• 5 months ago
La suegra del comunicador no ha podido ingresar a Venezuela durante 30 años.

En el nuevo capítulo de "Tu Día", el periodista José María del Pino relató el drama familiar que lo aqueja tras la polémica victoria de Nicolás Maduro en las elecciones presidenciales de Venezuela, las que lo mantendrían en el poder hasta el 2031.

"Mi suegra es venezolana. Anoche me quedó muy marcado escucharla por el teléfono con un llanto muy angustiado. Ella no ve a su familia hace 30 años, llegó a Chile antes de que llegara el Chavismo. No ve a su familia hace más de 30 años, a ella nunca más le renovaron el pasaporte para entrar a su país", contó el comunicador que cubrió el proceso desde Washington, donde se estableció una parte importante de la oposición del país sudamericano.

El drama del periodista José María del Pino
José María del Pino se emocionó tanto que lanzó un llamado a las autoridades: "¿Vamos a seguir aferrándonos a que estos tiranos entreguen el poder cuando se les antoje o alguien va a hacer algo por esta gente?".

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Transcript
00:00You never want to put yourself in a situation of violence.
00:04I want to make a disclaimer for the people.
00:06My mother-in-law is Venezuelan
00:08and last night I was very shocked to hear her on the phone
00:11with a very anguished cry.
00:13She hasn't seen her family for 30 years.
00:16She came to Chile before Chavismo started
00:19but she hasn't seen her family for 30 years
00:21because later they never revalidated her passport
00:24and she can't enter her country.
00:26She hasn't seen her sister for 30 years.
00:28And I was very shocked.
00:30Sorry for getting emotional but...
00:33I was crying.
00:35There comes a moment when you say
00:37let's keep holding on
00:40until these tyrants
00:43give up their power when they feel like it
00:46or someone is going to do something for these people.
00:49Someone is going to do something
00:51for my mother-in-law, for her sister,
00:53for the families that are scattered around the world.
00:57Are we really going to allow this
00:59as an international community?
01:01I'm not Venezuelan.
01:03Are we really going to allow
01:05the international community to look at us like this?
01:07I'm proud of what the Chilean government did last night.
01:09It set the standard for everyone.
01:11But it's not enough.
01:13I'm sorry to tell you this
01:15and I don't believe in armed conflicts
01:17and I don't believe there are invaders here.
01:19But it's not enough.
01:21So I ask the international community
01:23what is enough to end this?
01:25To end the pain of my mother-in-law?
01:27To end the tears of her sister
01:29who was locked up last night
01:31thinking there was going to be a coup
01:33because Diodado Cabello ordered the military to be garrisoned in Venezuela?
01:35Please, Chile lived it.
01:37What are we going to do?
01:39And I'm sorry to say this to you
01:41but there is no one left to speak for the Venezuelan community.
01:43If the world doesn't react,
01:45if the world doesn't take severe action,
01:47we are going to perpetuate
01:49one more dictatorship per decade.
01:51We already have Cuba.
01:53We already have Nicaragua.
01:55And we are going to perpetuate
01:57chavism and maurism
01:59for 30, 40, 50, 60 more years
02:01separating families
02:03and not allowing them to see each other.
02:05I'm sorry, but I'm very angry.
02:07I'm very, very angry
02:09because I witnessed this fraud
02:11live and in person.

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