Escalating border closure; Why Venezuela President wants to close it

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has announced the closure of the border with Brazil as a row over foreign humanitarian aid continues.

The embattled leftist leader went on TV to say that he was also considering shutting the border with Colombia to stop the opposition bringing in relief.He denies any crisis and calls the aid delivery plans a US-orchestrated show.

Opposition leader Juan Guaidó is leading a convoy from the capital, Caracas, to the Colombian border.Later on the week, a huge concert will be held on the Colombian side of the border to raise money for Venezuela.

At the same time, Mr Maduro’s government will hold its own event, reportedly just some 300 metres away.

Mr Guaidó declared himself interim leader during anti-government protests last month and is recognised by dozens of foreign states, including the US and most Latin American countries.

Scuffles broke out and tear gas was fired when the convoy of buses and cars was briefly stopped by security forces on a road near Mariara, west of Caracas, but they later moved on.

Meanwhile, after Mr Maduro’s announcement that the border would be closed indefinitely on Thursday night, many Venezuelans rushed across the frontier to the Brazilian city of Pacaraima to stock up on supplies, Brazilian Media reported.

The crossing at the border of the two countries usually closes at night and would normally have opened at 08:00 local time (12:00 GMT) on Friday.

Mr Guaidó and his allies hope to collect food and medicine in defiance of President Maduro. The Venezuelan military has so far managed to block shipments of US aid from coming across the border with Colombia.

Despite denying there is any humanitarian crisis, Mr Maduro announced this week that 300 tonnes of aid would be shipped to Venezuela from its ally Russia.

More than three million Venezuelans have fled in recent years as the country grapples with hyperinflation and shortages of essentials like food and medicine, the UN says.

Mr Maduro, in power since 2013, has been criticised at home and abroad for his handling of the economy.

  Guiad’o Support

jam building up after the announcement of border closure

Venezuela’s military has so far defied calls to abandon President Maduro and support his rival.However, this week former military intelligence chief Hugo Carvajal recognized the opposition leader as “president in charge”. In a video address posted online he issued a stinging rebuke to Mr Maduro.

“You have killed hundreds of young people in the streets for trying to claim the rights you stole – this without even counting the dead for lack of medicines and security,” he said.

Mr Carvajal, a congressman, called on the military to break with the president and to allow humanitarian aid in.

In another development, Mr Guaidó’s aides in Washington said 11 Venezuelan diplomats based in the US had defected and declared their support for him.

  Why the border closure?

Flanked by Defence Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez and other top military commanders, Mr Maduro announced that the border with Brazil would be closed “completely and absolutely” until further notice.

The president also added: “I don’t want to take any decision of this type but I am evaluating it, a total closure of the border with Colombia.”He says the delivery of aid is part of a US-led attempt to depose his government and seize Venezuela’s oil reserves.

The right-wing Brazilian government of President Jair Bolsonaro is among those that recognise Mr Guaidó as Venezuela’s legitimate leader, pending elections.

some Venezuelan women queue to sell their hair

Presidential spokesman Gen Otávio Régo Barros said on Tuesday that, in co-ordination with the US, food and medicine would be available in the border town of Pacaraima to be collected by “the government of acting President Juan Guaidó in Venezuelan trucks driven by Venezuelans”.

“Brazil is taking part in this important international initiative to support the Guaidó government and the Venezuelan people,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Venezuelan government announced it would deliver 20,600 of its own food boxes to the Colombian border area.

A video posted on Twitter by Food Minister Luis Medina Ramírez showed cargo lorries.

https://twitter.com/LuisMedinaRa/status/1098397068148858880

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