The Guardian (USA)

Venezuela opposition leader briefly detained after challengin­g Maduro

- Tom Phillips Latin America correspond­ent

Venezuelan secret police seized and then swiftly released a prominent opposition leader, less than 48 hours after he declared himself ready to assume the presidency of his crisisstri­cken country in a bold challenge to its leader Nicolás Maduro.

Juan Guaidó, the 35-year-old head of Venezuela’s opposition-run parliament, was reportedly taken by agents from the Bolivarian National Intelligen­ce Service (Sebin) on Sunday morning as he travelled north out of the capital, Caracas.

On Friday the politician threw down the gauntlet to Hugo Chávez’s heir, telling a rally Maduro was an illegitima­te “usurper” and declaring that he therefore had the constituti­onal right to assume leadership of the country until fresh elections were held. Several regional powers, including Brazil and Colombia, voiced support for that move.

A video circulatin­g on social media showed the moment of Guaidó’s detention, which sparked an immediate wave of internatio­nal criticism.

The head of the Organisati­on of American States expressed his “absolute condemnati­on” of what he called “the kidnapping of Venezuela’s interim president”. “The internatio­nal community must stop the crimes of Maduro and his goons,” Luis Almagro tweeted.

The United States secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, denounced the “arbitrary detention”, adding: “The US and world are watching”.

Two foreign journalist­s – from the Colombian broadcaste­r Caracol and CNN’s Spanish language channel, CNN en Español – were also reported to have been detained.

However, less than an hour after the first reports of Guaidó’s detention he was released. “I am with him already,” tweeted the politician’s wife, Fabiana Rosales, adding: “The dictatorsh­ip will not crush his fighting spirit.”

Stalin González, another prominent opposition leader, tweeted: “They will not scare us with acts of violence and arbitrarin­ess. We will carry on fighting until we achieve the change Venezuela needs.”

Venezuela’s communicat­ions minister, Jorge Rodríguez, told state media the detention was a “unilateral and irregular” act carried out by rogue agents who were being investigat­ed and dismissed.

On Friday Venezuela’s chavista prison minister, María Iris Varela Rangel, had tweeted a warning to Guaidó after his challenge to her leader: “I’ve already prepared your cell and your uniform, I hope you name your cabinet quickly so I know who is going down with you.”

Addressing a rally of supporters following his release, Guaidó painted his brief detention as the result of infighting between members of Maduro’s panicked administra­tion. “Look what they are doing. They are desperate in [the presidenti­al palace] Miraflores! They don’t know who is giving the orders!” he said, calling on Venezuelan citizens and members of the armed forces to unite against Maduro.

“We are survivors. Not victims!” Guaidó said, repeating a call for renewed street protests.

The secret police operation brought to a close a dramatic week for the oilrich South American nation which appeared to signal the start of a new and potentiall­y tumultuous phase in Venezuela’s economic and political crisis.

On Thursday, Maduro, who assumed leadership of Chávez’s Bolivarian revolution after his 2013 death, shrugged off a storm of internatio­nal condemnati­on to start his second sixyear term in office.

But with Venezuela’s economic collapse accelerati­ng and internatio­nal pressure mounting as Latin America swings back to the political right, many doubt Maduro will cling to power for that long.

Maduro mocked Guaidó on Friday at a summit of Latin American leftists in Caracas, claiming most citizens did not even know who he was.

“It is a show … a Hollywood-esque show,” Maduro said of his opponent’s bid to replace him.

 ??  ?? Juan Guaidó, the head of Venezuela’s opposition-run parliament, was reportedly taken by agents on Sunday morning and then swiftly released. Photograph: Yuri Cortéz/AFP/Getty Images
Juan Guaidó, the head of Venezuela’s opposition-run parliament, was reportedly taken by agents on Sunday morning and then swiftly released. Photograph: Yuri Cortéz/AFP/Getty Images

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