Edmundo González Urrutia is heading to Argentina this week in a show of defiance as Caracas prepares to inaugurate current President Nicolas Maduro
Police are out in force in the streets of Venezuela’s capital as the opposition calls for major anti-government protests.
The Argentine diplomatic residence in Caracas, where five members of the Venezuelan opposition are staying to avoid arrest, has become a "prison," one opposition member staying there said on Saturday.
(Reuters) -Venezuela opposition leader Edmundo Gonzalez, who says he resoundingly won a July presidential election but has been living in Spain after a warrant was issued for his arrest, said on Thursday he will travel to Argentina this weekend. Gonzalez's ...
Argentina's government said on Thursday it had filed a complaint with the International Criminal Court against Venezuela for detaining a member of its gendarmerie, a branch of Argentina's security forces,
Venezuelan opposition candidate Edmundo González Urrutia, who insists he beat President Nicolás Maduro in the country's July vote, is travelling to Buenos Aires from exile in Madrid for a Saturday meeting with Argentina's Javier Milei.
Argentina has filed a complaint with the International Criminal Court against Venezuela for allegedly detaining a member of its security forces, calling it a 'forced disappearance.' Tensions have risen between the countries since Javier Milei became Argentina's president.
CARACAS - Venezuelan authorities are investigating a detained member of Argentina's Gendarmeria national security force for links to international right-wing terrorism, Venezuela's attorney general announced on Friday.
Milei has been a vocal critic of the Venezuelan regime, calling Maduro a “criminal” after Venezuela expelled Argentina’s diplomats in the aftermath of the contentious election, which was ...
Venezuela's attorney general said on Friday that an Argentine military officer who was arrested in Venezuela earlier this month has been charged with terrorism.
The government of President Nicolás Maduro says he did not. The stakes for Friday’s swearing-in of the man who will govern Venezuela for the next six years have never been higher in this century. González had never imagined he would be carrying the weight of the main opposition faction,