Following the U.S. designation of Tren de Aragua as a terrorist organization, new evidence has surfaced in Chile showing not only that there are links between the Venezuelan gang and the Nicolás Maduro regime,
The killing infuriated politicians in Chile, one of Latin America’s safest and most affluent countries, and set off a diplomatic dispute with Venezuela’s regime. The murder sent shock waves throughout the Venezuelan diaspora, where exiles worried that ...
The success of President Donald Trump’s clampdown on a notorious Venezuelan criminal gang depends, at least in part, on years of bitter experience in Chile.
Venezuela Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello, an ally of strongman Nicolás Maduro, is accused of ordering the assassination in Santiago, Chile, allegedly carried out by transnational crime gang Tren de Aragua.
Edmundo González, recognized by the United States as Venezuela’s president-elect, urges the Trump administration not to deal with the Maduro regime on immigration.
The Minister of the Interior of Chile, Carolina Tohá, assured that she will resort to the International Criminal Court (ICC) to make all those […]
Chile, Ecuador, Peru and Central America, in addition to Venezuela. While the link between the Maduro regime and the Tren de Aragua has for long been suspected, the news coming out of Chile this ...
A series of immigration executive actions signed by President Donald Trump on the first day of his second term included a call for the Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang as a global terrorist organization.
Venezuela boasts of having the largest oil reserves on the planet, and a massive exodus of its people means that there are almost eight million fewer mouths to feed, but still some five million Venezuelans are going hungry in the country,
The New York Times, the so-called US “newspaper of record,” carried an opinion piece by one of its columnists promoting “military intervention” to promote
There is no census, and migrants come and go, but the majority of people in La Soledad appear to be from Venezuela, the once-wealthy South American nation that has seen an exodus of more than 7 million amid an economic, social and political crackup.
Chile will not promote new migratory flows” or “change its border migration policy due to a crisis in any country in the region”, said to EFE the head of the Chilean Migration Service, Eduardo Thayer,