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News > Latin America

Roger Waters Slams Interventionist Concert at Venezuela Border

  • This is not the first time Roger Waters has weighed into South American politics.

    This is not the first time Roger Waters has weighed into South American politics. | Photo: Facebook / Roger Waters

Published 20 February 2019
Opinion

"Do we really want Venezuela to turn in to another Iraq or Syria or Libya? I don't and neither do the Venezuelan people," Waters wrote.

Pink Floyd co-founder Roger Waters slammed an upcoming "Live Aid"-style concert to raise funds for humanitarian aid for Venezuela, calling the event a U.S.-backed effort to tarnish the socialist government in a video circulating Tuesday.

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Roger Waters: 'LEAVE THE VENEZUELAN PEOPLE ALONE'

"It has nothing to do with humanitarian aid at all," the 75-year old Waters said. "It has to do with Richard Branson ... having bought the US saying, 'We have decided to take over Venezuela, for whatever our reasons may be.'"

Billionaire Richard Branson is backing the Friday show in the Colombian border city of Cucuta with a fundraising target of US$100 million to provide food and medicine for Venezuelans suffering widespread shortages.

Latin singers Alejandro Sanz, Nacho, Luis Fonsi and Maluma have so far confirmed they will perform in the concert, which has evoked comparisons to Irish rock star Bob Geldof's 1985 global "Live Aid" concert to raise money for famine relief in Ethiopia.

"Venezuela Aid Live" is part of a broader western interventionist effort disguised as “humanitarian aid” organized by Venezuela's right-wing opposition, which is supported by the far-right governments of the United States and Brazil along with other conservative governments in the region.

The opposition plans to bring aid into Venezuela on Saturday from collection points in neighboring countries including Cucuta via sea and land, despite the fact that the government of President Maduro not giving authorization for such action.

Waters, the British rock group's principal songwriter who penned many of the hit songs on the hugely popular albums "The Dark Side of the Moon" and "The Wall," said the relief effort was part of the United States' attempts to paint a false picture of Venezuela to justify regime change.

To date there was "no mayhem, no murder, no apparent dictatorship" in Venezuela, he said.

"Do we really want Venezuela to turn in to another Iraq or Syria or Libya? I don't and neither do the Venezuelan people," Waters wrote.

This is not the first time Waters has weighed into South American politics. During a concert in Brazil ahead of presidential elections there last year, Waters spoke out against then far-right candidate Jair Bolsonaro, who is now president. He has also come out in support of the Palestinian cause and others relating to those fighting against oppression and capitalist and neoliberal governments and corporations. 

Maduro's government this week announced two concerts on Friday and Saturday just across the border from Cucuta to rival Branson's "Aid Live" show.

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