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Nassif describes “the day the Brazilian Hells Angels invaded Caracas”

"It's an episode of the same magnitude as the attacks by people on Paulista Avenue against those wearing red shirts. And less serious than the so-called 'Online Rebels' inciting the mob against reporters from a magazine considered leftist. Wherever there are mobs, typical mob-related problems occur. It's that simple," opines the journalist, regarding the "political and diplomatic mission" in Venezuela, according to Aécio Neves.

"It's an episode of the same magnitude as the attacks by people on Paulista Avenue against those wearing red shirts. And less serious than the so-called 'Online Rebels' inciting the mob against reporters from a magazine considered leftist. Where there are mobs, typical mob-related problems occur. It's that simple," opines the journalist, regarding the "political and diplomatic mission" in Venezuela, according to Aécio Neves (Photo: Gisele Federicce).

247 – The episode experienced by Brazilian senators in Caracas, where they intended to visit leaders of the opposition to Nicolás Maduro's government who are imprisoned, was a "manipulation," a "ridiculous fabrication," and demonstrates that, from the beginning, the parliamentarians wanted to "cause a stir." This is the opinion of Luís Nassif.

In an article published in the GGN newspaper, titled "The day the Brazilian Hells Angels invaded Caracas," he says that "the attempt to transform a banal episode into a diplomatic incident is unworthy of the Brazilian parliament." And he compares the situation in the Venezuelan capital with some recent episodes of hostility in Brazil:

"It's an episode of the same magnitude as the attacks by members of the public on Paulista Avenue against people wearing red shirts. And less serious than the so-called 'Online Rebels' inciting the mob against reporters from a magazine considered leftist. Wherever there are mobs, typical mob-related problems occur. It's that simple."

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