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Venezuela crisis: European states recognise Guaidó as president

The UK, France, Germany, Spain and other European countries have officially recognised opposition leader Juan Guaidó as interim president of Venezuela.

It comes after President Nicolás Maduro defiantly rejected the EU’s Sunday deadline to call snap elections.

Mr Guaidó declared himself interim leader last month and won US backing.

Russia – a backer of Mr Maduro – accused EU countries of meddling in Venezuela’s affairs.

As pressure mounted on Mr Maduro to step down, he said he could not rule out the possibility of civil war.

In a TV interview, he warned that US President Donald Trump would leave the White House “stained with blood” if he intervened militarily in the crisis, over the legitimacy of his re-election last year.

His rival, Juan Guaidó said on Sunday he would build an international coalition to deliver humanitarian aid to Venezuelans.

What have EU countries said?

Sunday saw the expiry of an ultimatum set by European countries including France, the UK, Germany and Spain for Mr Maduro to call early presidential elections. They said that they would recognise Mr Guaidó as interim president if no such pledge was forthcoming.

On Monday, those countries and and several other European nations officially recognised Mr Guaidó as interim president.

“UK alongside European allies now recognises @jguaido as interim constitutional president until credible elections can be held“, Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said in a statement on Twitter.

French President Emmanuel Macron said Venezuelans had the right to “express themselves freely and democratically“, announcing his support for an EU contact group.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel told a news conference in Tokyo that EU countries expected Mr Guaidó to initiate a swift election process.

Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said Venezuela “should be the author of its own destiny.”

“The international community has a duty to help and ensure that this happens with the necessary guarantees”, he told reporters.

Miraflores press office shows Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro during an event with members of the military, in Turiamo, Venezuela, 3 February 2019
Nicolás Maduro has retained the support of the Venezuelan military

But Russia slammed the statements, accusing EU countries of interfering in the Venezuela’s affairs and attempting to “legitimise usurped power”.

Source: BBC

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