivo de Milei
www.infobae.com
March 13, 2024
Presidential spokesperson Manuel Adorni said that Venezuela is governed by “dictators” and “energúmenos.” Yesterday, after prohibiting the use of airspace to Argentine planes, the Venezuelan foreign minister described the Milei Executive as “neo-Nazi, submissive and obedient.”
El Gobierno argentino respondió las acusaciones del régimen de Maduro
El Gobierno argentino respondió las acusaciones del régimen de Maduro
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The Argentine Government responded to the accusations of the Maduro regime
The diplomatic escalation between Venezuela and Argentina is growing: after yesterday the Venezuelan Foreign Minister described the Government of Javier Milei as “neo-Nazi” , the response came from the Casa Rosada today: it was through spokesperson Manuel Adorni, who closed his usual conference press talking about the conflict between both countries.
“What can you expect from a donkey more than a kick,” said Adorni when asked about the statements of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Nicolás Maduro regime. “ The truth is that from a government of dictators the only thing you can expect are questions that do not even deserve an answer,” he added.
Yesterday, after Argentina initiated diplomatic actions against Venezuela after the Maduro regime prohibited Argentine aircraft from flying over Venezuelan airspace, the Venezuelan Foreign Minister, Yvan Gil, attacked the Argentine Government, which he described as “neo-Nazi, submissive and obedient".
In a publication on his "he intends to ignore the consequences of his acts of piracy and theft against Venezuela, which were warned repeatedly before the criminal act committed against EMTRASUR."
In that sense, he added: "Venezuela exercises full sovereignty in its airspace, and reiterates that no aircraft, coming from or heading to Argentina, will be able to fly over our territory, until our company is duly compensated for the damages caused, after the illegal actions carried out, only in order to please their northern guardians .”
“ It saddens us for the Venezuelan people that these madmen govern them ,” Adorni continued today in his usual contact with journalists accredited at the Casa Rosada. “We must downplay what comes from a Government of dictators. “He can say what he wants,” he closed.
The spokesperson explained that the decision to prohibit Argentine-flagged planes from using Venezuelan airspace “has a very high economic cost, therefore it harms a lot of passengers whose travel costs will be higher.”
The conflict broke out after in the early hours of February 12, the cargo Boeing 747-300M Dreamliner, which was owned by the Iranian company Mahan Air and currently belonged to Emtrasur, a subsidiary of the Venezuelan airline Conviasa, companies sanctioned by the United States Department of the Treasury, left for the United States, in response to a confiscation request.
The crew that had arrived in Argentina on June 6, 2022, made up of five Iranians and 14 Venezuelans, was initially detained by Justice and later released due to lack of evidence for the crime of financing terrorist activities.
The plane was eventually dismantled.
The plane had arrived in Argentina from Mexico after making a stopover in Venezuela. Two days later, he left Argentina to refuel in Uruguay, but returned to the Ezeiza International Airport because the neighboring country did not authorize his landing.
Then, the Argentine Justice ordered the ship to be immobilized and ordered that the 19 crew members could not leave the country. As the investigation progressed, the crew members were released.
The justification for the claim by the United States is that it was an Iranian entity sanctioned by the Department of Commerce that transferred the plane - made in the United States - to a third party, something prohibited precisely for the purposes of the sanction.
Before the departure of the plane to the United States, a confusing episode occurred on February 6, when a Venezuelan diplomat in Buenos Aires violated security and took photos of the aircraft, for which he was declared persona non grata and left the country. in the following 48 hours.
Two weeks after the plane left, on February 29, Maduro denounced the United States for the “vile, criminal, outrageous act” of “dismembering” the aircraft in Miami.