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More than 40% of Venezuelans – 10 Million People – Considering Leaving Country

Public Opinion Poll Published According to a survey released this week by Venezuelan research firm Meganalysis, 43.2% of Venezuelans – more than 10 million people – are considering leaving the country following the results of the fake July 28 presidential election, which socialist dictator Nicolas Maduro claims to have “won.”

Venezuela is in the midst of a new political crisis after the country’s National Electoral Council (CNE), controlled by the Maduro regime, claimed that Maduro “won” a fake presidential election on July 28 and was “re-elected” to a third six-year term. Election officials have refused to release voter data that would prove that Maduro “won” 51 percent of the vote as they claim.

Venezuela’s opposition has accused Maduro of stealing the election. Published The party claims that the results of thousands of votes cast on election day prove that its candidate, Edmundo Gonzalez, was the actual winner of the election. Several countries and international organizations have denounced Maduro’s claim of a “victory” as fraudulent.

The situation has sparked nationwide protests and the Maduro regime has responded with a brutal crackdown. campaign,at least 24 deaths and, 2,400 The regime’s security forces are attacking individuals. This thug socialist regime is also launching a new wave of internet attacks. censorship and”Re-education” A camp for detained dissidents.

A poll conducted by Meganalysis from August 8 to 11 found that 93.4% of respondents believe that Edmundo Gonzalez was the actual winner of the sham elections of July 28. Furthermore, 92.7% expressed distrust in the “results” announced by Venezuela’s electoral authorities and CNE President Elvis Amoroso as a supposed “victory” for Maduro.

The majority of respondents Expressed The post-election chaos has left them feeling “helpless, angry, anxious and frustrated.”

43.2 percent of poll respondents said they were considering leaving the country after the elections, Meganalisis explained, representing 10.4 million Venezuelans, of whom 6.9 million are eligible to vote.

The pollster further explained that of the 43.2% considering leaving, 39.8% said they did not know when they would do so, 22.3% said they would start preparing in 2025, 15.6% would leave after December, 5.8% “within a few months” and 1.6% “immediately”.

Over the past decade, the collapse of socialism in Venezuela under the Maduro regime and the growing authoritarianism of the ruling socialist government have led to an unprecedented migration crisis in the Western Hemisphere. 8 million Venezuelans have been in exile since 2014.

Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado Warned Last week, he warned that Maduro’s continued efforts to illegitimately cling to power would trigger a new wave of migration from Venezuela, which Machado estimated in an online press conference with Mexican journalists could grow to as many as 3 to 5 million Venezuelans “in a very short period of time.”

According to According to statistics from the Regional Interagency Coordination Platform for Venezuelan Refugees and Migrants (R4V), the majority of Venezuelan migrants currently in the region Residing It is being implemented in Colombia, Peru, the United States, Brazil, Spain, Chile, Ecuador and Argentina. The R4V Platform is a joint effort between the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) to address the Venezuelan migrant crisis in Latin America and the Caribbean.

In July, the governments of Colombia and Peru Announced He said he was concerned about a surge in Venezuelan migrants after the election and would begin strengthening the border.

In Chile, far-left President Gabriel Boric Condemned Maduro’s dishonest attempt to maintain power; Reportedly He called for preparations for a new wave of Venezuelan migration and suggested other Latin American countries agree on “quotas” for the number of migrants each is willing to accept.

Chilean presidential spokeswoman Camila Vallejo said the quota proposal was inspired by migration management practices in European countries during recent crises, such as the influx of Ukrainian refugees fleeing Russian aggression.

“The migration of Venezuelans to our country has never stopped,” Vallejo said in early August, “but given recent facts and events, it is clear that what our government has done is prepare for that possibility.”

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