Английская Википедия:2023 in Venezuela
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Шаблон:Year in Venezuela Шаблон:Dynamic list
The following lists events of the year 2023 in Venezuela.
Incumbents
Governors
- Amazonas: Miguel Rodríguez
- Anzoátegui: Antonio Barreto Sira
- Apure: Ramón Carrizales
- Aragua: Rodolfo Clemente Marco Torres and Daniela González
- Barinas: Argenis Chávez
- Bolívar: Justo Noguera Pietri
- Carabobo: Rafael Lacava
- Cojedes: Margaud Godoy
- Delta Amacuro: Lizeta Hernández
- Falcón: Víctor Clark
- Guárico: José Manuel Vásquez
- Lara: Adolfo Pereira Antique
- Mérida: Ramón Guevara
- Miranda: Héctor Rodríguez
- Monagas: Yelitza Santaella and Cosme Arzolay
- Nueva Esparta: Alfredo Díaz
- Portuguesa: Rafael Calles
- Sucre: Edwin Rojas
- Táchira: Laidy Gómez
- Trujillo: Henry Rangel Silva
- Vargas: José Manuel Suárez
- Yaracuy: Julio León Heredia
- Zulia: Manuel Rosales
Events
Ongoing — COVID-19 pandemic in Venezuela
January
- 1 January - Colombia and Venezuela agrees to reopen the last remaining border that has been previously blocked by authorities due to worsening ties.[1]
- 5 January – Juan Guaidó's interim government dissolves.[2]
March
- 25 March – Twenty-one Venezuelan government officials and businessmen are arrested in an anti-corruption probe targeting state oil company PDVSA and cryptocurrency regulator Sunacrip.[3]
May
- 22 May – 2023 Mahdia school fire: At least 20 children are killed during a fire at a school in Mahdia.[4]
October
- 22 October – Venezuelan opposition parties hold their first presidential primary since 2012.[5]
November
- 15 November – Venezuela announces that it will proceed with a referendum on the status of Guayana Esequiba, despite Guyana's petition to stop the referendum from being held.[6]
December
- 3 December - A consultative referendum was held on the dispute about the territory of Guayana Esequiba.[7][8]
- 4 December - Voters in Venezuela approve the takeover and integration of Guayana Esequiba in a controversial referendum. The National Electoral Council claims more than 10.5 million votes were cast with 95% being in favour of Venezuelan sovereignty over the region.[9]
- 9 December – 2023 Guayana Esequiba crisis: The United Nations Security Council holds a closed-door meeting on the ongoing crisis between Venezuela and Guyana over the Guayana Esequiba Region, but takes no immediate action.[10]
- 12 December – 2023 Guayana Esequiba crisis: A meeting is to be held in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines on Thursday to discuss the ongoing dispute between Venezuela and Guyana. Both countries will try to prevent the crisis escalating into an armed conflict.[11]
- 14 December – Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and Guyanese President Irfaan Ali hold talks in Kingstown, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. Both leaders agree to neither use threats nor force against the other. A joint commission is announced to address the existing issues, with a report expected within three months.[12]
- 20 December – Venezuela releases ten Americans, including Leonard Glenn Francis, and the United States releases Alex Saab, an ally of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, in a prisoner exchange between the two countries. As part of the deal, Venezuela will also release around 20 political prisoners from jail.[13]
Deaths
- 6 January – Victoria de Stefano, 82, Italian-Venezuelan writer[14]
See also
References
Шаблон:Years in Venezuela Шаблон:South America topic
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- ↑ Victoria de Stefano (Rímini, 1940 – Caracas, 2023) Шаблон:In lang