Venezuela opposition rally to keep up
pressure on Maduro
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[February 02, 2019]
CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuela's
opposition supporters will hold rallies across the country on Saturday
to show backing for self-proclaimed president Juan Guaido and to protest
against the increasingly isolated socialist leader Nicolas Maduro.
The mobilizations are meant to keep up the pressure after Washington
recognized Guaido as the legitimate president and issued potentially
crippling sanctions that are likely to further weaken the OPEC nation's
struggling oil industry.
Maduro's critics also hope to encourage similar moves by European
countries. Some European Union member states are expected to officially
recognize Guaido next week, while others will likely take a more
cautious stance of support.
"We'll see you in the streets tomorrow, Venezuela," said Guaido in a
video message posted on Twitter. "We're doing well, we're doing very
well."
Maduro on Saturday will also hold a rally, to commemorate the 20th
anniversary of late socialist leader Hugo Chavez's first inauguration as
president in 1999.
Washington has imposed sweeping sanctions on state-owned oil firm PDVSA
in the toughest financial challenge yet to Maduro, as the administration
of U.S. President Donald Trump openly seeks to push him from power.
U.S. Vice President Mike Pence told a Florida rally on Friday that the
time for dialogue had ended and all options were on the table.
Venezuela is suffering from hyperinflation, produce shortages and a mass
migration of citizens to neighboring Latin American countries - a
situation likely to be worsened in the short term by the new sanctions.
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Venezuelan opposition leader and self-proclaimed interim president
Juan Guaido speaks during an interview with Reuters in Caracas,
Venezuela January 31, 2019. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins
Guaido swore himself in as interim president on Jan. 23 in a direct
challenge to Maduro's rule and quickly won the backing of countries
in the region, but still has no control over state institutions or
any functions of day-to-day governance.
He has sent letters to Russia and China, both major creditors and
allies of Maduro's government, saying that a change of government
would be in the best interests of both countries.
Maduro's adversaries say he has run roughshod over democratic
institutions, including the opposition-run congress, and destroyed
the once-buoyant economy through a corruption-riddled exchange
control system and arbitrary nationalizations.
The former union leader calls the sanctions and effort to force him
from office an extension of the century-long efforts by the United
States to control Latin American nations.
(Reporting by Brian Ellsworth; Editing by Angus Berwick and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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