Juan Guaido says he is taking control of Venezuela’s foreign assets

Self-proclaimed president piled the pressure on Nicolas Maduro by calling for new protests against ruling regime

In this photo released to the media by Miraflores presidential palace press office, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro raises his fist from an amphibious tank as he poses for photos alongside first lady Cilia Flores and Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez, center right, at the Naval base in Puerto Cabello, Venezuela, Sunday, Jan. 27, 2019. Opposition lawmaker Juan Guaido has declared himself Venezuela's legitimate leader, as embattled socialist Maduro holds the reins of power. (Marcelo Garcia/Miraflores presidential palace press office via AP)
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Venezuela’s self-proclaimed acting president Juan Guaido said on Monday he was taking control of the country’s foreign assets as he piled pressure on leader Nicolas Maduro by calling for a new wave of protests against the embattled regime.

Mr Guaido, the opposition leader who has declared himself the country’s ruler amid violent anti-government protests, says “usurper” Mr Maduro’s rule is illegitimate and wants to set up a transitional government ahead of new elections.

In a statement published on social media, he said he was “beginning to take progressive and orderly control of our republic’s assets abroad to prevent, during his exit... that the usurper and his band try to empty the coffers.”

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Mr Guaido also called for a two-hour strike on Wednesday “to demand that the armed forces side with the people,” ahead of a “big national and international rally” on Saturday to acknowledge support from several European countries that have issued Maduro a deadline to hold new polls.

His remarks came as the death toll in last week’s protests rose to 35, according to NGO workers, with the government security forces accused of killing another eight in “extra-judicial executions.”

Pope Francis said on Monday following a trip to Panama that he was afraid the escalating political crisis in Venezuela would descend into “a bloodbath.”

The White House, meanwhile, urged Venezuela’s military to accept a “peaceful, democratic and constitutional transfer of power.”

National Security Advisor John Bolton told reporters in Washington that president Donald Trump was leaving “all options... on the table” when it came to considering getting the US military involved in the crisis.

Mr Maduro, 56, has refused to budge, telling Turkish television station CNN Turk: "No one can give us an ultimatum."

Millions of Venezuelans have been left in poverty or fled the country due to an economic crisis, marked by hyper-inflation and shortages of basic necessities, which began in 2014.

Mr Maduro devalued the currency by 35 per cent on Monday, aligning it with the exchange rate for the dollar on the black market, but analysts said it would only “make things worse.”

Mr Guaido, the 35-year-old head of the opposition-controlled National Assembly, says the election Mr Maduro won in May was not fair as it was boycotted by the opposition, while many in the international community branded it a fraud.

Last Wednesday, Mr Guaido launched a power struggle with Mr Maduro by declaring himself “acting president.”

He has the been recognised as Venezuela’s interim president by the United States and a dozen Latin American countries while Britain, France, Germany, Portugal, Spain and the Netherlands said they would follow suit unless Mr Maduro calls elections by February 3.

The EU has held back from joining the ultimatum, saying it would take "further actions" if elections were not called in the coming days, including the issue of recognition of the country's "leadership."

Russia, China, Turkey and leftist regional allies Cuba, Bolivia and Mexico continue to back Mr Maduro.

On Monday, the president of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Eduardo Ferrer, called for the leaders of both sides to meet “through peaceful channels” to find a way to “rebuild institutional democracy and full respect of human rights.”

Venezuela foreign minister Jorge Arreaza said Mexico and Uruguay are to present offers to host talks on solving the political crisis to the United Nations.

Canada said it would host an “urgent meeting” of the Lima Group of 13 Latin American nations plus Canada on February 4 to “discuss the steps we can take to support Juan Guaido and the people of Venezuela.”

That came as Rafael Uzcategui, director of the Venezuelan Program for Education-Action in Human Rights, accused the FAES police special forces unit of carrying out eight unlawful executions following last week’s protests, which he said had proved more deadly than previously thought.

“We have the corroborated figure, with first name, surname, place and presumed guilty parties, of 35 people murdered in the context of the protests” since Monday last week, Mr Uzcategui said.

Another NGO, Foro Penal, said 850 people, among them 77 children, have been arrested.

The US has warned there will be a “significant response” if US diplomats, Mr Guaido or the opposition-controlled National Assembly are targeted with violence and intimidation.

Encouraged by the international support for his cause, Mr Guaido is on a mission to weaken the military’s support of Maduro’s regime, which has been essential to keeping him in power since 2013.

His appeals have included promises of amnesty, and mass protests against Mr Maduro, who has presided over the collapse of the economy and a severe humanitarian crisis, with shortages of food and medicine.

Venezuela's defence minister Vladimir Padrino on Monday dismissed the amnesty offer as a “deception” and an “instrument of manipulation,” insisting that “no-one in the armed forces believes it.”

The military has backed the leftist regime, which was ushered into power 20 years ago by the late Hugo Chavez, a former military officer.

But Venezuela’s military attache in Washington, army colonel Jose Luis Silva, switched his support to Mr Guaido while Washington also accepted exiled opposition leader Carlos Vecchio as Venezuela’s new charge d’affaires to the United States.

Scarlet Salazar, a Venezuelan consular officer in Miami, said Monday she was also throwing her support behind Mr Guaido in a recorded statement.