FIRST RETIREES IN CENTS. When the history of retirements in the Public Administration is written, the employees listed below will be the first. The retirees are: Ángel Rafael Morillo Pérez, BsS. 0.12. Argenis Noemí Machado, BsS. 0.15. Edgar Andrés Delgado Méndez, BsS. 0.12. Jesús María Delgado, BsS. 0.13. Magali Josefina Fernández Fernández, BsS. 0.22. Morayma Isbelia Luna Bolívar BsS. 0.17. Rafael Antonio Segovia García, BsS. 0.25. Yajaira del Carmen Blanco Machado, BsS. 0.18. And, Zamari Coromoto Moreno Villafranca, BsS. 0.29. All from the Ministry of Transport. THE WAR OF SANTOS. Devils have appeared among the Santos in Colombia. The family is at war. They are fighting among siblings and uncles. This is the latest report from the press. The public confrontations among the Santos family, one of the most powerful and influential in Colombia, seem endless. Martín Santos, the eldest son of former president Juan Manuel Santos, and Francisco Santos, former vice president and now Colombia’s ambassador to the United States, have been involved in a new confrontation, this time over the proposal by Iván Duque’s government to reverse a legal decision made in 1994 and allow the confiscation of personal amounts of drugs, penalizing the holder and destroying the seized items. Martín criticized the fact that his uncle, one of the most loyal supporters of former president Álvaro Uribe, admitted to having smoked marijuana in the past and is now part of a government that will undertake a crusade against minimum doses, the possession of which was decriminalized in 1994 by the Constitutional Court. “For the poor stoner: Bolillo. For the Uribista stoner: Embassy,” tweeted Martín in reference to his uncle’s appointment at the Colombian embassy in Washington. Juan Manuel Santos and his cousin have also had public clashes over the last nine years. At one point, President Santos stated that Francisco Santos had “AIDS in the soul,” a comment rejected by the community of HIV carriers, which forced him to apologize. On his side, Francisco Santos has claimed several times that he knew Santos would betray Uribe once he reached the presidency, stating he lacks “character, loyalty, or convictions.” “I knew Juan Manuel would betray him on the second day. But I was wrong. It was on the first day,” he asserted in his book Rebelde con causa. DUQUE. The president of Colombia stated yesterday in a meeting with advisors that he has nothing to pay Venezuela for the migrants, contrary to what the country’s government aspires. A leader of the governing party went further, saying, “let them go to the Heavenly Court.” President Maduro has mentioned he will go to the international court to demand compensation from Colombians, appointing Jorge Rodríguez as the head of the mission to claim it. HUNGER. There is hunger in Venezuela, but less than in some other South American countries, except for Colombia. The number in our country dropped from 4.1 million in 2016 to 3.7 million, meaning about 400 thousand less. THE ELDERLY. They continue their protest because, according to their spokespeople, the government has not fully paid. “It’s our effort,” they warned. NOTE THIS. Producers from Guárico and other regions of the country are considering closing their farms. They can’t afford the inputs. In Táchira, more than 100 poultry farms have closed. CASH. The cash drama continues, but not the speculative business in some sectors of Caracas. Merchants are positioned in strategic locations to hunt their victims with inflated prices. CRISIS. The Brazilian Minister of Defense revealed his conversation with his Venezuelan counterpart in Puerto Ordaz, where the latter allegedly admitted the difficult food situation in Venezuela. PDVSA. Here are the new executives of Pdvsa: Guillermo Gustavo Blanco Acosta, vice president of Refining and internal director. Fernando Manuel de Quintal Rodríguez, vice president of Trade and Supply and internal director. Nemrod Antonio Contreras Mejías, vice president of Gas and internal director. Iris Yari Medina Fernández, vice president of Finance and internal director. Marcos Alejandro Rojas Michelena, Vice president of International Affairs and internal director. Miguel José Quintana Castro, vice president of Planning and Engineering and internal director. Yurbis Josefina Gómez, external director. Ricardo Andrés León Sabala, external director. Wils Asención Rangel Linares, external director. Simón Alejandro Zerpa Delgado, external director. Ricardo José Menéndez Prieto, external director. And Tareck Zaidan El Aissami Maddah, internal director.