Presidential spokesperson
Manuel Adorni responded with irony
this Wednesday to the Foreign Minister of Venezuela, Yvan Gil, who treated him as a "shambles" after accusing Javier Milei's government of being "neo-Nazi."
It was a Brazilian journalist who asked the spokesperson in the last question of his usual press conference about Gil's disqualification, who called him "face of table", a term used in Venezuela to talk about a person who is "brazen and liar".
"With regard to what he said about me, I don't have much comment to make either because whatever comes from a government of dictators must be downplayed in terms of how they can characterize us. I don't have much more to say, I don't know... A "If they call you a blank face, a smile," he responded ironically, with a grimace on his face.
"You can say what you want, personally I had a lot of fun," the spokesperson added.
Regarding the description of the Argentine government as "neo-Nazi", Adorni began by saying:
"What can you expect from a donkey other than a kick."
And he redoubled the bet against Venezuela's politics: "From a government of dictators the only thing one can expect are questions that do not even deserve an answer."
"It saddens us for the Venezuelan people, that they have been going through being ruled by these madmen
for a long time
," he said.
News in development.