The Phnom Penh Post

Colombia accused of failed ‘terrorist’ invasion

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THE Venezuelan government on Sunday said it foiled an attempted sea incursion by “terrorist mercenarie­s” from Colombia aimed at overthrowi­ng President Nicolas Maduro.

Minister of Interior, Justice and Peace Nestor Reverol said the group tried to land aboard fast boats before dawn in the northern coastal state of La Guaira but were intercepte­d by the military and special police units.

“Thanks to the opportune, effective action of our Bolivarian Armed Forces and special police action forces of the National Bolivarian Police, some were shot down and some were detained,” said Reverol, speaking on state television.

In a statement, the Colombian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said: “On behalf of the national government, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs rejects the claims that have been made by the dictatoria­l regime of Nicolas Maduro, which seek to blame our country for alleged actions aimed at destabilis­ation, and which divert attention from the true issues experience­d by the people of Venezuela.”

Reverol said the group attempted to land on a beach at Macuto, about an hour north of the capital Caracas.

A massive air, sea and land search was underway for remnants of the attackers, he said.

Diosdado Cabello, deputy leader of the ruling Socialist Party, said later that clashes had so far resulted in “eight people dead and two detained”.

Cabello said the operation was “orchestrat­ed” by the US and its Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (DEA), with support from its staunch South American ally, Colombia.

He said one of those killed was Roberto Colina, a formerVene­zuelan army officer linked to retired general Cliver Alcala.

Alcala, a Maduro critic, hit the headlines in March when he surrendere­d to DEA agents in Colombia and was flown to New York after he was indicted along with a dozen others, including the president, on drug-traffickin­g charges.

One of the t wo people detained is a

DEA agent, he said.

“We are going to confront this with all the instrument­s the Constituti­on guarantees us . . . with the use of force when necessary to preserve internal order,” said Cabello, who is also the speaker of the country’s all-powerful Constituen­t Assembly.

Speaking beside him on the steps of the Legislativ­e Palace in Caracas, Reverol said a speedboat used in the raid, as well as 10 rifles and two machines guns, had been stolen from a Venezuelan army depot in April last year.

Venezuela frequently accuses Colombia of fomenting plots to overthrow the Maduro government, and of allowing “mercenarie­s” to train in its territory.

Bogota’s foreign ministry dismissed the accusation as an “unfounded attempt to involve the government of Colombia in a speculativ­e plot”.

The Colombian government of President Iva n Duque has denou nced Maduro as a “dictator”. The two broke off diplomatic relations between their countries last year.

Under Maduro, the once oil-rich South American country has spiralled into the deepest economic crisis in its history, one accentuate­d by US sanctions and now the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Millions of its citizens have migrated abroad – many of them to neighbouri­ng Colombia – to escape deepening poverty and repression.

But so far, Maduro has weathered challenges to his rule, notably from opposition leader Juan Guaido, who declared himself acting president in January last year with the backing of the US and more than 50 other countries.

Guaido claimed the affair was “staged” by the government, to be used as an excuse to “continue the persecutio­n” of opposition figures.

Reverol said the group planned to carry out “terrorist attacks”, including the assassinat­ion of regime leaders.

The plan aimed “to increase the spiral of violence, generate chaos and confusion . . . and with that lead to a new attempt at a coup d’etat”, he said.

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