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EVIL FILTHY BLOOD THIRSTY "THIEVING AMRIKKANS' GREED" KILLED 100,000 Venezuelans - U.N. Rapporteur Jorge Arreaza

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FBInCIAnNSATerroristSlayer

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Apr 1, 2022, 3:38:28 AM4/1/22
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EVIL FILTHY BLOOD THIRSTY "THIEVING AMRIKKANS' GREED" KILLED 100,000
Venezuelans and "STARVED MILLIONS" who had to migrate to neighboring
countries colombia, ecuador etc


EVIL CUNNING WASPs use the word "SANCTIONS", when in REALITY it is
"BLACKMAIL".

EVIL CUNNING Amrikkan WASPs "BLACKMAILED" Venezuela because Venezuelan
NATIVES "DIDN'T LET" the Amrikkan Rapacious THIEVES to CONTROL and LOOT
"native Venezuelan OIL and GAS WEALTH".


EVERY WORD that comes out of the bodily orifices is a "LIE"

EVERY WORD.

NO EXCEPTIONS.

Amrikka is a "PURE EVIL RACIST THIEVING NATION" which must be completely
DESTROYED for humans to live in peace and harmony.




========================================================================


EVIL FILTHY BLOOD THIRSTY "THIEVING AMRIKKANS' GREED" KILLED 100,000
Venezuelans - U.N. Rapporteur Jorge Arreaza


https://www.mintpressnews.com/jorge-arreaza-venezuela-sanctions-post-petro-economic-plan/279083/


Jorge Arreaza on Venezuela Recovering from Sanctions In New Post-Petro
Economic Plan

“I think our oil industry is going to grow and be maybe even more
important than it was before, because now we know how to do many things
by ourselves that we thought that we couldn’t. And the sanctions helped
us in that sense.” — Jorge Arreaza, Venezuelan Minister of Basic Industries


UN Special Rapporteurs estimate that 100,000 people have died in
Venezuela in the last decade because of the lack of medicine brought on
by U.S. sanctions. Nearly 60% of those deaths took place under the Trump
administration after Washington escalated its economic warfare on the
Bolivarian state. During the Trump era, Jorge Arreaza served as
Venezuela’s foreign minister and spent years building diplomatic ties
with other nations amid Washington’s aggressive hybrid war.

“After 22 years of revolution, we have had to deal with President
Clinton, President Bush, President Obama, President Trump, and President
Biden. And there are no major differences between them because it is not
a matter of who is in the Oval Office; it is a matter of who really
controls the decisions in the United States,” Arreaza told MintPress. He
continued:

The pressure is less with Biden because, while he hasn’t lifted any
sanctions (they are in place, they are harming the people and causing a
lot of damage against our economy and our society), he [also] hasn’t put
new sanctions in place. In the Trump era, this was almost on a daily
basis… As long as the elite that rules the U.S. doesn’t accept and
recognize that there are free people in Latin America and that we are
independent nations and not their backyard, that they have to respect us
— if that doesn’t happen, we are always going to have tensions.”


While Donald Trump escalated sanctions against Caracas, it was indeed
the Obama administration that built the framework of the United States
sanctions regime to appease hawks in his administration. Alex Main,
International Policy Director for the Center for Economic and Policy
Research, told MintPress:

Through an executive order, Obama created the framework of the
sanctions regime against Venezuela, declaring Venezuela an unusual and
extraordinary threat; which is what he had to do to use the
International Economic Emergency Powers Act, which allows U.S.
presidents to unilaterally impose sanctions on foreign entities without
having to get congressional approval.”


Main explained that Trump built on Obama’s framework, allowing Marco
Rubio to choose regime-change hawks to appoint into high places, where
they carried out a crusade against the South American nation. He continued:

In August 2017, while golfing, Trump threatened Venezuela with
military intervention for the first time. Within the same month, the
U.S. president announced sweeping financial sanctions that were designed
to asphyxiate the Venezuelan government and, by extension, the country.
This led to a rapid decrease in the production of oil, due to the lack
of financing available to maintain the oil fields. The Trump
administration continued to escalate it’s economic war, which led to
depleted foreign exchange in which to buy imports, including medicine
and food.”

Earlier this year, Arreaza left his position as foreign minister and was
appointed as the new minister of basic industries, helping to oversee
and develop a plan to revive Venezuela’s industries most affected by
sanctions: oil and minerals. The goal is to allow Venezuela to become
less reliant on imports and become self-sufficient in the face of
sanctions. Venezuela is home to not just the largest oil reserves in
Latin America, but also the largest mineral reserves in the region —
including iron ore, aluminum, gold, and other precious metals that
Western corporations have had their eyes on to fuel the tech boom. While
the oil industry suffered because of lack of financing, the mineral
extraction industry was unable to develop and flourish because sanctions
prevented Venezuela from importing parts to repair the mining machines.

Arreaza is very confident that the oil industry will bounce back
stronger than ever, thanks to the ingenuity of the rank-and-file
workforce at the state-owned oil company PDVSA, revealing that it has
already recovered almost to the level it was at before American
sanctions. He elaborated:

We did things that the U.S. did not even imagine that we could do to
recover our oil industry. And we, of course, trusted in the working
class of PDVSA. They have done this by themselves. We, as the
government, brought all the spare parts and chemical components that
were needed. I can’t tell you how, because if I tell you, then they
would try to stop this from happening. But it was the working class; the
workers from PDVSA, who really made this miracle happen. So I think our
oil industry is going to grow and be maybe even more important than it
was before, because now we know how to do many things by ourselves that
we thought that we couldn’t. And the sanctions helped us in that sense.”


Arreaza also noted that the government has plans to use oil revenues to
develop society and create jobs across Venezuela. “We need to diversify
our economy. And the oil will be the most important tool that we have to
invest in other sectors of our economy,” he said. If his assertions
prove correct, Venezuela may have weathered the storm and there could be
sunnier days ahead for the country, much to Washington’s dismay.


Dhl

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Apr 1, 2022, 8:45:03 AM4/1/22
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