The Revolutionary Government demanded that Brazil not meddle in matters that concern only Venezuelans
Photo: Internet
Published at: 02/11/2024 02:34 PM
The Revolutionary Government urged Brazil to stop meddling in the affairs of Venezuela in order to avoid the deterioration of relations between the two countries.
In a statement released this Saturday by Foreign Minister Yván Gil, Venezuela urged its Brazilian counterpart to “assume respectful professional and diplomatic conduct” in favor of good relations.
Below is the full statement:
The Government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela finds incomprehensible the recent communiqué drafted by the Brazilian Foreign Ministry (Itamaraty), in which it tries to deceive the international community, posing as victims in a situation where they have clearly acted as perpetrators, which has surprised Brazilian, Venezuelan and Latin American society.
Venezuela has demonstrated, through public complaint, with dozens of evidence, how Itamaraty has undertaken a brazen and rude aggression against the Constitutional President, Nicolás Maduro Moros, public institutions and powers, as well as Venezuelan society, in a systematic campaign that violates the principles of the United Nations Charter, such as national sovereignty and the self-determination of peoples, even violating the Brazilian constitution itself in its mandate and non-interference in matters internal members of States.
The argument expressed by Itamaraty, to meddle in electoral and political issues in Venezuela, calling themselves witnesses to the Barbados accords, lacks veracity and is a ruse that must cease immediately, since the above-mentioned agreements were developed exclusively by Venezuelans.
The Bolivarian Government once again urges the Itamaraty bureaucracy to desist from meddling in issues that concern only Venezuelans, avoiding deteriorating diplomatic relations between the two countries, for which they must assume respectful professional and diplomatic conduct, as Venezuela has demonstrated through its foreign policy. Caracas, November 2, 2024.


Mazo News Team