
Caracas/The president in charge of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, announced that she will announce this Wednesday “changes” for Venezuela, a country that she has governed for a little more than three months after the capture of Nicolás Maduro by the United States.
“Tomorrow I will speak to the country, I will speak about the truths, I will speak about the changes that Venezuela needs, about the changes that we want in Venezuela, but most importantly, about the future that we have to guarantee for our children and our young people,” said the president in statements broadcast this Tuesday by the state channel Venezolana de Televisión (VTV).
Rodríguez made the announcement during the signing ceremony of an agreement “for peace and the comprehensive development of Venezuelan women”, held at the Miraflores Palace, headquarters of the Executive, in Caracas.
“I will talk about the truths, I will talk about the changes that Venezuela needs, the changes we want in Venezuela, but most importantly, the future that we have to guarantee for our children and our young people”
The Chavista leader pointed out that on January 5 of this year, when she took office, she swore to “defend peace, tranquility and preserve the future for youth,” and stated that her country wants to be “free of sanctions and free of blockade” so that “it can return to a path of well-being.”
The Minister of Communication, Miguel Ángel Pérez Pirela, pointed out on the social network X that it will be “an important message” that Rodríguez will direct, without giving details.
Since January 3, when Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, were captured in Caracas by US forces, Venezuela has been experiencing what the president in charge herself has described as a “new political moment”, marked by an oil opening, the release of political prisoners, an amnesty and the resumption of relations with Washington, after seven years of rupture.
Rodríguez is also promoting a mining law that he announced in March during the visit of the US Secretary of the Interior, Doug Burgum, and of which 115 of 130 articles have been approved until this Tuesday, when Parliament once again postponed the second discussion necessary to sanction the rule, which opens the sector to foreign investment due to Washington’s interest in Venezuelan gold.













