Inauguration of Maduro In January 2019,
Leopoldo López's
Popular Will party attained the leadership of the
National Assembly of Venezuela according to a rotation agreement made by opposition parties, naming
Juan Guaidó as
president of the legislative body. Guaidó began motions to form a
provisional government shortly after assuming his new role on 5 January 2019, stating that whether or not Maduro began his new term on the 10th, the country would not have a legitimately elected president in either case, calling for soldiers to "enforce the Constitution" Signs of impending crisis showed when a
Supreme Court Justice and Electoral Justice seen as close to Maduro defected to the United States just a few days before the 10 January 2019
second inauguration of Nicolás Maduro. The justice, , said that Maduro was "incompetent" and "illegitimate". Maduro's election was supported by Turkey, Russia, China, and the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America (
ALBA). Guaidó said that the National Assembly would "take the responsibility that touches us". The opposition considered assuming the powers of the executive branch legitimate based on constitutional processes; The National Assembly specifically invoked Articles 233, 333, and 350 of the Constitution. The National Assembly worked with the coalition
Frente Amplio Venezuela Libre to create a plan for the demonstrations, organizing a unified national force. On 11 January, plans to offer incentives for the armed forces to disavow Maduro were announced.
Guaidó declared acting president During Guaidó's speech, he said he was "willing to assume command ... only possible with the help of Venezuelans". The president of the
Supreme Tribunal of Justice of Venezuela in exile, based in Panama, wrote to Guaidó, requesting him to become acting president of Venezuela. OAS Secretary-General
Luis Almagro was the first to give international official support to Guaidó's claim, tweeting "We welcome the assumption of Juan Guaidó as interim president of Venezuela in accordance with Article 233 of the Political Constitution. You have our support, that of the international community and of the people of Venezuela."
Guaidó briefly detained, plans continue Guaidó was detained on 13 January by the
Bolivarian Intelligence Service (SEBIN) and released 45 minutes later. The SEBIN agents who intercepted his car and took him into custody were fired. The Information Minister,
Jorge Rodríguez, said the agents did not have instructions and the arrest was orchestrated by Guaidó as a "media stunt" to gain popularity;
BBC News correspondents said that it appeared to be a genuine ambush to send a message to the opposition. After his detention, Guaidó said that Rodríguez's admission that the SEBIN agents acted independently showed that the government had lost control of its security forces; he called
Miraflores (the presidential palace) "desperate", On 15 January 2019, the National Assembly approved legislation to work with dozens of foreign countries to request that these nations freeze Maduro administration bank accounts. Guaidó wrote a 15 January 2019 opinion piece in
The Washington Post entitled "Maduro is a usurper. It's time to restore
democracy in Venezuela"; he outlined Venezuela's erosion of democracy and his reasoning for the need to replace Maduro on an interim basis according to Venezuela's constitution. On 21 January, over two dozen National Guardsmen participated in a mutiny against Maduro with the assistance of residents in the area during the early morning hours. Government forces repressed the protestors with tear gas and the officers were later captured. During the night, over thirty communities in Caracas and surrounding areas participated in strong protests against the Maduro government. The strongest protests occurred in San José de Cotiza, where the rebel National Guardsmen were arrested, with demonstrations spreading throughout nearby communities, with
cacerolazos heard throughout Caracas. On 22 January, Vice President
Mike Pence called Guaidó personally and assured him that the United States would support his declaration.
Guaidó declares himself acting president On 23 January, Guaidó swore to serve as acting president. On that day, millions of Venezuelans demonstrated across the country and world in support of Guaidó, with a few hundred supporting Maduro outside Miraflores. At one end of the blocked street was a stage where Guaidó spoke and took an oath to serve as interim president. Minutes after his speech, the United States announced that it recognized Guaidó as interim president while presidents
Iván Duque of Colombia and
Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil, beside deputy Canadian prime minister
Chrystia Freeland, announced at the
World Economic Forum that they too recognized him. The
Venezuelan National Guard used tear gas on gathering crowds at other locations, Some protests grew violent, and at least 13 people were killed.
Michelle Bachelet of the
United Nations requested a UN investigation into the security forces' use of violence. meets with Carlos Vecchio,
Julio Borges, and other Washington-based Venezuelan representatives on 29 January 2019. Guaidó began to appoint individuals in late January to serve as aides or diplomats, including
Carlos Vecchio as the Guaidó administration's diplomatic envoy to the US,
Gustavo Tarre to the OAS, and
Julio Borges to represent Venezuela in the
Lima Group. He announced that the National Assembly had approved a commission to implement a plan for the reconstruction of Venezuela, called
Plan País (Plan for the Country), and he offered an
Amnesty law, approved by the National Assembly, for military personnel and authorities who help to "restore constitutional order". The
Statute Governing the Transition to Democracy was approved by the National Assembly on 5 February. As of July 2019, the National Assembly had approved Juan Guaidó's appointment has named 37 ambassadors and foreign representatives to international organizations and nations abroad.
Maduro response Maduro accused the United States of backing a coup and said he would cut ties with them. He said Guaidó's actions were part of a "well-written script from Washington" to create a
puppet state of the United States, and appealed to the American people in a 31 January video, asking them not to "convert Venezuela into another Vietnam". Maduro asked for dialogue with Guaidó, saying "if I have to go meet this boy in the
Pico Humboldt at three in the morning I am going, [...] if I have to go naked, I am going, [I believe] that today, sooner rather than later, the way is open for a reasonable, sincere dialogue". He stated he would not leave the presidential office, saying that he was elected in compliance with the Venezuelan constitution. With the two giving speeches to supporters at the same time, Guaidó replied to Maduro's call for dialogue, saying he would not initiate diplomatic talks with Maduro because he believed it would be a farce and fake diplomacy that could not achieve anything. On 18 February, Maduro's government expelled a group of Members of the
European Parliament that planned to meet Guaidó. The expulsion was condemned by Guaidó as well as
Pablo Casado, president of the
Spanish People's Party, and the Colombian government. Maduro's Foreign Minister
Jorge Arreaza defended the expulsions, saying that the constitutional government of Venezuela "will not allow the European extreme right to disturb the peace and stability of the country with another of its gross interventionist actions."
Humanitarian aid crisis Shortages in Venezuela have been present since 2007 during the presidency of
Hugo Chávez. In 2016, the
National Assembly of Venezuela declared a humanitarian crisis, asking Maduro's government to provide access to essential medicines and medical supplies. Maduro's refusal of aid worsened the effects of Venezuela's crisis. Guaidó made bringing humanitarian aid to the country a priority. In early February, Maduro prevented the American-sponsored aid from entering Venezuela via Colombia, and Venezuela's communications minister, Jorge Rodriguez, said there was a plot between Colombia, the
CIA and exiled Venezuelan politician
Julio Borges to oust Maduro. Humanitarian aid intended for Venezuela was also stockpiled on the Brazilian border, and two indigenous
Pemon people were killed as they attempted to block military vehicles from entering the area, when members of armed forces loyal to Maduro fired upon them with live ammunition. Guaidó issued an ultimatum to the Venezuelan Armed Forces, stating that humanitarian aid would enter Venezuela on 23 February and that the armed forces "will have to decide if it will be on the side of the Venezuelans and the Constitution or the usurper". Guaidó defied the restriction imposed by the Maduro administration on him leaving Venezuela, secretly crossed the border, saying that with the help of the Venezuelan military, and appeared at the
Venezuela Aid Live concert in Cúcuta, Colombia on 22 February, also to be present for the
planned delivery of humanitarian aid. Testing Maduro's authority, he was met by presidents
Iván Duque of Colombia,
Sebastián Piñera from Chile, and
Mario Abdo Benítez from Paraguay, as well as the OAS Secretary-General
Luis Almagro. the attempts failed, with only one truck able to deliver aid. At the Colombia–Venezuela border, the caravans were tear-gassed or shot at with rubber bullets by Venezuelan personnel. The National Guard repressed demonstrations on the Brazilian border and
colectivos attacked protesters near the Colombian border, leaving at least four dead, and more than 285 injured.
Lima Group meeting and Latin American tour meeting in Colombia Guaidó traveled from Cúcuta to
Bogotá for a 24 February meeting with US Vice President Mike Pence, and a 25 February meeting of the Lima Group. Pence did not rule out the use of US military force. and the European Union cautioned against the use of military force. The Lima Group rejected the use of force as well. and
US military officials said they had flown
reconnaissance flights off the coast of Venezuela to gather classified intelligence about Maduro. From Bogotá, Guaidó embarked on a regional tour to meet with the presidents of Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina, and Ecuador, to discuss ways to rebuild Venezuela and defeat Maduro. Guaidó's trip was approved by Venezuela's
National Assembly, as required by the Constitution of Venezuela, but he faced the possibility of being imprisoned when returning to Venezuela because of the travel restriction placed upon him by the Maduro administration. He re-entered Venezuela on 4 March, via
Simón Bolívar International Airport in
Maiquetía, and was received at the airport by diplomats and in Caracas by a crowd of supporters. German ambassador Daniel Kriener was accused of interference in internal affairs and expelled from Venezuela because of his role in helping Guaidó re-enter.
Blackouts supplies 80% of Venezuela's electrical power. In March 2019,
Venezuela experienced a near total electrical blackout, and lost 150,000 barrels per day in crude oil production during the blackout. Full recovery of oil production was expected to take months, but by April, Venezuela's exports were steady at a million barrels daily, "partially due to inventory drains". Experts and state-run
Corpoelec (Corporación Eléctrica Nacional) sources attributed the electricity shortages to lack of maintenance, underinvestment, corruption and to a lack of technical expertise in the country resulting from a
brain drain;
Nicolás Maduro's administration attributes them to sabotage. Guaidó said that Venezuela's largest-ever
power outage was "the product of the inefficiency, the incapability, the corruption of a regime that doesn't care about the lives of Venezuelans", Maduro's Attorney General, Tarek William Saab, called for an investigation of Guaidó, alleging that he had "sabotaged" the
electric sector. Guaidó announced he would embark on a tour of the country beginning 16 March, to organize committees for Operation Freedom with the goal to claim the presidential residence,
Miraflores Palace. From the first rally in
Carabobo state, he said, "We will be in each state of Venezuela and for each state we have visited the responsibility will be yours, the leaders, the united, [to] organize ourselves in freedom commands." On 20 March, Bachelet delivered a
preliminary oral report before the UN Human Rights Council, in which she outlined a "devastating and deteriorating" human rights situation in Venezuela, expressed concern that sanctions would worsen the situation, and called on authorities to show a true commitment to recognizing and resolving the situation.
Elvis Amoroso, Maduro's comptroller, alleged in March that Guaidó had not explained how he paid for his February 2019 Latin American trip, and said Guaidó would be barred from running for public office for fifteen years. The comptroller general is not a judicial body; according to constitutional lawyer José Vicente Haro, the
Inter-American Court of Human Rights ruled in 2011 that an administrative body cannot disallow a public servant from running. Constitutional law expert
Juan Manuel Raffalli stated that Article 65 of Venezuela's Constitution provides that such determinations may only be made by criminal courts, after judgment of criminal activity.
Red Cross aid effort , Juan Guaidó's wife
Fabiana Rosales, U.S. Special Representative for Venezuela
Elliott Abrams, and Venezuelan Ambassador to the U.S.
Carlos Vecchio, and diplomat in Washington, D.C., on 27 March 2019 In March, Francesco Rocca, president of the
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, announced that the
Red Cross was preparing to bring humanitarian aid to the country in April to help ease both the chronic hunger and the medical crisis.
The Wall Street Journal said that the acceptance of humanitarian shipments by Maduro was his first acknowledgement that Venezuela is "suffering from an economic collapse." After a 9 April meeting with the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Maduro indicated for the first time that he was prepared to accept international aid. Guaidó called on Venezuelans to "stay vigilant to make sure incoming aid is not diverted for 'corrupt' purposes". The first Red Cross delivery of supplies for hospitals arrived on 16 April, offering an encouraging sign that the Maduro administration would allow more aid to enter. According to
The New York Times, "
armed pro-government paramilitaries" fired weapons to disrupt the first Red Cross delivery, and officials associated with Maduro's party told the Red Cross to leave. According to the
Associated Press, having long denied that there was a humanitarian crisis in Venezuela, Maduro positioned the delivery "as a necessary measure to confront punishing U.S. economic sanctions." Having "rallied the international community", Guaidó "quickly claimed credit for the effort."
Revocation of Guaidó's parliamentary immunity Chief justice
Maikel Moreno asked that the
Constituent Assembly (ANC), controlled by Maduro loyalists, remove Guaidó's parliamentary immunity as president of the National Assembly, moving the Maduro administration a step closer towards prosecuting Guaidó. Guaidó supporters disagree that the Maduro-backed institutions have the authority to ban Guaidó from leaving the country and consider acts of the ANC "null and void".
Military uprising attempt speaks to supporters on 30 April 2019. On 19 April, Guaidó called for a "definite end of the usurpation" and the "largest march in history" on 1 May. Coinciding with his speech,
NetBlocks stated that state-run
CANTV again blocked access to social media in Venezuela. On 30 April 2019,
Leopoldo López, who was held under house arrest by the Maduro administration, was freed on orders from Guaidó. The two men, flanked by members of the Venezuelan armed forces near
La Carlota Air Force Base in Caracas, announced an uprising, stating that this was the final phase of "Operation Freedom". Though Guaidó said his forces held La Carlota, when supporters approached the base, Guaidó and a few dozen supporters stayed in a nearby overpass outside. Maduro was not seen during the day, but he appeared with his Defense Minister Padrino on that evening's televised broadcast, and announced he would replace
Manuel Cristopher Figuera, Director General of the
Bolivarian Intelligence Service (SEBIN), who had broken with Maduro during the uprising, The United States said Maduro had prepared to leave Venezuela that morning, but Russia and Cuba helped convince him to stay. Both Russia and Maduro denied that he had plans to leave Venezuela. Guaidó's supporters were forced to retreat by security forces using tear gas.
Colectivos fired on protesters with live ammunition, and one protester was shot in the head and killed. and López was at the Spanish embassy, while about 25 military personnel received asylum in the Panamanian embassy in Caracas. Guaidó acknowledged he had received insufficient military backing, and called for strikes beginning on 2 May, with the aim of a general strike later in the month. Russia and the US each charged the other with interference in another country's affairs.
Negotiations Following the failed military uprising, momentum surrounding Guaidó had subsided and fewer supporters gathered at demonstrations, with Guaidó resorting to negotiations with Maduro. Guaidó's deputy chief Rafael Del Rosario acknowledged that the debacle on 30 April made the prospect of removing Maduro more difficult. By May 2019, Trump had decided that Guaidó was weak; Bolton attributed a change of Trump's position to a comment made by President of Russia
Vladimir Putin to Trump in a phone call that Guaidó's claim to the presidency would be the equivalent of
Hillary Clinton declaring herself president following the
2016 United States presidential election. Representatives of Guaidó and Maduro began mediation with the assistance of the Norwegian Centre for Conflict Resolution (NOREF), with
Jorge Rodríguez and
Héctor Rodríguez serving as representatives for Maduro while and
Stalin González were representatives for Guaidó. In July 2019, Norway's commission carried out a third round of discussions between Guaidó's and Maduro's representatives in
Barbados. By August 2019, the Maduro administration decided to halt talks with Guaidó's commission after Trump administration imposed new additional sanctions on Venezuela, ordering a freeze on all Venezuelan government assets in the
United States and barred transactions with US citizens and companies.
Second visit of the OHCHR Ahead of a three-week session of the
UN Human Rights Council, the OHCHR chief,
Michelle Bachelet, visited Venezuela from 19 to 21 June. The Human Rights Commissioner met separately with both Maduro and Guaidó during her visit, as well as with Maduro's Attorney General
Tarek William Saab, several human right activists, and families of victims who experienced torture and state repression. Protests occurred in front of the UN office in Caracas during the last day of the visit, denouncing rights abuses carried out by Maduro's administration. Bachelet announced the creation of a delegation maintained by two UN officials that will remain in Venezuela to monitor the humanitarian situation. calling the measures "extremely broad" and that they are capable of exacerbating the suffering of the Venezuelan people. She also called for the release of political prisoners in Venezuela. Bachelet expressed her concerns for the "shockingly high" number of extrajudicial killings and urged for the dissolution of the
Special Action Forces (FAES). According to the report, 1,569 cases of executions as consequence as a result of "resistance to authority" were registered by the Venezuelan authorities from 1 January to 19 March. The report also details how the Venezuelan government "aimed at neutralising, repressing and criminalising political opponents and people critical of the government" since 2016. In the words of his foreign minister, "It's a text lacking in scientific rigor, with serious errors in methodology and which seems like a carbon copy of previous reports". Speaking to reporters after the UN Human Rights Council, Bachelet announced the release of 22 Venezuelan prisoners, including 20 students, judge
Maria Lourdes Afiuni, in her second house arrest since March, and journalist
Braulio Jatar, arrested in 2016. Bachelet welcomed the conditional releases and the acceptance of the two officers delegation as "the beginning of positive engagement on the country's many human rights issues". On 16 September 2020, the United Nations accused the Maduro government of
crimes against humanity.
Torture and death of Acosta Arévalo On 26 June, Maduro said that his government had arrested several defecting military, thus foiling a plot to remove him from power and to assassinate him, his wife and
Diosdado Cabello. The alleged plan also included the rescue of
Raúl Baduel, a retired general imprisoned for a second time in 2017, to install him as president. Jorge Rodríguez said that the foiled plan involved the bombing of a government building, the seizing of
La Carlota air base, and a bank robbery. Eight armed men on motorcycles dressed as civilians allegedly surrounded a vehicle containing two of Guaidó's aides. Guaidó, who was in a car further ahead, spoke with the armed civilians, according to photos and a video released by his press team According to Guaidó, the group received orders from the Venezuelan Military Counter-intelligence agency
DGCIM, but were not "hostile". Maduro administration did not provide a cause of death but announced an investigation on the matter. Acosta Arevalo's wife, human rights advocates, Juan Guaidó and the
US Department of State accused Maduro's administration of torturing the captain to death. The preliminary autopsy determined that Acosta Arévalo's cause of death was "severe
cerebral edema [brain swelling] caused by acute
respiratory failure caused by a
pulmonary embolism caused by
rhabdomyolysis [a potentially life-threatening breakdown of muscle fibers] by
multiple trauma".
Operación Alacrán An investigation led by
Armando.info reported that nine members of the National Assembly defended individuals sanctioned by the United States for their involvement in the controversial
Local Committees for Supply and Production (CLAP) program. The investigation reported that the implicated lawmakers had written letters of support to the
United States Treasury and others to a Colombian man named Carlos Lizcano, who authorities were investigating over his possible links to
Alex Saab, a Colombian businessman associated with the food distribution program and under United States sanctions. According to Armando.info, the lawmakers wrote the letters despite being aware of evidence that tied Lizcano to Saab.
Dollarization Following increased sanctions throughout 2019, the Maduro government abandoned policies established by
Chávez such as price and currency controls.
The Economist wrote that Venezuela had also obtained "extra money from selling gold, both from illegal mines and from its reserves, and narcotics". Its article continued to explain that the improving economy led to more difficulties for Guaidó as Venezuelans who had a better situation were less likely to protest against Maduro. == 2020 events ==