Venezuela: Opposition leader Guaido defends sanctions against Pres Maduro government

Guaido returned on Tuesday from a three-week international tour that took him to the US.

CARACAS, Feb 13 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Venezuela’s opposition leader Juan Guaido defended foreign sanctions against his country 24 hours after he was attacked at the Caracas international airport by state airline employees shouting “fascist”.

Guaido returned on Tuesday from a three-week international tour that took him to the US, Canada, Colombia and Europe. He was met by angry Conviasa workers enraged that last Friday the US placed sanctions on the state airline company.

The US action criminalizing transactions with the flag carrier is the latest of many sanctions by Washington aimed at toppling President Nicolas Maduro’s government, particularly by cutting his government’s oil revenue.

One protester even appeared to douse Guaido with a fizzy drink.

But speaking to journalists after a legislative session held in a Caracas plaza, the National Assembly speaker defended the use of sanctions.

He said they are “the free world’s tools to confront regimes (that) violate human rights, torturers and murderers.”

He said the sanctions imposed on the top officials in Maduro’s government were an “effective” form of pressure.

“Yes, there will be more sanctions for the criminals and everyone that supports the dictatorship,” warned Guaido, who had told supporters to “look out for new announcements.”

For the second time in less than a year, Guaido flouted a travel ban imposed by the government to meet with allies around the world, including US President Donald Trump.

Guaido sprung to prominence in January 2019 when he declared himself the country’s acting president in a direct challenge to Maduro.

He derived such authority from his position as the speaker of the National Assembly, after the legislature declared Maduro’s 2018 re-election invalid following a poll widely denounced as rigged.

Lawmakers called Maduro a “usurper” while more than 50 countries recognized Guaido as interim president. He retained his Assembly post last month despite a standoff in which troops stopped him from entering the legislature.

Although it sits on the world’s largest proven oil reserves, Venezuela’s economy has collapsed under Maduro’s leadership and the country has suffered five years of recession.

The UN says more than 4.5 million people have left the country due to its crisis while inflation is the highest in the world, according to the International Monetary Fund. — NNN-AGENCIES

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