Yaracuy churches were guarded by police and military
This Sunday the streets surrounding the Cathedral of San Felipe and the Virgen del Valle church in Yaracuy dawned with a deployment of police and military personnel, in response to the call for a global protest by opposition leader María Corina Machado.
The Bolivarian National Guard (GNB) deployed anti-riot teams in the vicinity of the Cathedral, while the Bolivarian National Police (PNB) did the same in the Monseñor Tomás Márquez Gómez square, adjacent to the Virgen del Valle church.
Leaders of Vente Venezuela and the Unitary Platform in Yaracuy reported unofficially that there were no plans to carry out mobilizations in the main cities of the state this Sunday, he reported. The Impulse.
In other states of the country there were demonstrations to demand action from the International Criminal Court (ICC) for crimes against humanity attributed to the administration of Nicolás Maduro.
The protest was called by the Democratic Unitary Platform (PUD) on World Human Rights Day.
There were reports of demonstrations in Falcón, Delta Amacuro, Amazonas, Trujillo, Vargas, Miranda, Mérida, Carabobo, Barinas, Portuguesa, Bolívar, Monagas, Lara, Apure and Caracas, according to publications on social networks. But they were all carried out peacefully.
The Con Vzla Command asked Venezuelans around the world to paint their hands red and put them over their mouths to capture a photograph and then share it on different social networks with the hashtag #CPIActúaYa.
Residents in Venezuela also painted walls with their handprints, held signs and gathered with community members to make the called to the ICC.
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