Miami Herald (Sunday)

Venezuela’s congress names new leader, vows to battle Maduro

- BY SCOTT SMITH Associated Press

Venezuela’s opposition­controlled congress opened its first session of the year Saturday, installing a freshfaced leader who struck a defiant tone and vowed to take up the battle against socialist President Nicolas Maduro.

Juan Guaido, 35, assumes the presidency of a National Assembly stripped of power by Maduro, whose government is blamed for leading the once-wealthy oil nation into a historic political and humanitari­an crisis.

Speaking to legislator­s, Guaido named off several opposition politician­s and opponents of Maduro’s government who have been jailed, driven into exile or killed. He said desperatio­n has forced masses of citizens to flee abroad looking for work.

“We are under an oppressive system,” he said. “It’s not just that — it is miserable.”

Tall and youthful, Guaido represents the next generation of Venezuelan political opposition, taking up the assembly’s leadership following 74-yearold Omar Barboza.

Guaido is an industrial engineer and former student leader from the same political party as Leopoldo Lopez, Venezuela’s mostpopula­r opposition leader under house arrest. Government opponents consider him a political prisoner.

Guaido called Maduro a dictator whose legitimacy has run out. Venezuela is living a “dark but transition­al” moment of its history, he said, adding that among its first acts congress will create a transition­al body to restore constituti­onal order, but he offered no details.

He addressed a hall filled only with opposition lawmakers as the government loyalists have long boycotted any sessions, saying the National Assembly has itself oversteppe­d its authority.

However, roughly 20 foreign diplomats from the United States, Canada, Japan, Italy and Germany attended the assembly’s inaugural session in a show of solidarity.

It opened days before Maduro’s inaugurati­on to a second, six-year term widely condemned as illegitima­te after he declared victory in the May 20 election that many foreign powers considered a sham.

Venezuela’s socialist party boss Diosdado Cabello said Saturday that Maduro will be sworn in on Jan. 10 before the Supreme Court, which is stacked with government loyalists. This defies the constituti­on that requires a president take the oath before the National Assembly.

As internatio­nal pressure mounts, a dozen Latin American countries and Canada on Friday urged Maduro to cede power and hand it over to congress until a valid president is elected.

Venezuelan officials accuse the coalition of taking orders directly from U.S. President Donald Trump, who they frequent- ly accuse of spearheadi­ng an economic war against Venezuela.

“Those of us here are fighting every day to restore democracy,” Guaido said. “We want the protection of the rule of law. We want the Venezuelan­s to be protected, because we believe in life.”

 ?? FERNANDO LLANO AP ?? Incoming parliament­ary president, Juan Guaido, center, incoming parliament­ary Vice President Edgar Zambrano, left, and Omar Barboza, outgoing president of Venezuela’s National Assembly, arrive for a special session in Caracas on Saturday.
FERNANDO LLANO AP Incoming parliament­ary president, Juan Guaido, center, incoming parliament­ary Vice President Edgar Zambrano, left, and Omar Barboza, outgoing president of Venezuela’s National Assembly, arrive for a special session in Caracas on Saturday.

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