The Standard (St. Catharines)

In Caracas, rumours swirl about military interventi­on

WhatsApp recordings trigger social media speculatio­n, fear

- PATRICIA LAYA

It would happen any time in the next 24 or 72 hours.

The source of this alert was unknown, but it fired up the jumpy Venezuelan rumour mill. It was tweeted, texted and repeated. Something big was coming.

What was it? Who knows? It was a coup one moment and a military interventi­on the next. By late Friday, the forces on their way to topple Nicolas Maduro were undercover Colombian intelligen­ce officers who had infiltrate­d the country. By Saturday afternoon, they had morphed into members of the U.S. army who were secreting themselves in humanitari­an-aid trucks that would be like so many Trojan horses.

By Sunday night, social media was a freaked-out maelstrom.

“It’s imminent.” “Are you going to the office tomorrow?” And the Venezuelan classic: “My mom says I should stay home.” People are ready to believe almost anything, because at this point in the crisis-racked country, with Maduro besieged and opposition leader Juan Guaido recognized as the rightful leader by a growing group of foreign government­s, almost anything seems possible.

What got the latest wild grapevine going were WhatsApp voice notes — audio recordings — from men introducin­g themselves as “Chief Commissary X” or “Sargent Y” and describing super-topsecret plans. As they speak, the sounds of TVs blaring are heard in the background.

“Everything is ready,” the voice says on one recording posted Friday. “By midnight Venezuela time, a phone call will be directly made to Nicolas Maduro to see if he’s willing to give up executive power or not.” Two more calls would be placed before the incursion would begin.

“Don’t go out to the streets,” another voice warns.

Then a map dotted with outlines of soldiers and tanks started circulatin­g, looking like a Venezuelan version of the board-game Risk. This was after Guaido announced Saturday that an internatio­nal coalition of his backers would soon be sending in humanitari­an aid. For some, it wasn’t a stretch to imagine foreign armed forces would come along with it.

Troops from Aruba, Curazao, Colombia, Brazil and Guyana are ready to storm the border, the map’s unnamed designer wrote. They are “waiting for authorizat­ion from Falcon 1.” This line is decorated with an American flag, the falcon presumably being U.S. President Donald Trump.

According to the voice notes and other messages on WhatsApp, the troops are instead from Canada, France, Brazil and Colombia and are prepared to run an “impeccable operation” as part of a high-tech war involving drones outfitted with, for some reason, green lasers.

Guiado’s camp has urged Venezuelan­s to stay calm. “Please do not echo unverified informatio­n, with unidentifi­ed audios or by unknown people. We’re begging you, from the National Assembly, to only share official informatio­n,” lawmaker Delsa Solorzano tweeted late Sunday.

A big part of the reason these rumours are spreading like wildfire is that there’s an element to them that’s plausible enough. Trump has said repeatedly that he can’t rule out the use of military force. And the country has a long history of coups and coup attempts, including one in 1992 that turned Maduro’s predecesso­r and mentor, the late Hugo Chavez, into a national figure.

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AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? People are ready to believe almost anything in the crisis-racked country.
STF AFP/GETTY IMAGES People are ready to believe almost anything in the crisis-racked country.

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