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Nobel Winner Machado Calls Venezuela A“Criminal Hub Of The Americas”
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Machado stepped onto a balcony of Oslo's Grand Hotel to chants of“valiente” and“libertad”, hours after her daughter had accepted the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize in her name.
She had spent months rotating between safe houses in Venezuela after detention during protests against President Nicolás Maduro 's disputed third term, barred from running yet still treated by many supporters as the country's legitimate political alternative.
Her journey out involved a night-time boat crossing to Curaçao and a flight to Europe, defying a long-standing travel ban and an arrest warrant that brands her a terrorist.
In Oslo she met senior Norwegian officials, embraced her children for the first time in more than a year and vowed to return home when it best serves“the cause of Venezuela's freedom,” stressing that she fully understands the personal risk.
At the heart of her message is a darker claim: that Venezuela is no longer just an authoritarian state but a“criminal hub of the Americas”.
Machado Warns of Foreign Influence and Crime in Venezuela
In her Nobel speech and interviews, she argued that the Maduro government is bankrolled by drug trafficking, illegal mining and human-smuggling, and that the country has been“invaded” – not by U.S. troops, but by Russian and Iranian operatives, Hezbollah networks and powerful gangs that now overlap with parts of the security forces.
Those accusations mirror long-running fears in the region about weapons, cocaine and migrants moving through Venezuelan routes under the protection of friendly foreign services and local strongmen.
More than 7.7 million Venezuelans have already left, straining neighbours and pushing desperate families towards the United States and Europe.
If Machado can eventually return and help drive a negotiated transition, Venezuela's collapse might ease, taking pressure off borders and weakening criminal networks tied into Moscow, Tehran and their allies.
If she is jailed on arrival, it will show that entrenched regimes backed by such partners can shrug off elections, courts and even a Nobel medal with few real consequences.
After a year in hiding, Venezuelan opposition leader and new Nobel Peace laureate María Corina Machado has resurfaced in Oslo after secretly fleeing by boat.
From the Nobel stage she accuses Nicolás Maduro's regime of fusing with criminal networks and says Venezuela is“invaded” by Russian and Iranian agents, Hezbollah and local gangs.
Her case turns the prize into a test of how far democracies will go to confront those allies and protect Venezuelans forced to flee.
Machado stepped onto a balcony of Oslo's Grand Hotel to chants of“valiente” and“libertad”, hours after her daughter had accepted the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize in her name.
She had spent months rotating between safe houses in Venezuela after detention during protests against President Nicolás Maduro 's disputed third term, barred from running yet still treated by many supporters as the country's legitimate political alternative.
Her journey out involved a night-time boat crossing to Curaçao and a flight to Europe, defying a long-standing travel ban and an arrest warrant that brands her a terrorist.
In Oslo she met senior Norwegian officials, embraced her children for the first time in more than a year and vowed to return home when it best serves“the cause of Venezuela's freedom,” stressing that she fully understands the personal risk.
At the heart of her message is a darker claim: that Venezuela is no longer just an authoritarian state but a“criminal hub of the Americas”.
Machado Warns of Foreign Influence and Crime in Venezuela
In her Nobel speech and interviews, she argued that the Maduro government is bankrolled by drug trafficking, illegal mining and human-smuggling, and that the country has been“invaded” – not by U.S. troops, but by Russian and Iranian operatives, Hezbollah networks and powerful gangs that now overlap with parts of the security forces.
Those accusations mirror long-running fears in the region about weapons, cocaine and migrants moving through Venezuelan routes under the protection of friendly foreign services and local strongmen.
More than 7.7 million Venezuelans have already left, straining neighbours and pushing desperate families towards the United States and Europe.
If Machado can eventually return and help drive a negotiated transition, Venezuela's collapse might ease, taking pressure off borders and weakening criminal networks tied into Moscow, Tehran and their allies.
If she is jailed on arrival, it will show that entrenched regimes backed by such partners can shrug off elections, courts and even a Nobel medal with few real consequences.
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