Internationalist Ramón López: ICC decision against Venezuela contains political ends
Internet
Published at: 04/03/2024 06:48 PM
The internationalist Ramón López, argued that the recent decision of the International Criminal Court (ICC) against Venezuela, related to human rights, lacks veracity and contains political ends in its entirety.
He made the assertion in the Al Aire program, broadcast by Venezolana de Televisió n, where he explained that this is an eminently political context, since “six Presidents who were unaware of the Government of Venezuela, recognized the interim, and within the framework of the guarimbas and that entelechy of the Lima Group, led by the U.S. government and Luis Almagro, take the complaint to the Criminal Court International, supposedly for crimes against humanity, which is one of the four crimes, handled by the Court.”
On the other hand, referring to the recent 8th Summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), López asserted that this instance is “the highest expression of Latin American and Caribbean unity and is an important factor for global geopolitics.”
“CELAC is the highest expression of Latin American and Caribbean Unity, a geopolitical and geo-historical instance of all of Latin America and the Caribbean, and is a constructive entity for the strengthening that must be maintained,” he said
The internationalist stressed that at the VIII Summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States there was a large representation of heads of state, however, the continental meeting is intended to be silenced by the media in some countries of the region, and in the face of this situation it must be combated.
“You access the website of the Panamanian Foreign Ministry and there is no mention of the eighth CELAC summit; it doesn't exist, it's being silenced in the media, so we have to fight against that,” he said.
He highlighted the success of this summit, in which they specified that the Latin American and Caribbean Region is a zone of peace.
For this reason, he stressed that this important block in the region is moving forward and that CELAC's relations with India and China are examples, and he also recalled bilateral agreements with the African Union (AU) and with the BRICS.
“Unity must be defended, because it is called to become a geopolitical factor in the new structure of new continental dynamics,” he argued.