Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Aid caravans in works for Venezuela

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Protesters and thousands of volunteers will organize relief caravans that will enter Venezuela on Feb. 23, National Assembly leader Juan Guaido said Tuesday, making a promise that will set a direct confrontat­ion with President Nicolas Maduro’s authoritar­ian regime.

“The armed forces will have a few days to decide whether to stand by the constituti­on and allow the entry of humanitari­an aid,” Guaido told thousands of opposition marchers Tuesday. “Enough of hunger, of misery, of usurpation of power.”

Guaido, who says he’s the rightful leader of Venezuela after Maduro’s election was widely disputed, has made a political tool of emergency shipments of food stalled in the Colombian border town of Cucuta. Traditiona­l aid groups have shunned the effort as a ploy, but Guaido is counting on the U.S.-backed initiative to persuade his country’s military to recognize him and to create an opening for desperatel­y needed relief.

While Venezuela faces deep shortages of necessitie­s like antibiotic­s, first-aid supplies and baby formula, Maduro has portrayed the shipments as a pretext for an invasion, sent to undermine his presidency. About 40 miles from Puerto Santander, where the donations are stockpiled, his security forces are using shipping containers and a tractor-trailer to close off an internatio­nal bridge.

 ?? AP/ARIANA CUBILLOS ?? Supporters of Venezuela’s self-proclaimed interim President Juan Guaido demonstrat­e Tuesday against the government of President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas, Venezuela.
AP/ARIANA CUBILLOS Supporters of Venezuela’s self-proclaimed interim President Juan Guaido demonstrat­e Tuesday against the government of President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas, Venezuela.

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