The Borneo Post

Venezuela ‘on alert’ after Trump threat

Suspends air and sea links with island of Curacao ahead of planned aid shipment

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CARACAS: Venezuela’s military said Tuesday it was on alert at its frontiers following threats by US President Donald Trump and suspended air and sea links with the island of Curacao ahead of a planned aid shipment.

Opposition leader and selfdeclar­ed interim president Juan Guaido has vowed to bring aid in from various points Saturday “one way or another” despite military efforts to block it.

But commanders doubled down on their allegiance to President Nicolas Maduro after Trump urged them to abandon him.

“The armed forces will remain deployed and on alert along the borders... to avoid any violations of territoria­l integrity,” said Defence Minister Vladimir Padrino.

Regional commander Vladimir Quintero later confi rmed media reports that Venezuela had ordered the suspension of air and sea links with Curacao and the nearby Netherland­s Antilles islands of Aruba and Bonaire.

Shipments of food and medicine for Venezuelan­s suffering in the country’s economic crisis have become a focus of the power struggle between Maduro and Guaido.

Aid is being stored in Colombia near the Venezuelan border and Guaido aims also to bring in consignmen­ts via Brazil and Curacao, wh9ich is off the coast of Venezuela.

A Brazilian presidenti­al spokesman said the country was cooperatin­g with the United States to supply aid to Venezuela but would leave it to Venezuelan­s to take the goods over the border.

Maduro says the aid plan is a smokescree­n for a US invasion. He blames US sanctions and “economic war” for Venezuela’s crisis.

Guaido has appealed to military leaders to switch allegiance to him and let the aid through.

He has offered military commanders an amnesty if they

The armed forces will remain deployed and on alert along the borders... to avoid any violations of territoria­l integrity. Vladimir Padrino, Defence Minister

abandon Maduro.

But the military high command has so far maintained its public backing for Maduro — seen as key to keeping him in power.

“We reiterate unrestrict­edly our obedience, subordinat­ion and loyalty” to Maduro, Padrino said.

Guaido posted a series of tweets calling by name on senior military leaders commanding border posts to abandon Maduro.

He has branded Maduro illegitima­te, saying the elections that returned the socialist leader to power last year were fi xed.

The United States and some 50 other countries back Guaido as interim president.

Trump has refused to rule out US military action in Venezuela. He raised the pressure on Monday, issuing a warning to the Venezuelan military.

He told them that if they continue to support Maduro, “you will fi nd no safe harbor, no easy exit and no way out. You will lose everything.”

Padrino rejected Trump’s threat, branding the US president “arrogant.”

If foreign powers try to help install a new government by force, they will have to do so “over our dead bodies,” Padrino said.

Venezuela’s deputy military attache at the UN announced Tuesday he was siding with Guaido.

“I declare myself to be in total and absolute disobedien­ce to the illegally constitute­d government of Mr. Nicolas Maduro,” Colonel Pedro Jose Chirinos said in a video posted on social media.

Since Guaido declared himself interim president on Jan 23, he has received the support of an army colonel and an air force general, neither of whom actually have any troops under their command, a retired air force major general and a number of lower-level officers.

Despite sitting on the world’s biggest oil reserves, Venezuela is gripped by an economic and humanitari­an crisis, with acute shortages of food and medicine.

It has suffered four years of recession marked by hyperinf lation that the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund says will reach a mind-boggling 10 million percent this year.

An estimated 2.3 million Venezuelan­s have left the country since 2015.

Guaido says 300,000 people face death without the aid but Maduro denies there is a humanitari­an crisis.

Padrino said the military would not be “blackmaile­d” by “a pack of lies and manipulati­ons.”

Maduro said that 300 tonnes of Russian aid would reach Venezuela on Wednesday. He previously announced the arrival of goods from China, Cuba and Russia, his main internatio­nal allies.

In a series of tweets, Guaido urged supporters to write to the generals “from the heart, with arguments, without violence, without insults,” to win them over.

Guaido says he has enlisted the support of 700,000 people to help bring in the aid on Saturday and is aiming for a million in total.

He thanked Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Spain for pledging “more than $ 18 million for the humanitari­an aid.”

British entreprene­ur Richard Branson said he will hold a proaid concert just over the border in Colombia on Friday.

British rock star Peter Gabriel and Colombian pop singer Carlos Vives are among those scheduled to perform.

Former Pink Floyd singer Roger Waters weighed in on Maduro’s side in a video broadcast on Venezuelan state media, criticizin­g Branson and Gabriel and said the aid was being politicise­d.

Maduro’s government plans to stage a rival concert on its side of the border.

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 ??  ?? File photo shows the word ‘Peace’ written on one of the containers placed by Maduro loyalists to prevent access to the country through the Tienditas Internatio­nal Bridge, as Colombian police officers stand guard in the Colombian side of the border in Cucuta where a concert organised by British billionair­e Richard Branson to raise money for the relief effort will be held on Feb 22. — AFP photo
File photo shows the word ‘Peace’ written on one of the containers placed by Maduro loyalists to prevent access to the country through the Tienditas Internatio­nal Bridge, as Colombian police officers stand guard in the Colombian side of the border in Cucuta where a concert organised by British billionair­e Richard Branson to raise money for the relief effort will be held on Feb 22. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? This combinatio­n of pictures shows Guaido (left) and Maduro (right). — AFP photo
This combinatio­n of pictures shows Guaido (left) and Maduro (right). — AFP photo

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