BFF-20 Venezuela’s Maduro says border with Colombia to reopen

260

ZCZC

BFF-20

VENEZUELA-POLITICS-DIPLOMACY

Venezuela’s Maduro says border with Colombia to reopen

CARACAS, June 8, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro on
Friday ordered the reopening of the country’s border with Colombia in western
Tachira state, near where international aid refused by Caracas has amassed.

The economically-devastated South American nation is suffering from
shortages of food, medicine and other essentials amid a power struggle
between Maduro and opposition leader Juan Guaido, who has been recognised as
interim president by more than 50 countries including the United States.

Announcing the reopening of the frontier on Twitter, Maduro said: “We are a
people of peace that strongly defends our independence and self-
determination.”

The leader, however, did not say whether crucial border bridges, closed
since August 2015 after two Venezuelan soldiers were wounded by suspected
smugglers, would be unblocked.

Maduro in February ordered the total closure of land frontiers with Brazil
and Colombia, as well as sea and air links with the Netherlands Antilles in
the Caribbean.

Guaido wanted to bring food and medicine into the country, but the Maduro-
backed army blocked the border bridges and prevented the entry of cargo.

Maduro says Venezuela is the victim of an “economic war” waged by the
United States and believes the aid was a smoke screen to prepare a “foreign
invasion”.

The Venezuelan government in May reopened its land border with Brazil and
the sea route with Aruba, but not with other islands such as Bonaire and
Curacao.

Relations between Venezuela and Colombia, who share a land border
stretching 2,220 kilometres (1,380 miles), have been broken since February 23
after Colombian President Ivan Duque announced his support for Guaido.

Many Venezuelans cross the frontier illegally every day to get supplies
because of the serious shortage of basic necessities.

BSS/AFP/GMR/1221 hrs