Texarkana Gazette

Venezuela’s Guaidó leads thousands in rally

- By Scott Smith

CARACAS, Venezuela — A large crowd rallied around Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó in a peaceful protest Saturday, answering his call to take to the streets in an attempt to reignite a campaign aimed at forcing President Nicolás Maduro from power.

Guaidó in a speech urged supporters to remain in the streets in the days ahead, pointing to the recent upheaval in Bolivia, where 18 days of protests prompted the resignatio­n of Maduro’s ally, Evo Morales.

“If we stay at home, we will lose,” Guaidó said before marching peacefully with a small group of supporters to the Bolivian Embassy in eastern Caracas, an opposition stronghold.

“Today, tomorrow and Monday — we will be in the streets,” Guaidó said.

It was not clear he would be able to sustain momentum.

The crowds in Caracas where Guaidó spoke were larger than they had been in months — with an estimated five blocks of a wide Caracas avenue crowded with thousands of supporters.

But they lacked the size and combativen­ess of demonstrat­ions in January, when Guaidó declared himself president, arguing that Maduro had “usurped” power and violated the constituti­on by starting a second term widely seen by opponents as illegitima­te.

Daniel Lansberg-Rodriguez, a geopolitic­al risk analyst who teaches at Northweste­rn

University’s Kellogg School of Management, said the march was not likely what Guaidó and his supporters had hoped for, especially at a time when the region has been inflamed with mass urban protest.

But, he added, “I’d be wary of proclaimin­g an ignominiou­s end to the Guaidó movement,” noting that millions of Venezuelan­s have migrated and the government’s heavy-handed response to protests has scared away others.

Managing disappoint­ment has long been a challenge for the opposition movement, Lansberg-Rodriguez said, adding that Guaidó has proven to be a resilient leader.

The demonstrat­ion in Caracas played out peacefully, with government security forces dressed in riot gear standing by on the perimeter without any of the firing of tear gas canisters as seen in violent protests earlier this year.

Retired office worker Deborah Angarita acknowledg­ed that the crowd was not large, but she said she is determined to continue marching despite the government’s efforts to wear down their resistance.

“We will stay in the streets until the regime leaves,” said Angarita, who has been at all of the opposition marches this year.

Lisbeth Guerra said she closed her two electronic­s shops in Caracas to join the march because she is fed up with two decades of socialist rule that have ruined the economy and driven 20 of her relatives to leave the country.

 ?? AP Photo/Matias Delacroix ?? ■ Opposition politician Juan Guaido greets supporters at an anti-government rally Saturday in Caracas, Venezuela. Guaido called nationwide demonstrat­ions to re-ignite a campaign against President Nicolas Maduro launched in January that has lost steam in recent months.
AP Photo/Matias Delacroix ■ Opposition politician Juan Guaido greets supporters at an anti-government rally Saturday in Caracas, Venezuela. Guaido called nationwide demonstrat­ions to re-ignite a campaign against President Nicolas Maduro launched in January that has lost steam in recent months.

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