Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Venezuelan­s take to streets as uprising attempt sputters

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CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuelan­s heeded opposition leader Juan Guaido’s call to fill streets around the nation Wednesday but security forces showed no sign of answering his cry for a widespread military uprising, instead dispersing crowds with tear gas as the political crisis threatened to deepen.

Thousands cheered Mr. Guaido in Caracas as he rolled up his sleeves and called on Venezuelan­s to remain out in force and prepare for a general strike, a day after his bold attempt to spark a mass military defection against President Nicolas Maduro failed to tilt the balance of power.

“It’s totally clear now the usurper has lost,” Mr. Guaido proclaimed, a declaratio­n belied by events on the ground.

Across town at the Carlota air base near where Mr. Guaido made his plea a day earlier for a revolt, intense clashes raged against between protesters and troops loyal to Mr. Maduro, making clear the standoff would drag on. There and elsewhere, state security forces launched tear gas and fired rubber bullets while bands of mostly young men armed with makeshift shields threw rocks and set a motorcycle ablaze.

“I don’t want to say it was a disaster, but it wasn’t a success,” said Marilina Carillo, who was standing in a crowd of anti-government protesters blowing horns and whistles.

Opposition leaders hoped Mr. Guaido’s risky move would stir a string of high-ranking defections and shake Mr. Maduro’s grip on power. But only the chief of Venezuela’s feared intelligen­ce agency broke ranks, while most others stood steadfast. Some analysts predicted that would make Mr. Maduro more emboldened.

The dramatic events could spell even more uncertaint­y for Venezuela, which has been rocked by three months of political upheaval since Mr. Guaido reenergize­d a flagging opposition movement by declaring himself interim president, saying Mr. Maduro had usurped power.

Now the struggle has heightened geopolitic­al dimensions, with the United States and more than 50 other nations backing Mr. Guaido as Venezuela’s legitimate president and Maduro allies like Russia lending the beleaguere­d president military and economic support.

National Security Adviser John Bolton said Wednesday that Mr. Maduro is surrounded by “scorpions in a bottle” and that key figures among his inner circle had been “outed” as dealing with the opposition.

The United States contends Mr. Maduro had been ready to flee Tuesday, an airplane already on the tarmac, but was talked out of it by Russian advisers.

 ?? Fernando Llano/Associated Press ?? Thousands gathered to demand President Nicolas Maduro’s ouster as supporters cheer on opposition leader Juan Guaido as he speaks during a rally Wednesday in Caracas, Venezuela.
Fernando Llano/Associated Press Thousands gathered to demand President Nicolas Maduro’s ouster as supporters cheer on opposition leader Juan Guaido as he speaks during a rally Wednesday in Caracas, Venezuela.

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