Albuquerque Journal

Opposition leader Guaido appears at live aid concert

Thousands attend star-studded Venezuela benefit in Columbia

- BY CHRISTINE ARMARIO AND LUIS ANDRES HENAO ASSOCIATED PRESS

CUCUTA, Colombia — Defying orders banning him from leaving Venezuela, opposition leader Juan Guaido made a surprise appearance at the end of star-studded aid concert in neighborin­g Colombia, joining thousands of other Venezuelan­s in pressuring President Nicolas Maduro into allowing the delivery of emergency food and medicine.

In Venezuela, a much smaller crowd gathered for a rival, three-day “Hands Off Venezuela” festival being organized by Maduro. Even as several million Venezuelan­s flee the country and those who remain struggle to find basic goods like food and antibiotic­s, the embattled president claims the relief effort led by Guaido is a U.S. orchestrat­ed ploy to oust him from power.

It’s not clear how Guaido sneaked into Colombia — in one video circulatin­g on social media he appears running across a bridge near the Venezuelan town of Urena, while in another he could be seen boarding a helicopter belonging to the Colombian air force.

But once he arrived at the giant stage located next to the Tienditas bridge connecting the two countries he was greeted like a rock star himself. Thousands of Venezuelan­s shouted “Juan arrived! Juan arrived!” when they spotted him donning a white shirt and accompanie­d by a large contingent of Colombian security as he made his way through the front of the crowd.

The presidents of Colombia, Chile and Paraguay were on hand to be the first foreign heads of state to embrace the 35-year-old lawmaker since he declared himself interim president a month ago at an outdoor rally.

The optimistic mood at the Live Aid-style concert opened in the Colombian border city of Cucuta couldn’t mask underlying tensions a day before Maduro’s opponents embark on a risky strategy to undermine Maduro and bring in the aid being amassed along three of Venezuela’s borders. But the crowd reacted with joy when Guaido suddenly appeared.

Thousands of kilometers away, near a crossing with Brazil, a member of an indigenous tribe was killed and 22 more injured in clashes with security forces who enforced Maduro’s orders to keep out the aid.

Hours before the concert in Cucuta began, dozens of Venezuelan­s hiked across the border through high bushes on an unmarked trail. They carried ice boxes, snacks and water and whispered directions as they kept a close eye out for Venezuelan soldiers.

“This concert happens once in a lifetime,” 19-year-old Shirley Duran said. “It will be a great opportunit­y for so many poor people who are suffering under the heat, who are hungry, jobless. At last they’ll have something to enjoy.”

British billionair­e Richard Branson organized the “Live Aid Venezuela” concert, which featured dozens of Latin musicians performing on a bridge-side stage not far from where Maduro’s government has placed a giant shipping container and tanker to prevent the delivery of U.S.-supplied food and medical kits.

 ?? FERNANDO VERGARA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Venezuela’s self-proclaimed interim president Juan Guaido, center, arrives at the Venezuela Aid Live concert near Cucuta, Colombia on Friday.
FERNANDO VERGARA/ASSOCIATED PRESS Venezuela’s self-proclaimed interim president Juan Guaido, center, arrives at the Venezuela Aid Live concert near Cucuta, Colombia on Friday.

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