Rejection of José Félix Lafaurie for comparing Ariel Ávila with Uriel



[ad_1]

José Félix Lafaurie published the photos of Ávila and alias ‘Uriel’, who was actually called Andrés Felipe Vanegas, on his social network and assured that it was something that reached him; However, wrote “They even look alike”, as seen in this trill:

The disproportionate comparison, taking into account that alias ‘Uriel’ was a guerrilla who committed homicides and recruited young people to join the Eln, led to various personalities such as journalist Daniel Samper Ospina, former minister Juan Fernando Cristo, and senator Gustavo Petro, who pointed out that he put Ávila in “danger”.

Cristo wrote on Twitter that although he respects the opinions of the president of Fedegán, even if he does not share them, he considers that to him “the lights went out”, and expressed solidarity with the journalist which recently came out of Semana.

Samper Ospina spoke in the same vein, which was much more drastic and said that Cabal’s husband He put a “tombstone on Avila’s neck”, and assured that the official had to apologize to the journalist for that “infamy.”

Sergio Fajardo agreed with the ‘Los Danieles’ columnist and added that the “violence of language” that Lafaurie used incites physical violence.

For his part, Petro stated on social media that Lafaurie, husband of Senator María Fernanda Cabal, “lost mental faculties” and what he wanted was to find an “enemy” to continue the war.

The official’s publication comes days after he had a confrontation with Ávila, after Lafaurie celebrated the end of his program in Semana.

Lafaurie’s controversial posts

It is not the first time that the president of Fedegán has become a trend on Twitter due to a controversial trill.

In past situations, Senator Cabal’s husband, who clarified whether he is influencing the US elections, had to apologize for making false posts.

On one occasion, he shared a false photo about a protest that was made for the massacre of Samaniego, Nariño, in which it seemed that the young people who were demonstrating were apologizing to the extinct FARC guerrilla. However, the image was edited and Fedegán’s president had to admit his mistake.

The same happened in another publication in which the senator’s husband was carried away by false comments and shared images of a performance (work of art), saying that they were “satanic rites” that “hooded men” were doing in the middle of protests.



[ad_2]