The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Venezuelan top prosecutor to investigat­e Guaido appointmen­ts

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CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuela’s chief prosecutor said Thursday he has launched an investigat­ion into opposition leader Juan Guaido’s appointmen­t of a transition­al board of directors for the state oil company.

Attorney General Tarek William Saab said the appointmen­ts by Guaido and his National Assembly are part of an illegal power grab backed by foreign government­s. He also said that ambassador­s of Guaido’s self-declared interim government are being investigat­ed as part of the probe.

“Clearly, this legislativ­e body through criminal means pretends to seize national powers,” Saab said in a news conference broadcast on state TV, calling the move part of a “circus.”

Guaido declared last month that he has a constituti­onal right to presidenti­al power as head of the opposition-controlled National Assembly, calling President Nicolas Maduro’s election in May a sham. Guaido currently has support from the U.S. and about 60 countries which are urging Maduro to step down.

Saab said he’s looking into the board members who were designated on Wednesday to oversee PDVSA and its Houston-based subsidiary Citgo.

These people “will of course suffer legal consequenc­es, as will the person who declared himself (president),” he said.

Magistrate Juan Mendoza of Venezuela’s pro-Maduro Supreme Court later read a statement in a televised address, nullifying the appointmen­ts and accusing the National Assembly of oversteppi­ng its constituti­onal powers.

Guaido’s representa­tive in Washington, Carlos Vecchio, previously said the National Assembly’s decision to name a new board of directors was taken to prevent Citgo from being “plundered by the dictatorsh­ip.”

The standoff in Venezuela could come to a potentiall­y violent head on Feb. 23, when Guaido says he will try to run caravans of U.S. humanitari­an aid across the Colombian border into Venezuela. The United States and other countries have also said they will send supplies through Brazil and the Caribbean island of Curacao, while billionair­e Richard Branson entered the fray and announced a benefit concert in the Colombian town of Cucuta.

Maduro has blocked the emergency food and medicine from entering and says that the interventi­on is part of a U.S. coup attempt.

But the situation now puts both leaders in a tight situation: Guaido could use successful efforts to bring in aid to regain momentum, while Maduro could be perceived as bowing to pressure if he allows the assistance to come through.

An oil-rich nation, Venezuela was once among Latin America’s wealthiest and politicall­y stable nations. However, oil production has collapsed to one-third of historic output, which critics blame on two decades of socialist rule.

The administra­tion of President Donald Trump recently lodged sanctions against Venezuela’s oil sector that it said could further cripple Maduro’s government by cutting off an estimated $11 billion in cashflow this year.

 ?? Ariana Cubillos / Associated Press ?? Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro speaks during an interview with The Associated Press at Miraflores presidenti­al palace in Caracas, Venezuela, on Thursday.
Ariana Cubillos / Associated Press Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro speaks during an interview with The Associated Press at Miraflores presidenti­al palace in Caracas, Venezuela, on Thursday.

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