Venezuela Political Crisis: Maduro rejects calls for new elections

World Today

VENEZUELA-CRISIS-MADURO-MILITARYHandout picture released by the Venezuelan presidency showing Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro posing for pictures with troops during military exercises at Fort Paramacay in Naguanagua, Carabobo State, Venezuela, on January 27, 2019. (AFP PHOTO / VENEZUELAN PRESIDENCY / MARCELO GARCIA)

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro is rejecting calls by a growing number of countries to hold new elections. This comes as self-declared president Juan Guaido gains new support.

CGTN’s Stephen Gibbs reports from Caracas.

Maduro, in an interview with CNN Turk aired on Sunday, also said he was open to dialogue and that meeting U.S. President Donald Trump was improbable but not impossible. The broadcaster dubbed the interview from Spanish into Turkish.

Washington, which has recognized Guaido as leader, had on Saturday urged the world to “pick a side” on Venezuela and financially disconnect from Maduro’s government.

Venezuela has sunk into turmoil under Maduro with food shortages and protests amid an economic and political crisis that has sparked mass emigration and inflation that is seen rising to 10 million percent this year.

Britain, Germany, France and Spain all said they would recognize Guaido if Maduro failed to call fresh elections within eight days, an ultimatum Russia said was “absurd” and the Venezuelan foreign minister called “childlike.”

Washington, Canada most Latin American nations and many European states have labeled Maduro’s second-term election win last May fraudulent.

Maduro retains the loyalty of the armed forces, though Venezuela’s top military envoy to the United States on Saturday defected to Guaido.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan had voiced his support for Maduro in a phone call on Thursday.

Story by Reuters with some reporting from CGTN