LAS CUEVAS: Venezuela’s ambassador to the UN, Samuel Moncada, condemned on Thursday a recent US strike on a small boat in Caribbean waters that killed six people, calling it “a new set of extrajudicial executions.”
He called on the UN Security Council to investigate what he called a “series of assassinations,” noting there have been five lethal attacks and 27 reported deaths since the strikes in the Caribbean began in September, targeting what US officials say are suspected drug traffickers.
Among those believed to be killed in the latest strike that occurred Tuesday are two fishermen from Trinidad and Tobago, whom Moncada referenced in his speech.
As Moncada spoke at the UN on Thursday, people in the sleepy fishing town of Las Cuevas in northern Trinidad mourned the disappearance of Chad Joseph. His relatives believe he was killed in the strike, although they offered no other evidence that he was aboard the boat that was hit.
“People are crying. Why is Donald Trump destroying families?” Afisha Clement, Joseph’s cousin, told The Associated Press.
She said Joseph had moved to Venezuela six months ago and was working on farms in hopes of earning more money.
But in recent weeks, Clement said he told the family that he was disappointed with the money he was making and planned to come back home.
On Tuesday, he boarded a boat bound for Trinidad and was expected to arrive on Wednesday, Clement said.
But no one has heard from him from since then.
His family has called and texted him to no avail as they condemned the strikes.
“He was a quiet person,” Christine Clement, Joseph’s grandmother, said from her living room. “He has left the whole village in sadness.”
The Trinidad and Tobago Guardian, a local newspaper, reported that also missing is a man only identified as “Samaroo.”
At UN headquarters, Moncada held up the newspaper’s front page that detailed the lives of the two men from Trinidad.
“There is a killer prowling the Caribbean,” Moncada said. “People from different countries…are suffering the effects of these massacres.”
Only a couple of miles separate Venezuela and Trinidad and Tobago at their closest point, and the ongoing military strikes have spooked fishermen in the twin-island nation.
“There is no justification at all,” Moncada said. “They are fabricating a war.”
The administration of US President Donald Trump has said it considers alleged drug traffickers as unlawful combatants who must be met with military force.
Democrats have said the strikes violate US and international law, while some Republicans have sought more information on the strikes and their legal justification.
Meanwhile, Trinidad and Tobago’s Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar has praised the first strike on a boat suspected of carrying drugs in the southern Caribbean and said that all traffickers should be killed “violently.”
The US began building its maritime forces in the Caribbean earlier this year in an unprecedented fashion not seen in recent times.
“The United States is overseeing a seismic reordering of defense priorities and assets to the Western Hemisphere,” stated a recent report from the think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C.
It noted that the US territory of Puerto Rico has provided “the lion’s share of such infrastructure” as the US military seeks airfields and ports in the Caribbean region as concerns over the strikes grow.
“The administration’s declaration of war against drug cartels has raised a host of legal, ethical and moral questions, and while the declaration of a state of armed conflict has offered some legal foundation, this is already facing fierce domestic scrutiny,” the center stated in its report.
Venezuela at the UN condemns latest US strike in Caribbean as people in Trinidad mourn
https://arab.news/66mvt
Venezuela at the UN condemns latest US strike in Caribbean as people in Trinidad mourn
- The US began building its maritime forces in the Caribbean earlier this year in an unprecedented fashion not seen in recent times
- Among those believed to be killed in the latest strike that occurred Tuesday are two fishermen from Trinidad and Tobago
Canadian police investigate reports of gunfire at US consulate in Toronto
- Police said they were at the scene near University Avenue and Queen Street West
- “Evidence of a firearm discharge has been located,” police said in the post
TORONTO: Canadian police are investigating reports that the United States consulate in downtown Toronto was hit by gunfire early on Tuesday morning.
No injuries have been reported.
Toronto police said Tuesday they responded to reports at around 5:30 a.m. that someone shot a gun at the US consulate.
In a post on social media, police said they were at the scene near University Avenue and Queen Street West.
“Evidence of a firearm discharge has been located,” police said in the post.
No suspect information has been released.
“The shooting that took place at the US consulate early this morning is an absolutely unacceptable act of violence and intimidation aimed at our American friends and neighbors,” Ontario Premier Doug Ford said in a statement.
“Everyone at all levels of government and across Canada needs to make clear that there is zero tolerance for this sort of intimidating and dangerous behavior.”
The reported shooting comes after two Toronto-area synagogues were struck by gunfire last weekend.
“The US consulate was shot at. This comes after shootings at synagogues,” Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow said. “This cannot stand. Toronto’s Jewish community has the right to practice their faith and culture and to live their day-to-day lives without fear, intimidation or violence. As we have seen too many times, antisemitic incidents spike when international incidents rise. It is never acceptable to target the Jewish community.”
Chow said there is heavy police presence on Tuesday at both the US and Israeli consulates in Toronto.
The war in Iran has prompted large demonstrations outside the US consulate, both in support and in protest.










