Venezuela’s Army Support Maduro
MADURO |
opposition
leader Juan Guaido |
Venezuela’s
powerful military high command threw its weight behind President Nicolas Maduro
on Thursday as opposition leader Juan Guaido pressed a direct challenge to his
authority with the backing of the United States and key Latin American allies.
Defence
Minister Vladimir Padrino, a general, accused Guaido of attempting a “coup
d’etat” and said Maduro, 56, is “the legitimate president.”
Eight
generals who command strategic regions of the country reiterated their
“absolute loyalty and subordination” to the socialist leader in messages
carried on state television.
Some ended
their statements by adding: “Always loyal, never traitors.”
In
Washington, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo warned the Maduro government
against the use of force against demonstrators in a speech to the Organization
of American States.
“The time
for debate is done. The regime of former president Nicolas Maduro is
illegitimate,” Pompeo said.
Guaido, 35,
set the showdown in motion Wednesday by proclaiming himself “acting president”
and was swiftly recognized by the United States and about a dozen regional
governments, including those of Brazil, Argentina and Colombia.
Mexico, Cuba
and Bolivia, all in the hands of leftist governments, pledged support for
Maduro.
Further
afield, Maduro received support from allies Russia and China while France and
Canada backed Guaido.
Guaido’s
bold move came amid a fresh wave of deadly street clashes between protesters
and security forces in this oil-rich but economically devastated country.
A deep
depression marked by hyperinflation and shortages of food and medicine has
triggered an exodus of Venezuelans to surrounding countries.
Tens of
thousands of Venezuelans took to the streets on Wednesday — on the 61st
anniversary of the fall of the Marcos Perez Jimenez dictatorship — in rival
rallies opposing and supporting the regime.
It capped
three days of high tension that began Monday when a group of soldiers took over
a command post in the capital Caracas and rose up against Maduro.
That was
quickly quashed and officials said 27 people were arrested but it sparked a
wave of smaller protests that were met by security forces using tear gas and
rubber bullets.
The
Venezuelan Observatory of Social Conflict told AFP that 16 people have died in
clashes over the past three days.
US President
Donald Trump almost immediately recognized Guaido’s claims to power, declaring
Maduro “illegitimate” and the National Assembly “the only legitimate branch of
government.”
An enraged
Maduro responded by breaking off diplomatic ties with the “imperialist” US
government, ordering its diplomats to leave within 72 hours.
Defying
Maduro, Guaido urged diplomats to stay put, in an open letter to embassies in
the country.
The US State
Department said that as it no longer recognized Maduro as president, it did not
accept his authority to sever ties or declare its diplomats “persona non
grata.”
Maduro’s key
ally Russia denounced Guaido’s bid as a “usurpation” of power and warned that
“this is a direct path to lawlessness and bloodshed.”
The
Venezuelan president’s main financial backer China said it opposes
“interference” in Venezuelan affairs.
Wednesday’s
mass street protests were the first in Venezuela since a crackdown on
anti-government demonstrations between April and July, 2017 that claimed the
lives of 125 people.
In Caracas,
tens of thousands of opposition supporters dressed in white and waving Venezuelan
flags chanted: “Guaido, friend, the people are with you.”
Maduro hit
back in a speech from a balcony at the presidential palace, lashing out at
Trump’s “extremist policy,” calling it “a very serious folly.”
“Trying to
impose a government by extra-constitutional means, we cannot accept that,” he
said.
UN Secretary
General Antonio Guterres, speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos,
appealed for dialogue to keep the crisis from spiralling out of control,
warning it could lead “to the kind of conflict that would be a disaster for the
people of Venezuela and for the region.”
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