The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Guaido in new bid to rally military support

-

CARACAS: Opposition leader Juan Guaido will make a fresh bid on Saturday to rally Venezuela’s armed forces behind him with protests at military bases in the crisis-hit country.

The protest call by Guaido – the head of the National Assembly legislatur­e, who is recognised as interim president by more than 50 countries – comes just days after he urged the military to rise up against the socialist president, Nicolas Maduro.

“Peacefully, civically, we are going to deliver a simple document, a proclamati­on to the Armed Forces to listen to the Venezuelan call, that a rapid transition is possible to produce free elections,” Guaido told a press conference in Caracas.

A small group of military personnel heeded Guaido’s call to rise up on Tuesday, but the effort petered out, triggering two days of protests against the government in which four people were killed and several hundred injured.

Venezuela’s military leadership has since reiterated its support for the government, and Maduro is standing his ground.

The country’s attorney general Tarek William Saab said Friday that 18 arrest warrants had been issued for “civilian and military conspirato­rs” following the failed uprising, with lieutenant colonels among the uniformed personnel being sought.

The standoff has drawn in major world powers, with the US throwing its support behind Guaido and Russia and China backing Maduro.

The United States has imposed tough sanctions and Trump has refused to take the threat of military action off the table, in an intensifyi­ng campaign to drive Maduro out.

But President Donald Trump adopted a strikingly conciliato­ry tone after a more than hourlong conversati­on with Vladimir Putin on the Venezuela crisis, describing the Friday talks with his Russian counterpar­t as ‘very positive.’ —A FP

 ??  ?? A Colombian army member observes the passage of people on the Simon Bolivar internatio­nal bridge, after a shooting near to the border between Colombia and Venezuela, in Cucuta. — Reuters photo
A Colombian army member observes the passage of people on the Simon Bolivar internatio­nal bridge, after a shooting near to the border between Colombia and Venezuela, in Cucuta. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia