The End of a Dictator
Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro has been ousted by the United States. The last president of Venezuela wasn’t exactly likeable and considered to be a man full of suspicion and hate. A corrupt leader as a ruler has not been new to a South American nation. Venezuela had suffered under him, and the state exchequer had been manipulated. The control and misuse of state exchequer was considered a nuisance in its politics. The ouster of a ruler who was not peculiarly clean, and had been occupied with graft should be considered a grave political development. Venezuela and its citizens must seek better opportunities under a new leader, and their life must improve drastically. The removal of a dictator by the United States must be considered praiseworthy, although certain reservations remain. The international norm of sovereignty should be dealt forthrightly, and a new leader must enter the fray to lead the headless nation. The South American nations have had a socialist hue; they have vouched for people’s welfare but have seldom achieved their social and economic aims. They have adored themselves, and considered their citizens to be socialists or communists, as the case might warrant them to be. Under the new dispensation, the Venezuelans must achieve freedom and justice, and the international community must assure them of a better future.
The ousted president has been taken to the United States, where he might stand trial and be imprisoned for the crimes that he has been accused of. The advent of new politics in South America should be considered a welcome step, provided its new government vows to last and rule as efficiently as they are expected to. Venezuela should be considered a nation that has had a socialist past and is willing to move forward towards a more comprehensible future. Although the future remains unknown, and the United States of America with its self-congratulatory mood must be made more vigilant. The removal of a dictator has not been an easy task for the United States. The recent political development should be highlighted as a ground that has not been treaded before by the dominant power of our times. The United States must put Nicolas Maduro on trial and give him the fair advantage that all rulers, roguish or otherwise, deserve. The new beginning for Venezuela must bring a fresh dose of history. The life that its rulers had promised to them must be made more achievable. The nations are looted in South America under the garb of socialist ideas; their leaders give them nothingness of politics in return. The corrupt regime that they lead has been often mired in conflicts and cartels, and the government ignore the welfare of the people. A nation that should be run as wonderfully as other republics is often left to suffer in poverty. The plight of the people is ignored, and exploitation becomes a norm of the society that they live in. The Venezuelans must be given a novel beginning of politics. The past politics should be forgotten and left aside for history to partake in.
Yuvraj Saharan
Capital Report