Times of Oman

Fake humanitari­an aid won’t be let in: Maduro

Venezuela’s opposition leader Juan Guaido said he would do ‘everything that is necessary… to save human lives’

-

CARACAS: Venezuela’s opposition leader Juan Guaido refused on Friday to rule out authorisin­g US interventi­on to force President Nicolas Maduro’s hand in allowing in humanitari­an aid and leaving power.

Guaido launched an audacious bid to oust Maduro last month, declaring himself acting president, a move recognised by the United States and some 40 countries, including 20 from the EU.

National Assembly president Guaido said he would do “everything that is necessary… to save human lives,” although he acknowledg­ed that American interventi­on is “a very controvers­ial subject.”

Earlier, Maduro vowed not to let in ‘fake humanitari­an aid’ and claimed Venezuela’s crisis has been ‘fabricated by Washington’ to justify interventi­on.

Under Maduro’s stewardshi­p, Venezuela’s economy has collapsed leaving the country wracked by hyperinfla­tion, recession and shortages of basic necessitie­s such as food and medicine.

Guaido, 35, is trying to bring in aid from the US but the supplies are stuck in warehouses in Colombia because the Venezuelan military has blocked their entry.

“Venezuela won’t allow the spectacle of fake humanitari­an aid because we’re no one’s beggars,” Maduro said at a press conference in Caracas.

Guaido says 300,000 people could die if desperatel­y-needed aid isn’t brought in. “We’re going to do everything that has a lower social cost, which generates governabil­ity and stability to deal with the emergency so we can recover public services,” he said.

Venezuela frequently suffers from power cuts, a lack of running water and public transport, while there is also a shortage of doctors and medical supplies in hospitals.

But bringing in humanitari­an aid is crucial to Guaido’s challenge to Maduro’s authority.

Several trucks carrying food and medicine arrived at a collection center in the Colombian border town of Cucuta on Thursday.

Venezuelan migrants gathered there to see if they could receive some aid.

However, on the other side of the Tienditas border bridge, Venezuelan troops loyal to Maduro had blocked the road, heightenin­g tensions with Washington.

Guaido, who has appealed to the military to back him, said the armed forces “have a dilemma: either they side with the people in need or with the dictatorsh­ip.”

He has called for another street protest on Tuesday to keep up the pressure on Maduro, who is backed by China, Russia, Turkey and leftist regional allies Cuba and Bolivia.

Maduro, 56, blames shortages of food and medicine on US sanctions, which mostly target regime individual­s as well as state oil company PDVSA.

“Liberate the money that has been blocked and sequestere­d,” said Maduro, who has repeatedly accused the US of fomenting a coup.

“This is a macabre game: we squeeze them by the neck and make them ask for crumbs.”

Guaido’s representa­tive in Cucuta, Lester Toledo, said the provisions already delivered were the ‘first drops’ and promised ‘a tsunami of humanitari­an aid’ would follow.

“We’re going to open a humanitari­an corridor and the doors to freedom,” he told journalist­s.

Early Wednesday, a Venezuelan military boat carrying 100 tons (tonnes) of aid landed in Havana to help Cubans recovering from the wrath of a tornado.

Guaido is trying to force Maduro from power, aiming to set up a transition­al government and hold presidenti­al elections.

He claims his legitimacy from the constituti­on, but Maduro — labeled a dictator by the West and his Latin American neighbors — insists his re-election last year was constituti­onal. The US, EU and many Latin American countries branded it a fraud as prominent opposition leaders were unable to stand after being exiled, jailed or barred.

 ?? -File photo ?? RALLY: Opposition leader Juan Guaido gestures at thousands of supporters during a gathering in Caracas. He has called for another street protest on Tuesday to keep up the pressure on Maduro,
-File photo RALLY: Opposition leader Juan Guaido gestures at thousands of supporters during a gathering in Caracas. He has called for another street protest on Tuesday to keep up the pressure on Maduro,

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman