En su declaración ante el tribunal de sentencia y a la pregunta de la defensa de Arnaldo Giuzzio, si se reunió con otras autoridades, Marcus Vinicius respondió que si, con un ministro de obras.
@SaraMorenoPEny @javierpanza dicen que hace mucho vienen cubriendo las "denuncias" hablan de dramas, interrupciones de tratamiento y riesgo de vida.
Mientras tanto... El banco del esposo de su jefa ( @bancoatlas ) desvió y mal manejó cientos de miles de millones de los aportes, dinero que debía servir para salud e infraestructura (un hospital Hemato-oncologico entre otros) Hoy hay deudas, falta de meds y personas sufriendo
Pero ellos no hablan también de la plata que sus jefes malversaron
O sea que con las declaraciones de Benigno se confirma que el @bancoatlas ganó mucho dinero con esos fondos, pero el @IPSParaguay no recibió los rendimientos que correspondían.
El fideicomiso terminó beneficiando más al banco que a la gente del IPS.
Lo que no te van a contar en @ABCDigital@MRehnfeldt
🔎Se armó la polémica en la Copa del Mundo.
⚠️Al igual que 🇵🇾Miguel Almirón (expulsado via VAR), hubo intercambio y discusiones donde 🏴Jude Bellingham y 🇵🇹Cristiano Ronaldo se taparon la boca.
❌Sin embargo, no hubo revisión de VAR ni tarjeta roja para ellos, como sí la vio el jugador paraguayo.
❓¿Doble vara de FIFA si son europeos o sudamericanos?
😡 Les roban un penalti.
❌ Se incumple la 'Ley Vinicius' y Jude Bellingham no ve la tarjeta roja.
🇬🇭 Ghana, atracada.
🇵🇾 Paraguay, indignada. Presentará una queja a la FIFA por diferencia trato en la norma.
📌 BOCHORNO #FIFAWorldCup
🚨🎙️New: Zlatan Ibrahimović on FIFA’s new mouth-covering rule:
“Almirón gets a red. Bellingham gets nothing. Same rule, different treatment”:
“I don’t understand football anymore. FIFA tells us there is a new rule: cover your mouth during a confrontation and you can be sent off. Fine. A rule is a rule. But when the same World Cup gives us two similar situations and only one player pays the price, people are going to ask questions.
“I don’t understand football anymore. FIFA tells us there is a new rule: cover your mouth during a confrontation and you can be sent off. Fine. A rule is a rule. But when the same World Cup gives us two similar situations and only one player pays the price, people are going to ask questions.
When the law is a spider’s web, the small flies get trapped while the big ones tear straight through it. Every new football rule is sold as justice, but justice that changes shirts depending on who wears it stops looking like justice at all.
Football fans are not blind. They see a Real Madrid superstar and England’s golden boy getting the benefit of every doubt, while smaller nations get punished before they can even explain themselves. The badge on your chest should not be a shield against the laws of the game.
And please don’t tell me VAR sees everything. VAR can spot a blade of grass being offside from 50 cameras, but suddenly develops tunnel vision when certain players are involved. It’s amazing how technology becomes a microscope for some teams and a blindfold for others.
The danger isn’t the red card. The danger is the message. If supporters start believing that England, Europe, and football’s biggest brands play by a different set of rules, then trust in the competition starts collapsing like a house built on sand.
Football was supposed to be the world’s game. Now many fans feel it’s becoming a VIP club. The stars sit in first class while everyone else is told to follow the rules from economy.
If the gesture deserves a red card, then give it every time. If it doesn’t, then stop pretending. Because selective justice is the quickest way to kill fair play. And when fair play dies, football becomes nothing more than a blockbuster movie where the ending is already protected.”
Sol Campbell on FIFA's mouth-covering rule:
🗣️ “Let's stop pretending this is about protecting football. If FIFA truly cared about consistency, the same action would lead to the same punishment every single time. Instead, we're watching a system where the badge on your shirt matters more than the rulebook itself.”
“Almirón covers his mouth? Red card. Bellingham covers his mouth during a heated confrontation? Nothing. No punishment. No suspension. No serious scrutiny. Explain to me how football fans are supposed to believe that's justice.”
“The moment I saw the two incidents, I knew exactly what people around the world would be thinking. One player represents a football superpower. The other doesn't. One gets protected. The other gets punished. That's the perception FIFA has created for itself.”
“We keep hearing speeches about equality, respect, and fairness. But fairness disappears the second similar incidents produce completely different outcomes. At that point, the rule stops being a rule and becomes a tool used whenever it's convenient.”
“What makes it worse is that FIFA expects supporters to ignore what they're seeing with their own eyes. Fans aren't stupid. Players aren't stupid. The entire football world can see when standards suddenly change depending on who is involved.”
“If you're Paraguay, Ghana, or any nation outside football's elite circle, every decision feels like an uphill battle. Every tackle is examined. Every reaction is analysed. Every mistake is punished. Meanwhile, the stars seem to live under a completely different set of conditions.”
“This is exactly how trust in institutions disappears. Not because of one controversial decision, but because of a pattern that keeps repeating itself over and over again.”
“The danger is that players from smaller nations start believing the game is already stacked against them before kickoff. Once that belief enters football, you've got a serious problem.”
“FIFA wanted this rule to send a message. Well, it has sent one. Just not the message they were hoping for. Right now, many fans are asking whether the rule applies equally to everyone or only to those without influence.”
“Football survives because people believe the pitch is the one place where everyone starts equal. The moment supporters stop believing that, the credibility of the entire competition starts to crumble.”
"Because from where I'm sitting, it doesn't look like one rule for all. It looks like one rule for the powerful and another for everybody else.”
🌎 #Mundial2026 🏆⚽️ ¡EN EL OJO DE LA TORMENTA!
La FIFA está siendo fuertemente cuestionada porqué hace diferencias entre unas selecciones y otras para la aplicación de las nuevas reglas.
¿Estaba dormido el VAR o expulsar a Almirón era más fácil porque es paraguayo? Es cierto que Ayew se banca la parada ante Bellingham y no sale corriendo a gritar "señorita, señorita, Miguelito se está tapando la boca" como hizo Muldur. El fútbol es para vivos. Y depende la camiseta, los árbitros están más o menos atentos.
🇧🇷 Sawary Jeans. El jean que usan 10 millones de brasileñas.
🇵🇾 Planea fabricarlos en Paraguay.
El CEO de Sawary, Miled El Khoury, voló a Asunción.
9 de junio de 2026.
Se reunió con el ministro de Industria de Paraguay.
Cansado de la reforma tributaria brasileña que nadie entiende.
Cansado de impuesto corporativo del 34%.
Cansado de aranceles de hasta 20% sobre insumos.
Cansado de costos que no cierran.
¿Adónde fue a buscar soluciones?
Al país que ya le quitó a Dass, Lupo y Malwee.
El plan:
Fase 1: Comprar el 40% al 50% de su producción a fábricas paraguayas ya operativas.
Fase 2: Instalar su propia planta.
Empleos: entre 3.000 y 4.000.
¿Por qué Paraguay?
🇵🇾 Impuesto corporativo: 1% tributo único.
🇧🇷 Brasil: 34%.
🇵🇾 Aranceles de insumos: 0%.
🇧🇷 Brasil: hasta 20%.
🇵🇾 Energía industrial: USD 41/MWh.
🇧🇷 Brasil: USD 100+/MWh.
El presidente de la Cámara de Maquiladoras dijo:
"En lugar de optar por Argentina, Sawary observa un mejor clima de negocios en Paraguay."
Siguen pasando los días y la deuda del @bancoatlas con el @IPSParaguay sigue sin saldarse, y quienes pagan el costo de esto? Los pacientes mas vulnerables, nuestros abuelos
Se tiene q hacer cargo, dejan de inventar temas para tapar este verdadero escandalo @ABCDigital