Politics Events Country 2025-12-12T20:17:52+00:00

Milei in Oslo to Support Venezuelan Opposition

Argentine President Javier Milei traveled to Norway to support Corina Machado and condemn electoral fraud in Venezuela, vowing unwavering support to its people.


Milei in Oslo to Support Venezuelan Opposition

Argentine President Javier Milei arrived in Oslo to support the Venezuelan opposition. He was one of the few and the first in the region to openly support the fraud allegations raised by Corina Machado. The silent, unarmed majority of Venezuelans who backed Machado elected Edmundo González Urrutia to succeed Nicolás Maduro and his Bolivarian elite, who refuse to relinquish power. Milei will not be alone, as three other regional presidents also supported Corina Machado and were invited to Norway. 'We will not retreat a single centimeter until the elected government of Venezuela takes the reins of power, because that is what the people of Venezuela wanted,' he told the European press. Milei arrived a few hours ago, accompanied by his sister and General Secretary Karina Milei, and his Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno, on a lightning trip. The three musketeers plus d'Artagnan who will guard the brave Venezuelan politician. While Trump speaks majestically and without stress about Maduro, saying, '...his days in power are numbered,' the four Latin American presidents present in Europe loudly, whenever they could, expressed their rejection of the electoral fraud perpetrated by the heir to Hugo Chávez. The Panamanian Mulino, who traveled from his country on Sunday, was the first to arrive in Norway, and has already held meetings with the mother, sister, and daughter of Corina Machado. 'I am here to accompany her. At any moment of the day she could appear, and Argentine President Javier Milei decided to extend his stay in Oslo, waiting for her. His presence at such an important event and at a crucial moment for Venezuela is purely Milei's merit. But for quite some time now, Milei has shown himself to be a fervent ally of Machado and does not hesitate for a second to call Maduro a dictator. Before leaving Buenos Aires, he told his officials that Nicolás Maduro should recognize '...his defeat after years of socialism, misery, decay, and death.' He not only made statements. In March 2024, he received at the Argentine embassy in Caracas six collaborators of Corina Machado who had suffered harassment and persecution from the Bolivarian regime for over a year. On the other hand, the Javier Milei administration suffered the pressure and harassment of its diplomats in Caracas when Maduro ordered to expel them all, and those who remained were defended by Brazil, which took control of the national diplomatic legation. Now, the most urgent and delicate issue is the reappearance of the gendarme Nahuel Gallo alive. In the 21st century, many Venezuelans in Argentina associate Corina Machado with the figure of a new liberator, like Simón Bolívar. For the government and the wife of the young gendarme, he is in a situation of 'forced disappearance.' The Quirno Chancellery and the Ministry of Security of Alejandra Monteoliva assured that they will not cease in the search for Gallo's release, whom the Nicolás Maduro regime accuses of supposed 'conspiratorial actions.'