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Open letter reappeared. In an act that took place in a bookstore in the federal capital, Kirchner's Intellectual Collective supported dictator Nicolás Maduro and described the proclamation of Juan Guaidó as Venezuela's interim president as a "coup d'etat" process.
In the statement that they read, titled "Our support to the Nicolás Maduro government", affirmed that the serious crisis in which Venezuela finds itself "constitutes the most cruel exercise of a new act of imperial domination, of a decrepit imperial domination".
The former director of the National Library Horacio González, the actress Cristina Banegas, the philosopher Eduardo Rinesi, the journalist Gustavo Campana and the economist Guillermo Wierzba were present.
Through the text, have argued that coups d'état are a "North American specialty""and spoke about the country's involvement in the overthrow of Chilean President Salvador Allende and the wars in Vietnam and Iraq.
In addition, they badured that the situation this does not explain "only" by the desire to control the vast oil reserves of the Caribbean country, but also by "the political theological notion of certain sectors of American power that want to take retribution moralizing about Latin America of José Martí, Sandino, Perón, Fidel, Lula, Chavez, Kirchner, Evo Morales ".
The signatories thought that Maduro is kept in power thanks to the "great popular support" and the "firm" support of the army, an aspect they described as "fundamental to any solution to the crisis other than the coup and carnage".
And although they recognized the The "unacceptable deficiencies" that Venezuelans experience indicate that they are caused by the "blockade" led by the United States, despite the fact that sanctions against the state oil company PDVSA were imposed just over two weeks ago.
In statements to EFE, the sociologist Horacio González expressed his "concern" because the situation "may have warlike nuances at any moment".
At the same time, he pointed out that Carta Abierta "is in favor of a dialogue in Venezuela, but not without condemning the coup d'etat and without defending the government of Nicolás Maduro".
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