León XIV, escúchanos: No se puede dialogar con un narco-Estado sin condiciones

León XIV, escúchanos: No se puede dialogar con un narco-Estado sin condiciones

No se puede dialogar con un narco-Estado sin condiciones

Mensaje al papa León XIV: no se puede pedir “diálogo” sin condiciones con un narco-régimen que ha tomado a Venezuela como rehén .Frente a crímenes de lesa humanidad, tortura sistemática, represión y exilio forzado, pedir “diálogo” con estructuras narco-autoritarias no es neutral: es funcional a la impunidad. La ética cristiana no admite equidistancias con el opresor. La Biblia es tajante: “Curan la herida… con liviandad, diciendo: Paz, paz; y no hay paz” (Jer 6:14); “Defended al débil… libradlo de mano de los impíos” (Sal 82:3-4); “Aprended a hacer el bien; buscad la justicia; socorred al oprimido” (Is 1:17). Cuando hay captura criminal del Estado, “diálogo” sin verdad, justicia y libertad real sólo prolonga el dolor de las víctimas. El que justifica al impío… es abominación (Prov 17:15). La prudencia pastoral nunca puede confundirse con permisividad moral. A líderes religiosos y políticos por igual: tienen el deber de nombrar al victimario, no de blanquearlo. La paz auténtica exige condiciones no negociables: liberación de presos políticos, cese de la persecución, garantías de justicia independiente y rutas ciertas hacia elecciones libres. Cualquier pronunciamiento que ignore estas premisas será usado por los opresores como coartada. La caridad cristiana es acción: “Libra a los que son llevados a la muerte” (Prov 24:11-12) y “desata las ligaduras de impiedad” (Is 58:6). Hoy, en nombre de las víctimas, afirmo con claridad: no hay mediación válida que relativice la verdad ni paz posible que no pase por justicia.

Robert Carmona-Borjas #Venezuela #LeónXIV #NoHayPazSinJusticia #CrímenesDeLesaHumanidad #NarcoRégimen #LibertadParaVenezuela #DerechosHumanos #VerdadYJusticia #BastaDeImpunidad #SOSVenezuela

Leo XIV, hear us:

You cannot dialogue with a narco-state without conditions

In the face of crimes against humanity, systematic torture, repression, and forced exile, calling for “dialogue” with narco-authoritarian structures is not neutral; it serves impunity. Christian ethics admits no equidistance with the oppressor. Scripture is unambiguous: “They dress the wound of my people as though it were not serious, saying, ‘Peace, peace,’ when there is no peace” (Jer 6:14); “Defend the weak… rescue them from the hand of the wicked” (Ps 82:3–4); “Learn to do right; seek justice; defend the oppressed” (Is 1:17). Where the state is criminally captured, “dialogue” without truth, justice, and real freedom only prolongs victims’ pain. “He who justifies the wicked… is an abomination” (Prov 17:15). Pastoral prudence must never be confused with moral permissiveness. To religious and political leaders alike: your duty is to name the perpetrator, not launder him. Authentic peace requires non-negotiable conditions: release of political prisoners, an end to persecution, guarantees of an independent judiciary, and credible pathways to free elections. Any statement that ignores these premises becomes the oppressor’s alibi. Christian charity is action: “Rescue those being led away to death” (Prov 24:11–12) and “loose the chains of injustice” (Is 58:6). Today, on behalf of the victims, I state plainly: there is no valid mediation that relativizes truth, and there is no peace that does not pass through justice. Robert Carmona-Borjas #Venezuela #PopeLeoXIV #NoPeaceWithoutJustice #CrimesAgainstHumanity #NarcoRegime #FreedomForVenezuela #HumanRights #TruthAndJustice #EndImpunity #SOSVenezuelaTraducir post

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Robert Carmona-Borjas is a Venezuelan-born American lawyer, university professor, author, and advocate for democracy, human rights, and institutional integrity. Trained in law, national security, military affairs, and governance, he has devoted much of his public life to exposing corruption not merely as an administrative offence, but as a deeper form of institutional decay: a condition that disfigures the State, weakens the rule of law, and diminishes human dignity. Following the political rupture of April 2002 in Venezuela, he was forced into exile in the United States, the country that later also became his own. There he continued the civic, academic, and humanitarian work that had already defined his life. He is the CEO and Co-Founder of Arcadia Foundation, a non-profit organisation established in Washington, D.C., dedicated to the defence of democracy, transparency, fundamental freedoms, and the protection of vulnerable persons affected by persecution, forced migration, corruption, and impunity. His work through Arcadia Foundation has joined public denunciation with practical service: civic education, institutional analysis, humanitarian assistance, support for asylum seekers and migrants, and advocacy on behalf of victims whose voices are too often lost inside the machinery of power. As an author, he has written on politics, human rights, migration, and international justice. In recent years, he has also become a recognised voice in the scrutiny of ethical and institutional failures within the International Criminal Court in relation to the Venezuela I Situation. Carmona-Borjas’s life joins exile, teaching, legal discipline, and civic resistance into a single vocation: the defence of law as an instrument of truth, public responsibility, and human freedom.

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