Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

U.S. sends aid meant for Venezuela

- By Christine Armario and Leonardo Haberkorn

Activists demand that Maduro allow trucks carrying humanitari­an aid to cross the Colombian border.

CUCUTA, Colombia — Trucks carrying U.S. humanitari­an aid destined for Venezuela arrived Thursday at the Colombian border, where opposition leaders vowed to bring them into their troubled nation despite objections from embattled President Nicolas Maduro.

Two trucks loaded with boxed emergency food and medicine rolled into the Colombian city of Cucuta, which is across the river from Venezuela.

“The United States is prepositio­ning relief items — including food, nutritiona­l supplement­s, hygiene kits and medical supplies — in Colombia so they are available to reach those most in need in Venezuela, as soon as possible,” said a U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The focus of Venezuela’s political fight now hinges on whether Maduro will allow the aid to enter the country, a move anticipate­d in coming days.

Maduro denies a humanitari­an crisis exists and says Venezuela is not a

country of beggars. The Venezuelan military has barricaded a bridge between the two nations with a tanker and two cargo trailers in an apparent attempt to block the aid.

Opposition leader Juan Guaido, who requested the internatio­nal assistance, said it is necessary in a country racked by shortages of basic goods.

Guaido, who has the backing of some 40 countries, including the United States, is seeking to oust Maduro following a 2018 election that many have denounced as a sham. Russia and China and several other countries continue to support Maduro.

About a dozen human rights activists stood at the gated entrance to the Tienditas Internatio­nal Bridge on Colombia’s side, demanding Maduro allow the emergency aid to cross into Venezuela.

Luis Escobar, a Venezuelan who lives in Colombia after fleeing his crisis-ridden nation, said his wife has advanced breast cancer and urged Maduro to accept the aid.

In tears, he described how his wife was unable to get treatment in Venezuela and that by the time they

were able to see a doctor in Colombia, her illness had progressed.

“I am here because, unfortunat­ely, my wife is going to die,” Escobar said. “But today I am here for Venezuelan­s who are suffering the same as my wife. The world has to know about this.”

Meanwhile, Venezuela’s communicat­ions minister, Jorge Rodriguez, appeared on state TV claiming Colombian intelligen­ce, the CIA and exiled Venezuelan opposition lawmaker Julio Borges were behind a plot to overthrow Maduro.

“A murderer like Borges must set aside hypocrisy,” Rodriguez said. “There’s no democracy, no humanitari­an aid. What will he say, now that his own accomplice­s gave him away?”

Rodriguez showed a videotape of what he said was a confession from retired national guard Col. Oswaldo Garcia Palomo as proof of the alleged plot. An outspoken Maduro critic, Palomo has openly spoken of amassing a military force in exile to remove the Venezuelan leader from power. He was arrested last month after he entered Venezuela clandestin­ely from Colombia.

 ?? SCHNEYDER MENDOZA/GETTY-AFP ?? A Venezuelan migrant feeds her baby Thursday at a shelter in Cucuta, Colombia.
SCHNEYDER MENDOZA/GETTY-AFP A Venezuelan migrant feeds her baby Thursday at a shelter in Cucuta, Colombia.

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