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(Correspondent) – The journalist Infobae Roman Lejtman He entered one of the humanitarian aid trucks that will attempt to cross the border between Colombia and Venezuela and showed how Venezuelans were receiving food and health products gathered at Cúcuta with the presence of presidents from several countries of the region.
Thousands of Venezuelans advance in trucks by bridges Ureña and Simon Bolivar with the goal of entering your country to take the humanitarian aid.
Infobae, from the inside of one of these trucks, he is witness to the emotion of the people and the enthusiasm to know that whenever it takes less to reach the goal: that drugs and food arrive in the oil country.
The acting president of Venezuela, Juan Guaidóhe asked that people get on the trucks to protect them from the repression of the Chavez regime.
Earlier, the opposition MP Miguel Pizarro has confirmed the entry into the country of first truck with the help of Brazil. "From that moment, the mobilization of Táchira towards the border with Colombia and the one towards the border with Brazil began", added the legislator of the opposition.
Then Juan Guaidó himself confirmed the news on his Twitter: "Attention Venezuela! We officially announce that the first shipment of humanitarian aid has already entered our border with Brazil. It's a great success, Venezuela! ", Did he declare.
In the middle of a great tension, Venezuelan opposition tries to ensure that foodstuffs and medicines stored in Colombia cross the borders imposed by dictator Nicolás Maduro, which considers that humanitarian badistance covers military interventions.
In Ureña, a Venezuelan town on the border with Cúcuta, incidents between the population and the security forces prevented the pbadage of humanitarian aid.
Guaidó, 35 years old and recognized by more than 50 countries as interim president of Venezuela, is responsible for the operation on the Colombian side of the Tienditas international bridge, blocked since the beginning of the month by container trucks and other obstacles mounted by soldiers. Venezuelans
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