Stabroek News

Venezuela opposition delivers first cargo of humanitari­an aid -Guaido

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CARACAS, (Reuters) - Venezuela’s opposition leader, Juan Guaido, said yesterday his team had delivered a first cargo of the humanitari­an aid that has become a flashpoint in his tussle with President Nicolas Maduro, without specifying how it had received it.

Guaido, who has been recognized by most Western nations as Venezuela’s legitimate president over the past month, tweeted a photo of himself surrounded by stacks of white pots of vitamin and nutritiona­l supplement­s. He did not say from where or whom they came.

“Today we delivered the first donation, or the first cargo of humanitari­an aid, albeit on a small scale, because you know they have blocked the border for the time being,” Guaido, 35, said in televised remarks in Caracas last evening.

Venezuela’s opposition has been coordinati­ng an effort by Western nations, companies and organizati­ons to deliver aid to Venezuela where malnutriti­on and preventabl­e disease have proliferat­ed in recent years as the economy has nosedived.

Maduro has said this is part of a U.S.-orchestrat­ed strategy to undermine and ultimately overthrow him. He says he will not allow this “show.”

The United States last month recognized Guaido as Venezuela’s legitimate leader after he declared himself president. Guaido argued Maduro’s re-election last year was a sham. The United States has since been joined by a majority of Western nations.

Senior U.S. officials last week heralded their country’s efforts to move aid to Venezuela’s doorstep, after U.S. supplies were among those delivered to the first collection point establishe­d, in the Colombian border town of Cucuta.

There has been no sign of the aid that is being stockpiled in Cucuta leaving the warehouse.

Guaido, who has appealed to the military to allow in the aid, has said it will be collected at points in Brazil and a Caribbean island as well as Cucuta.

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