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Venezuela's Maduro Begins Second Term as Crisis Deepens

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Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro, center, shakes hands with Supreme Court President Maikel Moreno as his presidential sash is adjusted, after he took the oath of office in Caracas, Jan. 10, 2019.
Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro, center, shakes hands with Supreme Court President Maikel Moreno as his presidential sash is adjusted, after he took the oath of office in Caracas, Jan. 10, 2019.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro was sworn in to a second term Thursday amid international calls for him to step down and a devastating economic crisis.

Seventeen Latin American governments, the United States and Canada rejected the legitimacy of Maduro's next term in a measure adopted Thursday. Most countries from Europe and Latin American didn't send representatives to the swearing-in.

Cuba's President Miguel Diaz-Canel, Bolivian President Evo Morales and President Anatoli Bibilov of a breakaway province of Georgia were among the few foreign leaders who attended the ceremony at the country's Supreme Court.

In a speech after his swearing-in, Maduro claimed 94 countries had sent representatives to his inauguration. He vowed to continue the legacy of the late President Hugo Chavez and accused the United States of trying to ignite unrest through its increasing economic sanctions.

"Venezuela is the center of a world war led by the North American imperialists and its allies,'' said Maduro, a former bus driver. "They have tried to convert a normal inauguration into a world war.''

Maduro's second term extends Venezuela's socialist revolution amid widespread complaints that he has stripped the country of its last vestiges of democracy.

Maduro, 56, denies that he's a dictator and often blames President Donald Trump for leading an economic war against Venezuela that's destroying the country.

The Organization of American States voted not to recognize Maduro's legitimacy, adopting a resolution Thursday presented by Colombia, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, the United States, Paraguay and Peru. The move was denounced by Venezuela's ambassador to the OAS, Samuel Moncada, as "a hostile act ... against the will of our nation.''

Paraguay cuts ties

Paraguay went a step further, cutting diplomatic ties. President Mario Abdo Benitez said his country "in the exercise of its constitutional powers and national sovereignty, adopts the decision to break diplomatic relations with the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.''

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement that the United States will keep up pressure in support of the Venezuelan people.

"It is time for Venezuelan leaders to make a choice,'' Pompeo said, urging Maduro supporters to be on the right side of history. "Now is the time to convince the Maduro dictatorship that the moment has arrived for democracy to return to Venezuela.''

Argentina's President Mauricio Macri also denounced Maduro, saying he lacks the authenticity won through honest elections despite Thursday's elaborate inauguration ceremony and any other "tricks.''

"Nicolas Maduro today is making a mockery of democracy'' Macri said on Twitter. "Venezuelans know it, the world knows it. Venezuela lives under a dictatorship.''

Oil-rich Venezuela was once among Latin America's wealthiest nations. It produced 3.5 million barrels of crude daily when Chavez took power. Output now has plummeted to less than a third of that. Critics blame years of rampant corruption and mismanagement of the state-run oil firm PDVSA.

The economic collapse has left the nation of roughly 30 million in the throes of a historic crisis.

An estimated 2.3 million Venezuelans have fled their nation's hyperinflation and shortages of food and medicine over the last two years, according to the United Nations. Those remaining live on a monthly minimum wage equal to less than $5 and falling daily.

Venezuela's splintered opposition movement has failed to counter the socialist party's dominance. Maduro's government has jailed or driven into exile its most popular leaders.

In May, Maduro declared victory in a presidential election that his political opponents and many foreign nations consider illegitimate because popular opponents were banned from running and the largest anti-government parties boycotted the race.

The opposition-led Congress opened its session for the year this week, led by 35-year-old Juan Guaido, who vowed to battle against Maduro. Guaido said Maduro is "usurping the presidency.''

"Today there is no head of state. Today there is no commander in chief,'' said Guaido, adding that Maduro kidnapped Venezuela for his own benefit.

U.S. pressure

The Trump administration has increased pressure on Maduro through financial sanctions, this week singling out powerful Venezuelan media magnate Raul Gorrin. U.S. banks are also banned from doing business with Venezuela, putting a financial stranglehold on the cash-strapped country.

David Smilde, a Tulane University expert on Venezuela, said that this isn't likely to create change. Ultimately, Maduro's government isn't worried about its international reputation, he said.

"He still has control of the institutions,'' Smilde said. "He has the guns. He has the money.''

While Maduro's popularity has plunged amid scarcities, hyperinflation and rising authoritarianism that have sparked a mass emigration, supporters who receive government subsidies in shantytowns continue to back the man who took over from Chavez.

"It's not the president's fault,'' said Frances Velazquez, 43, a mother of two who survives on government-subsidized boxes of rice, flour and cooking oil. Velazquez blamed opportunists who drive up the prices of scarce items for making life difficult for families like hers.

Others, like construction worker Ramon Bermudez, 52, have lost hope of escaping Maduro's rule.

He pointed out the irony of living in a nation with the world's most abundant oil reserves yet having to wait in line overnight to fill three canisters of natural gas to cook at home.

"All that's left to do is raise your hand to heaven and ask God to help us,'' said Bermudez, who was camped out on a Caracas sidewalk with hundreds of others waiting for gas. "There's nothing more.''

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