Venezuelan opposition leader urges supporters to demonstrate to force
Maduro to leave office
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[January 06, 2025]
By REGINA GARCIA CANO
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina
Machado on Sunday urged supporters to demonstrate across the country,
saying in a video message that President Nicolás Maduro will not step
down on his own and they “must make him leave.”
Machado instructed supporters to demonstrate Thursday, the day before
Venezuela's next presidential term is set to begin. Her message came
hours after the government again made clear its intention to arrest
retired diplomat Edmundo González, who claims to have defeated Maduro in
last year's election.
“Maduro is not going to leave on his own, we must make him leave with
the strength of a population that never gives up,” Machado said in a
social media video. “Go outside, shout, fight. It is time to stand firm,
and make them understand that this is as far as they go. That this is
over.”
Machado, who has been hiding for months at an undisclosed location to
avoid arrest, told supporters she “will be with” them Thursday.
Hours earlier, without mentioning González's name, National Assembly
leader Jorge Rodriguez said the unicameral body would request the
immediate arrest of the retired diplomat should he step on Venezuelan
soil. The threat followed the government's recent announcement of a
$100,000 reward for information on González’s whereabouts.
González left Venezuela for exile in Spain in September after a judge
issued a warrant for his arrest in connection with an election-related
investigation. In recent weeks, he has vowed to travel to Venezuela to
be sworn in for the presidential term which, by law, must begin Jan. 10,
but he has not explained how he plans to return or wrest power from
Maduro, whose party controls all institutions and the military.
“That unworthy being ... has been saying that he is going to return to
the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela,” Rodriguez said shortly after he
was re-elected as the National Assembly's president. “Each and every
deputy who defends peace will request, if he touches a bit of land of
the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, his immediate arrest.”
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Venezuela's opposition leader Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia holds an
Uruguayan and a Venezuelan flag outside the government residence in
Montevideo, Uruguay, Saturday, Jan. 4, 2025. Gonzalez, who claims he
won the 2024 presidential election and is recognized by some
countries as the legitimate president-elect, traveled from exile in
Madrid to Argentina and Uruguay. (AP Photo/Matilde Campodonico)
González began a tour of the Americas with stops in Argentina and
Uruguay on Saturday, when he told reporters he would travel to the
United States next and hoped to speak with President Joe Biden. He
said he also planned to visit Panama and the Dominican Republic.
Meanwhile, Maduro already received an invitation from the National
Assembly to be sworn in for a third term Friday, more than five
months after the country's National Electoral Council, stacked with
ruling-party loyalists, declared him winner of the July 28 election.
Unlike previous presidential elections, electoral authorities did
not provide detailed vote counts. Yet, the opposition collected
tally sheets from more than 80% of the nation’s electronic voting
machines, posted them online and said they showed González had won
the election with twice as many votes as Maduro.
Global condemnation over the lack of transparency prompted Maduro to
ask Venezuela’s high court, also controlled by ruling-party
supporters, to audit the results. The court subsequently reaffirmed
his victory.
The U.S. and most European governments have rejected the election’s
official results and consider González the legitimate winner.
Rodriguez on Sunday told National Assembly members that their
potential request to have González arrested would be based on a
recently approved measure that allows for the prosecution of anyone
who expresses support for economic sanctions like those imposed by
the United States against Venezuela.
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