Asked whether they are being held as detainees or are free to leave, Cubillos described the situation as contradictory.
“They tell us we are completely free, that we shouldn’t be afraid, that we are fully protected. But we want to leave and they don’t let us,” he said.
“We are prisoners, with the freedom to have a phone and technology, that’s it,” Rodelo said.>>>



They need people to be terrorized by them to be able to impose a police state like they did in Venezuela and many others.