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Guaido says Venezuela’s opposition is ‘not going anywhere’ as pressure mounts | CBC News

The leader of Venezuela’s opposition — and the man who now claims the presidency — was relatively unknown even in his own country when he was thrust into the international limelight. But Juan Guaido says that despite the risks that come with taking on Nicolas Maduro, he’s not backing down.

Guiado was at his alma mater, Andres Bello Catholic University, on Wednesday to speak to a group of farmers about improving the country’s food supply. The engineer by training has become a high-profile politician, trailed by journalists, admirers and selfie-hunters.

As he ducked into a building at the school in Caracas, he ran into what appeared to be an old friend. The two embraced, and the friend looked at him with wonder. “You’re a rockstar.”

There is indeed a certain Obama-like quality about Guaido, something his supporters seem to sense, breaking out into shouts of “Si, se puede” (“yes, we can”) when he enters the auditorium.

​To his opponents, the newly prominent politician is a usurper trying to oust the country’s elected presidents. To his supporters, he’s a voice for the people in a country beset by chaos and corruption.

Guaido’s assumption of the presidency has energized this country’s opposition in a way that nothing has before, but he didn’t arrive in this position simply through charisma.

Instead, a series of first partisan and then constitutional factors pushed the relatively unknown politician into the forefront of a movement that derives its main force not from him, but from the desperation for change of millions of Venezuelans.

One of the first people to speak in the university auditorium reminded him of that when she turned to him during a speech and said: “Don’t let us down.”

Whistling bullets

As Guaido received plaudits from his backers Wednesday, he also heard from Diosdado Cabello, a prominent member of Maduro’s government.

“Mr. Guaido, you haven’t heard the whistle of a bullet near you, you hear? You don’t know how it feels to have a bullet hit three centimetres from your head.”

At the university, Guaido responded, “lamentably the Venezuelan people have had to listen to a lot of whistling in these years. We’re not going anywhere. We’re not afraid.”

Guaido moves freely, with only three visible bodyguards, constantly surrounded by crowds. There is no effort to separate him from anyone. At one street rally, he departed by hopping on the back of someone’s motorbike for a ride to the next event.

WATCH: Interim president or rogue politician? Hear from Juan Guaido

Weeks after Juan Guaido declared himself Venezuela’s interim president, dozens of countries have backed the young leader. But Nicolas Maduro is clinging on to power and rallying his base with warnings of a U.S. invasion. Where does Guaido go from here? The National’s Adrienne Arsenault caught up with him in Caracas to get the answer. 4:12

Guaido has already been shot by government forces, having been struck by pellets from a 12-gauge shotgun in the neck and back during protests in 2017 in his home state of Vargas.

Agents of the government’s feared secret police arrested him briefly in January but then let him go. He hasn’t been touched since. Why not?

“That’s a great question, I’ve asked myself the same one,” he told CBC News. “Especially because there are more than 350 political prisoners, and we have politicians who have been murdered, tortured, exiled, kidnapped, among other things.”

Guaido said he sees three main reasons he hasn’t been detained.

“The first is we are acting in keeping with our constitution. And that is the first element, so the world can see our actions are completely constitutional. The second is the support of the people.”

“And the third one is the support of the international community.”

The Trump effect

That support has come in various forms. Some countries, including Canada and most of Latin America, recognized Guaido within hours of his declaration that he was assuming the role of acting president under the Venezuelan constitution. But those countries have also ruled out any kind of foreign military action.

Most major European nations, who also believe Maduro is not a legitimately-elected president, gave the Venezuelan leader eight days to call new elections — and then recognized Guaido when he failed to do so. They also oppose foreign military intervention.

But one government, the Trump administration, has repeatedly refused to say that military involvement is out of the question.

WATCH: Juan Guaido talks about support from Trump.

With Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro raising the issue of an invasion, interim president Juan Guaido explains why U.S. President Donald Trump’s support must be kept in perspective. 1:12

“I thank President Trump for the firmness and determination with which he’s spoken about Venezuela,” Guaido said, going on to thank Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other international leaders.

That international support has been contentious both within Venezuela and abroad, as some question whether countries like Canada should be weighing in on leadership issues in sovereign nations.

Guaido said Maduro’s government wants the people to believe that the demands for change are sponsored by the U.S., rather than driven by Venezuelans.

“The Venezuelan struggle has been years of sacrifice. The construction of a majority, mobilization, non-violent struggle, social and political demands — many elements,” he said. “To reduce it to a question of outside pressure from one country or another would be to minimize our struggle. And our determination to be free.”

Fight over foreign aid

As the country deals with the competing claims to power, there are questions around who will make decisions that affect the lives of poverty-stricken Venezuelans.

Countries have given money for humanitarian aid to be administered by Guaido, but Maduro has sworn that no cargo will pass. Just hours before CBC News spoke with Guaido, Venezuelan troops built barricades and dropped shipping containers to block the bridge linking Colombia to the Venezuelan town of Pedro Maria Urena, which was to have been the principal aid corridor.

There is anger in Venezuela at the thought that the government will prevent aid from reaching needy people, and that means pressure on Guaido to make it happen.



Venezuelan migrants line up with their children for a free lunch served at a migrant shelter in La Parada, on the outskirts of Cucuta, Colombia, on the border with Venezuela. (Fernando Vergara/Associated Press)

But not one square inch of this country is under Guaido’s control, and the military remains the mainstay of the Maduro government. 

“Part of our work is going to be to convince military members, and generate political pressure on them as Venezuelan citizens who also have mothers who are sick, who also have family members in need,” he said. “That they have to take care of their families. Not only appealing to their conscience and respect for the constitution.”

“We are going to insist with a lot of force that the entry of aid saves lives in Venezuela.”

Back in the Caracas university, farmers from across the country participated in a meeting of the national farming and livestock associations. Coffee growers from Portuguesa State, orange growers from Yaracuy, and ranchers from the vast plains around the Orinoco gave speeches that boiled with anger at a government they say has destroyed the Venezuelan countryside, and their ability to feed the nation.

WATCH: Guaido entered the auditorium to cheers from a mixed crowd of mostly farmers in the seats, and students lining the walkways

Farmers and students await a speech by Juan Guaido 0:12

“This government persecutes the coffee growers,” said one woman, relating how productive coffee farms had been reduced to growing subsistence vegetables.

Farmers spoke about millions of doses of foot-and-mouth disease vaccine they had brought privately being stranded in Brazil because the government won’t let them enter the country.

One man said police had broken up a meeting in his town and arrested 30 farmers, accusing them of subversion. “We were just talking about how to solve foot-and-mouth because that’s our work,” he said. “We weren’t there to overthrow the government.”

The opposition leader, who is pushing forward despite the lack of a clear path, told them he would work with them to restore the countryside. 

“It’s clear to me you understand your role in helping to recover our country,” said Guaido, whose own role remains in flux. 

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