State Terrorism, Torture, Spionage - the operational of Military Intelligence in Venezuela

After the scandal and denounces of the Venezuelan Deathsquads acting in military dome of the Venezuelan forces and police, more and more denounces of torture and abuse of power is comming from Maduro.

Many of the leaders defected the Venezuelan army and requested asylum at other countries, denouncing corruption, power abusive of the government and other shits that Maduro always did. This time, another ex-Military, high rank, and chair of one of the most important domes of security and intelligence of presidency denounced.

Former Secret Service, the ex-military deserter, ex chief of the Venezuelan Intelligence in the past, General Ricardo Chrstopher Figuera, and gave information about how the government military intelligence worked these years under the Maduro's presidence.

His support for Guaidó as legitimate president is also spotlight, 

Maduro used to request reportes each two hours, with list of 30 politics which were supposed to be under supervision. Also, he requested that the reports were given to his wife Cilia Flores and the vice-president, Delcy Rodriguez.

The monitoring were with involved spreadsheets, with pictures, cell phones interceptions and 24 hours agent rotation of a team of four observing the movements, reunions, callings, etc.

Figuera is the most important deserter of the last two decades and he is at USA, offering details of the government and claimed that the government became more and more authoritary in the schemes wchich ones the president and his family and associated were appropriating of the oil profits, gold and other national treasures and resources, while the country 30 milion people are under the chaos and starve.

In more than 5 hours of interviews with Bloomberg in a hotel in Miami and in a bar at the proximity, Figuera, a 55 year old man bodyshaped in Cuba and Belarus, affirmed that the Intelligence Service infiltrated in the Security Complex in Colombia.

With this tactics, the Venezuelan mapped the movings of the important deserter, the Colonel Oswaldo García Palomo, that was captured, tortured and interrogated after cross the borders of Colombia to organize a rebelion.

Figuera affirmed that the torture didn't happen under his command at the SEBIN, but in DGCIM, specialized in military counterintelligence. Figuera said that Palomo is still in SEBIN's priosion and he is a friend that the received treatment became horrofied.

The Colombian president and Defense Minister didn't still answer.

The great part of the affirmative is about the abuse of power, authoritarism and corruption involving Maduro, and he had known the facts after he assumed the position.

The declaration was received with skepticism by the opposition that declared that the ex-General passed one decade as advisor of DGCIM before assumed the control of SEBON and that he was totaly integrated to the most brutal security dome before defect.

According to Figuera, Maduro ordered the FLN to kill him.

His situation at USA is temporary and he doesn't want to stay resident at there. He believes that Maduro will not stay president till the end of the year. The USA authorities said that if he wants to stay he should request the political asylum.

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Venezuela's former secret service chief came to the US with a "treasure": the secrets of Maduro
https://newsbeezer.com/chileeng/venezuelas-former-secret-service-chief-came-to-the-us-with-a-treasure-the-secrets-of-maduro/

The former Venezuelan intelligence chief, General Manuel Ricardo Cristopher Figuera, came to the United States this Monday with a "treasure". The secrets of the president of his country, Nicolás Maduro assures The Washington Post

Figuera, who was hidden and protected for two months, accused the Venezuelan government of illegally trading gold from the presence of Hezbollah in Venezuela and the influence of Cuba in Maduro so the US newspaper.

The information distributed by the media on Monday is based on statements by prominent Venezuelan opponents, US officials and 1

2 hours of exclusive interviews with Figuera, the first he gives to major media outlets.
Figuera, 55, has recognized Juan Guaidó as the legitimate president of his country although he remains at the heart of "Chav ista" when he served for a decade as the chief of security of the late President Hugo Chávez Father of socialist Venezuela and mentor of Maduro

was. The former head of the Bolivarian National Intelligence Service (SEBIN) says that did not regret having gotten up against Maduro although the attempt to bring him out of power has failed and entered the hands of US agents in Colombia was given.

Opposition and Americans " celebrated a partial victory with Figuera's desertion" because it shows "that they were effective and their efforts remain in force even after the failed uprising".

Figuera says that his work at the head of SEBIN made him realize the "rottenness" within the Maduro government.

Cuba's influence on the palace, the gold rush and the Hezbollah cells

Complaint that he began to investigate a company founded by an assistant to Maduro's son, who had built a monopoly by buying cheap gold from miners in the south of the country to sell it to the central bank at high prices.

irregularly protected the government, including the Colombian National Liberation Army (ELN) which would assist in defense in the event of an invasion of the country.

He also referred to the presence of Hizbulá in Maracay, Nueva Esparta and Caracas allegedly related to "illegal operations to finance operations" in the Middle East.

"I discovered that cases of drug trafficking and guerrillas should not be affected." explains Figuera. [194559004] Cuba's influence in Venezuela is reflected in several sentences of the former intelligence chief: "Raul (Castro) was adviser to Maduro" and "When (Maduro) in any meeting, it could be interrupted when Castro called. "

The Washington Post notes that Figuera sent a message to Maduro in April in which he outlined the situation in the country described as "regrettable" and proposed holding elections, but the Venezuelan president called him "cowardly, defeatist", which he called a "break", I had to act.

The former head of the SEBI concluded by saying that he regretted some of his actions, but not all.

Now in the U.S., Venezuela's former spy chief says he was part of plot to oust Maduro

https://theweek.com/speedreads/848989/now-venezuelas-former-spy-chief-says-part-plot-oust-maduro

Gen. Manuel Ricardo Cristopher Figuera, once Hugo Chávez's head of security and later Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro's spy chief, is telling all about what he says he witnessed while serving as one of the government's top officials.

Figuera was named the head of SEBIN, Venezuela's intelligence police, last October, which landed him on a U.S. sanctions list in February. A month later, Figuera was approached by the opposition and joined the plot to push out Maduro, he told The Washington Post in an interview conducted last week and released Monday. He said that working as head of SEBIN made him realize "Maduro is the head of a criminal enterprise, with his own family involved," and he was ready to defect.

Figuera told the Post he learned that an assistant to Maduro's son ran a company that had a monopoly on gold, buying it from miners for a steal and selling it for much more to Venezuela's central bank, among other high-level corruption. The government also looked the other way as groups like Hezbollah and the Colombian guerrilla organization ELN operated inside the country, he said. "I found that the cases of narco-trafficking and guerrillas were not to be touched."

The uprising against Maduro was launched April 30, but it ultimately failed. Figuera told the Post he's not the only top official who joined the effort; he named the chief justice of Venezuela's supreme court, who has publicly denied being part of the plot. Maduro was nervous during the uprising, Figuera said, and once Maduro summoned him to the country's most infamous prison, he knew he had to flee. He went to Colombia, and on Monday, arrived in the United States. "I'm proud of what I did," Figuera told the Post. "For now, the regime has gotten ahead of us. But that can quickly change." Read more on the plot to oust Maduro and Figuera's story at The Washington Post. Catherine Garcia

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