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Trump anuncia que el ejército de Estados Unidos ha matado en Venezuela al Niño Guerrero, líder del Tren de Aragua

13 June 2026 at 02:15

El presidente de Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, anunció este viernes por la noche (hora de Washington, seis más en la España peninsular) que el Comando Sur de Estados Unidos había matado en un “ataque militar rápido y letal” a Niño Guerrero, “el infame líder del Tren de Aragua”, que el republicano definió en el mensaje de Truth, su red social, con el que dio la noticia como “una de las organizaciones terroristas más sanguinarias del planeta”. Trump no especificó dónde se produjo el ataque, pero un comunicado del Gobierno de Delcy Rodríguez confirmó después que al conocido líder criminal lo mataron en el Estado de Bolívar, al sureste de Venezuela.

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© Gobierno de Venezuela

Ficha de captura de Héctor Rusthenford Guerrero Flores.

El PP cita en el Senado a Teresa Peramato para que rinda cuentas de los contactos de Leire Díez con la cúpula de la Fiscalía

12 June 2026 at 11:17
Los populares despliegan una operación de "cerco total a la corrupción del sanchismo" con un calendario repleto de comparecencias: desde el ministro del Interior y la secretaria de Zapatero al ex comisario de Barajas Leer

Los populares despliegan una operación de "cerco total a la corrupción del sanchismo" con un calendario repleto de comparecencias: desde el ministro del Interior y la secretaria de Zapatero al ex comisario de Barajas

Venezuela releases 54 political prisoners, all members of the military

10 June 2026 at 12:39

The Venezuelan government on Tuesday authorized the release of another 54 political prisoners, all military personnel, according to information confirmed by relatives of the detainees and support groups such as the Coalition for Human Rights and Democracy. Three of those released are women. According to data provided by Foro Penal official Gonzalo Himiob, most of them were part of the so‑called Operation White Armband, an alleged military conspiracy denounced by Venezuelan intelligence agencies four years ago. They had been held at Ramo Verde prison and the National Institute for Female Rehabilitation (INOF).

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© Ariana Cubillos (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

Relatives of political prisoners camp near the U.S. embassy in Caracas, Venezuela, on June 9, 2026.

Zapatero, a decade on the edge in Venezuela

7 June 2026 at 05:00

Those were turbulent times. It was November 2024 and Nicolás Maduro was holed up inside Miraflores Palace, the Venezuelan presidential residence. When any foreign leader hinted to him that it might be time to leave power, he answered with a single word: “Never.” The police and intelligence services under his command detained thousands of people who had taken to the streets to protest the electoral fraud that Chavismo had perpetrated in plain view of the world. Protesters had pulled down bronze statues of Hugo Chávez across the country. Prisons were overflowing. The nation was on the brink of rebellion or a bloodbath — or both.

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© OEA/EUROPA PRESS

Zapatero with Delcy Rodríguez in 2016.

Venezuela opens its electricity system to private investment

4 June 2026 at 11:14

The National Assembly of Venezuela, controlled by Chavismo, has taken a step toward ending the state monopoly over the electricity service, which has been in crisis with blackouts and other problems for two decades. A draft reform to the Organic Law of the Electric System and Service was approved in first reading; it is aimed at opening the field to private capital within a framework of long-term concessions.

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© MIGUEL GUTIERREZ (EFE)

Session in Venezuela’s assembly, in April.

The other Carmen Navas: The tireless families searching for relatives who disappeared in Venezuela’s prisons

2 June 2026 at 14:03

María Emely Delgado crossed paths with Carmen Navas several times this year: at the offices of the NGO Foro Penal, at the Public Ministry, and once at the El Rodeo prison on the outskirts of Caracas. Delgado is 63 years old, Navas was 82. Both were looking for their sons, who disappeared after being arbitrarily detained. Carmen Navas died 10 days after finding her son Víctor Hugo in a cemetery. She had spent 16 months searching for him. María Emely has still not found Jorgen. “You have to be in these shoes to know what this is like,” says the retired teacher, who has been wearing them for almost two years. “Her son had been missing for less time than mine; with Jorgen I’m now coming up on 22 months without news of him.”

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© Ronald Peña R (EFE)

People hold candles during a vigil in honor of Carmen Navas in Caracas, Venezuela.
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