Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro
ED Noor: This brings to mind September 2006, just after his infamous appearance on the floor of the
UN General Assembly, the great Hugo Chavez called George W. Bush the devil.
“Yesterday, the devil came here,” he said, “Right here. Right here. And
it smells of sulfur still today, this table that I am now standing in
front of.” He then made the sign of the cross, kissed his hand, winked
at his audience and looked to the sky. It was vintage Chávez, an
outrageous remark leavened with just the right touch of detail (the
lingering sulfur!) to make it something more than bombast, cutting
through soporific nostrums of diplomatese and drawing fire away from
Iran, which was in the cross hairs at that meeting.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has slammed US President Barack Obama and called him the ‘grand chief of devils.’
Maduro made the comment during a speech on Saturday as a response to
Obama’s interview with a Spanish-language television network a day
earlier.
While speaking to Univision, Obama did not say whether Washington recognized Maduro as the new president of Venezuela.
“Coming out of Central America, Obama let loose with a bunch of impertinent remarks, insolent stuff… He is giving an order, and his blessing, for the fascist right wing to attack Venezuela’s democracy,” the Venezuelan president stated.
“We are here defending our institutions, peace, democracy, the
people of Venezuela… and we can sit down with anyone, even the grand
chief of devils: Obama,” Maduro said.
The Venezuelan president also charged Washington with helping the Venezuelan opposition financially.
ED Noor: Maduro is correct of course. Henrique Capriles Radonski, a Sephardic Jew, was the Wall Street choice, backed fully by Israel.
“It is Obama himself ~ as the puppet of the imperial power ~ who is
behind the financing in dollars of this right wing that is seeking to
destroy Venezuela’s democracy.”
In addition, the Venezuelan president accused the United States for a
brawl which took place in the chamber of the country’s parliament on
April 30, after the assembly passed a measure denying opposition members
the right to speak in the chamber until they recognize Maduro as
president.
Maduro said the physical altercation was “planned” ahead of Obama’s trip to Mexico and Central America.
On April 14, Maduro was elected president after defeating opposition
leader Henrique Capriles by receiving 50.7 percent of the vote against
49.1 percent, with a difference of 235,000 ballots. Capriles claims
irregularities had taken place.
ED Noor: Capriles may claim all the irregularities he wishes but none will be found. He expects fraud because he himself ran on fraud.
However, on April 28, Venezuela’s National Electoral Council said
Capriles had failed to present any compelling proof that there were
irregularities during the presidential election.
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