Maduro Refuses to Step Down, Exiled Supreme Court Calls for His Arrest

Bowen Xiao
By Bowen Xiao
January 24, 2019US News
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Maduro Refuses to Step Down, Exiled Supreme Court Calls for His Arrest
Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro speaks during a press conference, where he warned the Lima Group that he would take energetic measures if they do not rectify their position on Venezuela in 48 hours, on the eve of assuming a new six-year mandate, at the Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas, Venezuela on January 9, 2018. - Last week the Lima Group -- made up of 14 mostly Latin American countries -- had urged Maduro to renounce his second term and deliver power to parliament, a demand Caracas blasted as incitement to stage a coup d'etat. (Yuri Cortez/AFP/Getty Images)

Venezuelan Dictator Nicolás Maduro said he won’t step down after President Donald Trump recognized opposition leader Juan Guaidó as the interim president on Jan. 23. Meanwhile, the country’s exiled Supreme Court chairman told The Epoch Times that Venezuela’s military should “fulfill their duty” and detain Maduro.

Speaking to supporters at a rally outside the Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas on Jan. 23, Maduro told them “We are defending the right to the very existence of our Bolivarian republic,” and said they should resist what he described as a coup attempt.

A day later, the Trump administration rejected a move by the embattled Venezuelan strongman who ordered Washington diplomats to return home within 72 hours. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Maduro had no legal authority to make such a command as Washington pledged to keep diplomats inside the Latin American country.

“The United States maintains diplomatic relations with Venezuela and will conduct our relations with Venezuela through the government of interim President Guaidó, who has invited our mission to remain in Venezuela,” Pompeo said in a statement on Jan. 24.

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Venezuela’s National Assembly head Juan Guaido speaks to the crowd during a mass opposition rally against leader Nicolas Maduro in which he declared himself the country’s “acting president” in Caracas on Jan. 23, 2019. (Federico Parra/AFP/Getty Images)

Maduro, who gained power over the oil-rich nation in 2013, is now in the second term of a presidency won through illegitimate means. Socialist policies introduced by Maduro and his predecessor, Hugo Chavez, have crippled Venezuela in less than two decades. Food and medicine shortages, hyperinflation, and violent crime have driven over 3 million Venezuelans out of the country, according to the UN Refugee Agency.

Exiled chairman of the Supreme Court of Justice of Venezuela, Justice Miguel Angel Martin, said Maduro will soon face punishment for his crimes.

“Maduro is a former president. Maduro has been convicted by the court for a criminal offense, he has to serve a sentence, he has to be brought to justice, and we are waiting for the state security bodies to make the decision and have the determination to fulfill their constitutional duty,” he said.

Martin is one of 33 magistrates who Maduro threatened with jail after Congress named them to a parallel tribunal in 2017 to challenge the existing Supreme Court, which has heavily favored the ruling Socialist Party. In 2017, Martin fled Venezuela by boat and now resides in Washington, his colleagues escaped to Panama, Colombia, and Chile. The exiled justice said Maduro’s future is now “in the hands of the Venezuelan military.”

On Jan. 7 the Venezuelan supreme court released an official statement urging Maduro to hand over his “illegitimately exercised power” to the chairman of the National Assembly, whom Guaidó is the leader of.

Trump’s declaration was backed by almost every country in Latin America and by most countries worldwide, including Canada, Colombia, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, Panama, Paraguay, Peru.

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People raise their hands during a mass opposition rally against President Nicolas Maduro in which Venezuela’s National Assembly head Juan Guaido declared himself the country’s “acting president” in Caracas on Jan. 23, 2019. (FEDERICO PARRA/AFP/Getty Images)

Bolivia, Cuba, and Mexico pledged their support for Maduro. The countries harbor socialist governments that are aligned with Venezuela’s socialist dictatorship. The collective international fallout comes after tens of thousands of Venezuelans across the country filled the streets in protest, calling for Maduro’s resignation.

“What you’re doing is perfect, keep pushing harder,” Martin said of what the Trump administration and the mounting international pressure has done for Venezuela. On Twitter, Guaidó also expressed his gratitude to Trump on behalf of all Venezuelans.

Venezuela has been fed billions of dollars from both Russia and China for years already through loans and energy deals. On Jan. 24 Russian warned the United States not to the intervene militarily in Venezuela, arguing it could set off destruction.

The exiled justice, who hopes the country will be a democracy in the near future, described Maduro’s regime as not just “simple corruption,” but the “product of a criminal mafia.”

“The greatest damage of this criminal organization is that it broke the social fabric. Not even post-war Europe experienced this,” Martin said.

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President of Venezuela Nicolás Maduro (C) looks on before talking to judges and members of the Supreme Justice Tribunal on its annual opening day of sessions on Jan. 24 in Caracas, Venezuela. (Getty Images/Getty Images)

“We are not talking about individual human rights to some people, we are talking about human rights to a country, we are talking about the violation of human rights to millions of people. I believe that this goes beyond one dimension.”

Martin’s added that millions of Venezuelan families have some of their children overseas. He said his own nephews are in different countries. 

‘All Options’ On Table

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President Donald Trump speaks during a roundtable meeting with conservative leaders at the White House on Jan. 23, 2019. (Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images)

The United States is warning Venezuela that “all options” will be considered if Maduro decides to use military force in the current standoff.

When asked if the United States’ options included military, National Security Advisor John Bolton, who was in Venezuela on Jan. 24, told reporters, “I think that speaks for itself.”

“What we’re focusing on today is disconnecting the illegitimate Maduro regime from the source of its revenues,” he said. “Those revenues should go to the legitimate government.”

“We’re speaking with governments in this hemisphere which have overwhelmingly recognized the new constitutional government. We’re talking to our colleagues in Europe and elsewhere to demonstrate widespread political support for the interim presidency, and we’re moving to do everything we can to strengthen this new legitimate representative government.”

Bolton said Vice President Mike Pence spoke to Guaidó in the evening before Trump’s recognition statement. He said U.S. personnel are staying at the embassy currently and have been invited to stay by the legitimate government “consistent with their safety.”

“Venezuela is in our hemisphere, I think we have a special responsibility here, and I think the president feels very strongly about it,” Bolton told reporters.

Guaidó appears to have already taken the reigns as president, as he sent a formal request on Jan. 24 for U.S. assistance to provide the people of Venezuela immediate humanitarian relief.

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