The Borneo Post

New Venezuela parliament sworn in, Guaido out

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CARACAS: A new Venezuelan parliament was sworn in Tuesday with President Nicolas Maduro’s party in firm control and opposition leader Juan Guaido officially without a job, but with foreign backing to keep up a parallel legislatur­e.

The new assembly was denounced as “a fraudulent­ly elected body” by outgoing US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who said in a statement Washington recognised Guaido as “the legitimate president of Venezuela”.

“We consider this group to be illegitima­te and will not recognise it nor its pronouncem­ents,” he said of the new parliament which was also rejected by Colombia, Brazil and Uruguay.

Members of the Lima Group, consisting of more than a dozen Latin American nations and Canada, said they did “not recognise the result of an election” that violates the National Assembly’s “constituti­onal right to meet without intimidati­on or interferen­ce” to elect its president and governing board.

A total 256 of the National Assembly’s 277 seats are in the hands of Maduro’s United Socialist Party of Venezuela and its allies after December 6 elections boycotted by the opposition, who claimed fraud.

The chamber, which has a fiveyear mandate, previously had an opposition majority with Guaido as its speaker since 2019.

Guaido, now officially out of a job, has plans to maintain a parallel parliament of shadow opposition lawmakers.

He is considered Venezuela’s legitimate head of state by around 50 foreign government­s, while Maduro is subject to Western sanctions and labeled a dictator over alleged voter fraud and other abuses.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? The official deputy of the Venezuelan National Assembly, Jorge Rodriguez (right), is sworn in as the new president of the National Assembly, in Caracas.
— AFP photo The official deputy of the Venezuelan National Assembly, Jorge Rodriguez (right), is sworn in as the new president of the National Assembly, in Caracas.

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