The Star Malaysia

Aid for Venezuela in limbo amid Guaido-Maduro faceoff

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CCUTA (Colombia): Venezuela braced for a showdown between the military and regime opponents at the Colombian border when self-declared acting president Juan Guaido has vowed humanitari­an aid would enter his country despite a blockade.

Socialist leader Nicolas Maduro has vowed not to allow in the aid, which he’s dismissed as a show and pretext for a US invasion.

On the eve of the face-off Guaido defied a government ban on leaving the country and attended a concert organised by British billionair­e entreprene­ur Richard Branson just over the border in Colombia. The concert is aimed at raising funds to help the relief effort.

Guaido sensationa­lly claimed that the Venezuelan military, whose high command has repeatedly declared absolute loyalty to Maduro, “participat­ed in this process” to get him into Colombia.

Hours later, Caracas said it had sealed the Colombian border across the whole of Tachira – the western state that borders Cucuta – citing threats to Venezuela’s security.

Yesterday, “the whole of Venezuela will be in the streets demanding the entry of the humanitari­an aid,” said Guaido.

Venezuela is gripped by a human- itarian crisis that has seen poverty soar during four years of recession leaving shortages of basic necessitie­s such as food and medicine.

Guaido announced earlier that Feb 23 would be the day aid would come in, regardless of a military blockade.

The 35-year-old leader of Venezuela’s National Assembly declared himself interim president exactly one month ago and is calling for fresh polls, branding Maduro a “usurper” and accusing him of rigging his re-election last May.

Humanitari­an aid has become the key focus of the stand-off between Maduro and Guaido.

With the main crossing bridge on the Colombian border barricaded by Venezuela’s military, it was not clear how Guaido would achieve his aim, although he had said he wanted to mobilise one million people to help him.

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