Important issues facing the americas today. They talked about the attitudes of voters in venezuela, and oho support has shifted since 2019. This is an hour and 20 minutes. All right. Im going to go ahead and start to introducing the next panel, and so the next session is entitled, venezuela, a conversation and this session is a oneonone interview moderated by the president , and featured luis day leon. And also the president of the group will be here to talk about the latin american market. And also, the visesupervisor of the group. And also, we will be joined by the professor of foreign governments and also held the governance and the Southern Cone administration, and so without further ado, please welcome our speaker. Buenos diaz. Translator good morning. The topic of venezuela has come up a great deal in this Conference Since we got started yesterday afternoon. It is topic of great concern for all of us here in this room. And i dont think i need to point out the dimensions of the mu
But its incredibly confusing. Theres objects flying in all directions. Theres even tear gas coming from the top of that building over there. Its hard to see whats going on. Theyre using pepper protesters. The unrest has generated headlines around the world of a ruthless dictatorship crushing dissent with violence but in venezuela, there are competing narratives. Is this an authoritarian crackdown, or a clash between people with radically different visions for the future of their country . A year after the death of hugo chavez, fault lines is in caracas to find out whats really going on in the streets. In venezuela, the former president looms larger than life, even in death. The policies chavez implemented to redistribute oil wealth were polarizing from the start. In his first five years, he faced a coup, an oil lockout, and a recall vote from the countrys elite. Chavez survived it all, pushing forward what he called the bolivarian revolution and cutting poverty rates by more than half.
Theres objects flying in all directions. Theres even tear gas coming from the top of that building over there. Its hard to see whats going on. Theyre using pepper protesters. The unrest has generated headlines around the world of a ruthless dictatorship crushing dissent with violence but in venezuela, there are competing narratives. Is this an authoritarian crackdown, or a clash between people with radically different visions for the future of their country . A year after the death of hugo chavez, fault lines is in caracas to find out whats really going on in the streets. In venezuela, the former president looms larger than life, even in death. The policies chavez implemented to redistribute oil wealth were polarizing from the start. In his first five years, he faced a coup, an oil lockout, and a recall vote from the countrys elite. Chavez survived it all, pushing forward what he called the bolivarian revolution and cutting poverty rates by more than half. He won three more terms in el
Now being arrested. But its incredibly confusing. Theres objects flying in all directions. Theres even tear gas coming from the top of that building over there. Its hard to see whats going on. Theyre using pepper protesters. The unrest has generated headlines around the world of a ruthless dictatorship crushing dissent with violence but in venezuela, there are competing narratives. Is this an authoritarian crackdown, or a clash between people with radically different visions for the future of their country . A year after the death of hugo chavez, fault lines is in caracas to find out whats really going on in the streets. In venezuela, the former president looms larger than life, even in death. The policies chavez implemented to redistribute oil wealth were polarizing from the start. In his first five years, he faced a coup, an oil lockout, and a recall vote from the countrys elite. Chavez survived it all, pushing forward what he called the bolivarian revolution and cutting poverty rate
But its incredibly confusing. Theres objects flying in all directions. Theres even tear gas coming from the top of that building over there. Its hard to see whats going on. Theyre using pepper protesters. The unrest has generated headlines around the world of a ruthless dictatorship crushing dissent with violence but in venezuela, there are competing narratives. Is this an authoritarian crackdown, or a clash between people with radically different visions for the future of their country . A year after the death of hugo chavez, fault lines is in caracas to find out whats really going on in the streets. In venezuela, the former president looms larger than life, even in death. The policies chavez implemented to redistribute oil wealth were polarizing from the start. In his first five years, he faced a coup, an oil lockout, and a recall vote from the countrys elite. Chavez survived it all, pushing forward what he called the bolivarian revolution and cutting poverty rates by more than half.