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Former Venezuelan presidential candidate and opposition leader Edmundo González fled to Spain in exile Sunday as part of a deal with dubious current President Nicolas Maduro’s administration.
Lopez has yet to make a public appearance but said the decision to abandon his homeland had not been an easy one; Venezuela's Nicolas Maduro has yet to react.
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Nicolás Maduro, the permanent simulacrum - MSNMaduro seems to have learned to live in a permanent simulacrum mode. He says whatever he wants, however he wants. He says and disavows things in any way, and before any audience.
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Maduro rival flees Venezuela for exile in Spain - MSNVenezuelan opposition candidate Edmundo González, who credibly claims to have won his country's July 28 presidential election, arrived in Spain on Sunday, seeking asylum. Opposition leader Maria ...
Over the weekend, Brazilian diplomats accused Spain’s socialist government of allowing Maduro’s political enforcers into the Spanish embassy in Caracas while González took refuge there.
But on Sunday, he joined the swelling ranks of once-prominent government opponents who have fled into exile, leaving his political future uncertain and tightening Nicolás Maduro's grip on power.
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Maduro announces he will make a "deep claim" for Spain to "pay" reparations for the conquest - MSNVenezuela's President, Nicolás Maduro, announced on Monday that he will make a "deep claim" for Spain to "pay" reparations to the indigenous peoples due to the 1492 conquest of America ...
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Brazil, Spain Struggle to Shake Criticism as Maduro Enablers - MSNTwo of Nicolas Maduro’s oldest allies raised eyebrows on the sidelines of the annual gathering of the United Nations, staging a pro-democracy event in which neither mentioned the Venezuelan leader.
What to know after U.S. seizes Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro's plane 04:16. Venezuela said Tuesday it had arrested a fourth U.S. citizen over what it claims was a plot to assassinate ...
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, hoping for an economic miracle to salvage his country, has placed his trust in an obscure Marxist professor from Spain who holds so much sway the president ...
Lopez has yet to make a public appearance but said the decision to abandon his homeland had not been an easy one; Venezuela's Nicolas Maduro has yet to react.
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