Orlando Sentinel

Maduro flexes military support

- By Scott Smith

Embattled Venezuelan president oversees parade celebratin­g independen­ce day amid mounting criticism.

CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro oversaw a grand military parade to mark the country’s independen­ce day Friday, reveling in his might as commander in chief as the embattled socialist leader comes under mounting criticism for using brutal tactics to crush his opponents.

Maduro applauded and pumped his fist as soldiers marched past, tanks rolled by and fighter jets streaked overhead at a Caracas military base. A unit of camouflage­d special forces, guns drawn, shouted their loyalty as they paraded by the presidenti­al reviewing stand.

“We look to the heavens, asking for peace,” Maduro said. “All the while our military exercises play out. We plead to God with our missiles pointed.”

The parade served as a demonstrat­ion of Maduro’s continuing support from the military amid a political standoff with opposition leader Juan Guaido, who is trying to oust Maduro and has the backing of more than 50 nations, including the United States.

Guaido, who led a rival march across town Friday, claimed presidenti­al powers in January, at the time drawing throngs of supporters for demonstrat­ions against Maduro, who has overseen the oil-rich nation’s historic collapse.

More than 4 million Venezuelan­s have fled the struggling country amid food and medicine shortages and crushing inflation.

As head of the opposition-controlled National Assembly, Guaido claims that Maduro’s election in 2018 to a second, six-year term is illegitima­te because the most popular political figures and parties were barred from running.

Maduro refuses to step aside, blaming Venezuela’s woes on an economic war against the country led by the Trump administra­tion, and Guaido has not been able to lure a critical mass of soldiers to back him.

In his brief address, Maduro renewed his call for a dialogue with the opposition. As he spoke, members of Venezuela’s militia each held a cardboard box of the type used to distribute government-subsidized food.

Despite the splashy military parade, Maduro has had some defectors. Colombian authoritie­s say a few hundred soldiers have abandoned Maduro in recent months.

Most notably, Maduro’s spy chief, Gen. Manuel Cristopher Figuera, fled after a failed military uprising staged April 30 with Guaido and another popular opposition leader, Leopoldo Lopez.

Now in the United States, Figuera says his mission is to “seek help to free my country from disgrace.”

In a sign of increasing internatio­nal repudiatio­n of Maduro, the U.N. high commission­er for human rights, Michelle Bachelet, issued a scathing report Thursday accusing Venezuela’s security forces of nearly 5,300 killings last year.

Venezuelan­s interviewe­d by the human rights workers referred to a particular security unit, FAES, as a “death squad” or “exterminat­ion group.”

But Venezuelan Deputy Foreign Minister William Castillo blasted the U.N. report, saying it failed to reflect “the reality in our country.”

Security forces turned out at just 15% of 89 antiMaduro demonstrat­ions nationwide Friday, a dramatic departure from the government’s zero-tolerance stance, according to figures Guaido’s team provided to The Associated Press, which could not independen­tly confirm them.

National Assembly lawmaker Marco Quinones said that shows the government’s fear of internatio­nal repercussi­ons following the U.N. report, or it is proof of eroding support for Maduro among soldiers, who no longer want to repress their fellow citizens with tear gas and shotguns.

Across town, Guaido called on Venezuelan­s to take to the streets with him Friday for demonstrat­ions marking 208 years since Venezuela won its freedom from Spain. A few thousand joined him, far fewer than the number who turned out at demonstrat­ions earlier this year.

 ?? ARIANA CUBILLOS/AP ?? Soldiers march Friday to mark 208 years of Venezuela’s independen­ce from Spain.
ARIANA CUBILLOS/AP Soldiers march Friday to mark 208 years of Venezuela’s independen­ce from Spain.

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