Venezuela’s Guaido starts domestic tour to stir support

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VALENCIA, Venezuela, March 17, 2019 (AFP) – Venezuela’s self-proclaimed
interim leader Juan Guaido began a tour of his country Saturday aimed at
sparking a citizen’s movement to pry President Nicolas Maduro from power.

As Guaido, 35, kicked off his “operation freedom” in the northern city of
Valencia, the pro-Maduro military staged the latest in a series of exercises.

The drill focused on defending hydroelectric infrastructure from attack —
a reaction to a weeklong national blackout that Maduro blamed on US
“sabotage” but experts said was more likely the result of years of neglect.
Guaido, the head of the opposition-ruled National Assembly whose claim to be
caretaker president is recognized by the US, Canada and much of Latin America
and Europe, vowed he would “very soon” take up office in Miraflores, the
presidential palace. He has been pushing for nearly two months against Maduro
after declaring himself acting president during street rallies by tens of
thousands, following Maduro’s swearing-in for a second term despite elections
widely dismissed as a sham.

“We are going to reclaim what belongs to the people,” Guaido told thousands
of supporters on Saturday.

Maduro, he said, “believes that a thieving gang or a palace makes him
president. It’s only the support of our people that makes someone president
of a nation and he doesn’t have that. And not much longer will he be in that
palace.”

Guaido offered no timeline for the mobilization across Venezuela, which he
said will culminate with a march on the presidential palace in Caracas.

“I’m ready to head over to Miraflores right now, wherever my future
president Juan Guaido asks me to go,” said one of his supporters, Milagros
Lima, 50, a lawyer. She told AFP that her “whole family” are among the
millions who have fled the country’s dire shortages of food and medicine.

“If it weren’t for them, we’d be starving to death,” she said.

Accompanying Guaido on his tour are opposition lawmakers tasked with
creating citizen assemblies — “freedom cells” — across the country. The
opposition said that, by Saturday, around 50 had already been set up in half
of Venezuela’s 23 states.

“Whatever happens, we must be united, mobilized in the streets,” Guaido
said, adding that he has not ruled out asking the National Assembly to
activate a constitutional clause allowing foreign military intervention —
though such a move “depended on others.”

– US ratchets up sanctions –

That was taken as a reference to US military action, which US President
Donald Trump has repeatedly refused to rule out, even though there is no sign
such an operation is being mounted and US allies in Latin America oppose the
idea.

On Saturday, pro-Maduro demonstrators gathered in front of Trump’s White
House in Washington to protest any US-led intervention in Venezuela, while
anti-Maduro protesters held their own rally nearby.

Washington has so far concentrated on ratcheting up sanctions on Venezuela.
That has made an already dire economic situation in the country worse, while
increasing pressure on Maduro.

On April 28, a US embargo on Venezuelan oil exports will go into effect,
dealing a heavy blow to Venezuela’s diminished finances, as America accounts
for half of the oil exported.

A major barrier to Guaido’s plan to wrest control of the country is the
military, which has so far remained loyal to Maduro, who has put generals in
charge of lucrative civilian agencies and institutions.

Guaido has offered amnesties to soldiers who abandon Maduro, and on
Saturday tweeted that he has “contacted” officers to ask them not to repress
opposition protesters.

As has become common when the opposition holds an event, pro-Maduro crowds
surged into the streets of central Caracas on Saturday.

A senior regime official, Diosdado Cabello, roared to thousands of pro-
government supporters that Guaido and his team “will never enter the palace
of the revolutionary people.”

He asked the crowd if they would accept “the oligarchy, the bourgeoisie”
taking charge, prompting a loud “No” in response.

“We need a real opposition, one that isn’t beholden to the imperialists,
one that has personal standards and knows what is really happening in
Venezuela,” Cabello said.

Among the regime supporters, voices raged against perceived US meddling.

“Every minute of peace Venezuela has is a victory for the revolution and a
defeat for the North American empire (the US) that really wants to see us
killing each other here,” one pro-Maduro demonstrator, Hermes Flores, told
AFP.

For him, Guaido was “a flame that will go out.”