A volunteer assists people at a community kitchen set-up by USAID and World Food Programme in Cucuta, Colombia February 7, 2019. REUTERS/Marco Bello |
Trucks carrying humanitarian aid for crisis-stricken Venezuela arrived in the Colombian border city of Cucuta on Thursday as diplomatically-isolated President Nicolas Maduro appeared set to block its entry amid an escalating political crisis.
The arrival of the aid convoy, which includes supplies provided by the United States, has increased the pressure on Maduro hours after a European Union-backed group called for dialogue and elections and warned against interventionism.
Maduro has rejected the aid convoy as a โpolitical showโ and vowed to remain in office despite dozens of nations around the world disavowing his leadership and recognizing opposition leader Juan Guaido as the countryโs rightful head of state.
Escorted by police motorcycles, the trucks pulled into Cucuta, where Venezuelans were waiting to see whether Maduroโs government would clear the border road he has blocked and allow the humanitarian shipments to pass.
The crowd waved signs denouncing Maduro as a โcancerโ and celebrated the arrival of the convoy.
โThis gives me such hope, especially for the family that I left behind, my children, my wife,โ said Israel Escobar, 42, a Venezuelan who came to Cucuta a year ago to sell ice-cream on the streets. โThis is one more step towards ending that terrible regime.โ
Across the border on the Venezuelan side, a group of around 60 protesters demanded that the aid be let through.
Maduro has overseen an economic collapse that has left millions struggling to eat and fueled an unprecedented migration crisis in the region.
An estimated 3 million Venezuelans have left the oil-rich OPEC country since 2015, some 800,000 of whom have ended up in Colombia.
But Maduro showed little sign of relenting on aid, as a bridge linking Colombia and Venezuela remained blocked with a cistern and two shipping containers.
โThe so-called โhumanitarian aidโ operation is a show, a cheap show, a bad show,โ Maduro said in interview with Mexican newspaper La Jornada published on Thursday. โYou can be sure that it wonโt disturb Venezuela.โ
On Thursday, he appeared in an event at the presidential palace as part of a campaign by government supporters demanding an end to U.S. aggression against Venezuela.
Elliott Abrams, Washingtonโs special envoy on Venezuela, said the aid effort was being coordinated with Guaidoโs team but that the aid would not be forced into Venezuela.
โLet it in, thatโs what weโre asking, let it in,โ Abrams told reporters at a State Department briefing, calling on members of Venezuelaโs armed forces to persuade Maduro to step down or to disobey his orders.
He said the supplies would be delivered to Venezuelans when it was โlogistically safeโ to do so.
DIALOGUE AND ELECTIONS
Washington last week implemented crippling sanctions on Venezuelan state-owned oil firm PDVSA, which are expected to exacerbate the hyperinflationary economic crisis.
Offering a counter-point to Washingtonโs hard-line stance, the EU and a group of Latin American governments that have kept a moderate line on Venezuela called for dialogue and fresh elections.
The EU-backed International Contact Group on Venezuela in its inaugural meeting in the Uruguayan capital of Montevideo said overly forceful intervention could aggravate the crisis.
EU Foreign Policy chief Federica Mogherini said a resolution ultimately must come from the people of Venezuela.
โThis is not only the most desirable result but is the only result if we want to avoid more suffering and a chaotic process,โ Mogherini said.
Maduro via Twitter welcomed the call for dialogue.
Critics have said three previous dialogue processes have allowed the ruling Socialist Party to stall for time without making major concessions on key issues including imprisoned opposition politicians and electoral transparency.
Guaido has galvanized the opposition since taking over as head of Venezuelaโs National Assembly in January. Last month, he declared himself interim president, opening the door for Washington and others to recognize him as the legitimate leader.
Maduro, who calls Guaido a U.S. puppet seeking to foment a coup, has maintained power with the backing of Venezuelaโs military.
One Venezuelan Air Force general and several Venezuelan diplomats abroad have turned on Maduro and recognized Guaido.
The websites of Venezuelan embassies in Brazil, Argentina and Mexico on Thursday posted statements recognizing Guaido, which the embassies quickly dismissed as the work of hackers, reiterating โabsolute supportโ for Maduro.
The International Monetary Fund, which a new government in Caracas would likely call on for financial assistance, is awaiting guidance from its member countries on whether to recognize Guaido, IMF spokesman Gerry Rice said on Thursday.