Venezuela arrests Guaido aide for ‘terrorism’ in defiance of US
CARACAS: Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s regime defied the US to arrest a top aide of opposition leader Juan Guaido, whom Washington recognises as the crisis-hit country’s interim leader.
Interior Minister Nestor Reverol accused the aide, Roberto Marrero, a 49-year-old lawyer who serves as Guaido’s chief of staff, of leading a ‘terrorist cell’ bent on attacking the government’s leadership with the help of Colombian and Central American mercenaries as well as ‘acts of sabotage on public services to create chaos.’
He said weapons and foreign cash were found in a predawn raid on Marrero’s home.
He added that Marrero’s 34-yearold bodyguard, Luis Paez, was also arrested and faced the same charges and a search was on for ‘identified’ collaborators.
Later, President Nicolas Maduro said he would ‘not be afraid to fight terrorist groups to put them in jail.’
The development triggered alarm internationally. The United States, the European Union, and a grouping of Latin American nations plus Canada all denounced Marrero’s arrest and demanded his immediate release.
The United States has repeatedly warned Maduro’s government against arresting Guaido or his close aides, saying it would face unspecified repercussions.
US President Donald Trump reiterated this week he was considering ‘all options’ at his disposal to see Maduro dislodged and Guaido installed in power, implying military action if he deemed it necessary.
A UN spokesman expressed ‘concern’ at the arrest, urging “all actors in Venezuela to take immediate steps to lower tensions and refrain from any action that could lead to further escalation.”
The arrest was denounced by Guaido as a ‘vile, vulgar kidnapping.’ He said “we won’t be intimidated.”
One opposition lawmaker who is a neighbour of Marrero’s and whose home was also searched, Sergio Vergara, told reporters that Marrero had yelled out during his arrest that SEBIN intelligence officers had planted two assault rifles and a grenade in his place as a pretext.
“The United States condemns raids by Maduro’s security services and detention of Roberto Marrero, Chief of Staff to Interim President @jguaido. We call for his immediate release. We will hold accountable those involved,” US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Twitter.
“Maduro has made another big mistake. The illegitimate arrest of Roberto Marrero, Interim President Juan Guaido’s aide, will not go unanswered. He should be released immediately and his safety guaranteed,” added National Security Advisor John Bolton.
Vergara said the raid, which occurred around 2am (0600 GMT), was carried out by around 15 officers of the Bolivarian Intelligence Service, or SEBIN.
The Lima Group, which includes Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Panama and Peru, issued a statement ‘calling for Nicolas Maduro’s illegitimate and dictatorial regime to immediately release Mr Marrero’ and leave Vergara alone.
“We demand the end of harassment of Venezuelans upholding democracy and the systematic practice of arbitrary detention and torture in Venezuela,” said the statement issued by Peru’s foreign ministry.