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  • ‘I’m a prisoner of war’

    ‘I’m a prisoner of war’


    The sound of clanking leg shackles could be heard moments before Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro walked into the door of a New York City courtroom for the first time.

    He then told packed rows of reporters and the public that he had just been “kidnapped”.

    Minutes after his entrance, the Judge Alvin Hellerstein asked Maduro to confirm his identity so the proceedings could start.

    “I am, sir, Nicolás Maduro. I am president of the Republic of Venezuela and I am here kidnapped since January 3rd,” he told the court in a calm Spanish before an interpreter translated for the court. “I was captured at my home in Caracas, Venezuela.”

    The 92-year-old judge quickly interjected to tell Maduro that there would be a “time and a place to get into all of this”.

    During the dramatic 40-minute arraignment on Monday afternoon, Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, pleaded not guilty to drugs and weapon charges.

    “I’m innocent. I’m a decent man,” Maduro said, with Flores adding that she was “completely innocent”.

    The 63-year-old and his wife were transferred to a New York jail after they were arrested by US forces at their compound in Venezuela on Saturday, as part of a surprise overnight operation that also saw strikes on military bases.

    Dressed in blue and orange jail shirts and khaki pants, the two wore headphones to listen to a Spanish translation during the hearing, an attorney sitting between them. Maduro took meticulous notes on a yellow legal pad that he asked a judge to confirm that he could keep with him after the hearing.

    When Maduro walked into the room – the same federal courtroom where Sean “Diddy” Combs was tried and convicted just months earlier – he turned around to nod at several members of the audience and greet them.

    He maintained this calm and expressionless demeanour during the proceedings, even at the end, when a man watching from the public area suddenly shouted that Maduro would “pay” for his crimes.

    “I’m a president and prisoner of war,” he shouted towards the man in the audience in Spanish. The man was then escorted out of the room in tears.

    The proceedings were emotional for others in the court as well. Maibort Petit, a reporter from Venezuela who has covered Maduro’s administration, said the US missile strikes during Maduro’s arrest damaged her family home near Fuerte Tiuna in Caracas.

    She said it was surreal to watch her former leader escorted into court in prison garb by US marshals.

    Maduro’s wife, Flores, was much quieter, with bandages near her eyes and forehead for injuries her lawyers said she sustained during their weekend arrest.

    She spoke softly with her blonde hair tied back in a bun while her lawyers asked that she be given proper medical treatment, including an xray of potentially bruised ribs and a fracture.

    Maduro and his wife did not seek bail during the proceedings, but can do so at a later date, meaning they will remain in federal custody.

    The US has accused Maduro of narco-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine importation conspiracy, possession of machine guns and destructive devices and conspiracy to possess machine guns and destructive devices.

    Maduro was charged alongside his wife, son and several others. The next court hearing in the case has been scheduled for 17 March.



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  • Venezuela swears in interim leader after Maduro appears in court

    Venezuela swears in interim leader after Maduro appears in court


    Fiona Nimoniand

    Madeline Halpert

    Getty Images Delcy Rodriguez smiles towards the camera. She is wearing a bright green dress. Getty Images

    Delcy Rodriguez was sworn in as the interim president of Venezuela on Monday

    Delcy Rodriguez has been sworn in as Venezuela’s interim president in a parliamentary session that began with demands for the release from US custody of ousted leader Nicolas Maduro.

    Rodriguez, 56, vice president since 2018, said she was pained by what she called the “kidnapping” of Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores who were seized by US forces in an overnight raid on Saturday.

    In dramatic scenes inside a New York court room two hours earlier, Maduro insisted he was still the president of Venezuela as he pleaded not guilty to four charges of drug trafficking and terrorism.

    Meanwhile the US faced sharp criticism at the UN, but the US ambassador said the largest energy reserves in the world could not be left in the hands of an illegitimate leader, a “fugitive from justice”.

    Before the court appearance, the UN Security Council held an emergency session to discuss the situation in Venezuela.

    The ambassador for Venezuela, Samuel Moncada, said his country had been the target of an “illegitimate armed attack lacking any legal justification”.

    The US ambassador to the UN, Mike Waltz, justified the attack by describing Maduro as “an illegitimate so-called president”.

    Waltz added that the US had carried out a “surgical law enforcement operation” to apprehend Maduro, whom he is also referred to as a “fugitive from justice”.

    Maduro has been accused of narco-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine importation conspiracy, possession of machine guns and destructive devices and conspiracy to possess machine guns and destructive devices.

    During Monday afternoon’s court appearance, a member of the public began to yell in Spanish at Maduro that he would “pay” for what he had done.

    Maduro turned to him and replied that he was a “kidnapped president” and a “prisoner of war” before being escorted out in shackles behind his wife through the back court door.

    “I’m a decent man. I am still president of my country,” Maduro said earlier during the 30-minute hearing.

    Judge Alvin Hellerstein, 92, interjected to tell Maduro that there would be a “time and a place to get into all of this”.

    Getty Images A supporter of ousted Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro carrieshis portrait during a rally outside the National Assembly in Caracas on Monday. Hundreds of people can be seen in the crowd. In the portrait of Maduro he is wearing a black suit, red tie and a sash bearing the colours of the Venezuelan flag. Getty Images

    A supporter of ousted Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro carry his portrait during a rally outside the National Assembly in Caracas on.

    Speaking just hours after Saturday’s attack – which saw over 150 aircraft and 200 US personnel enter Venezuela – Trump had vowed the US would “run” Venezuela until “a safe and proper and judicious transition” was possible.

    He also promised US oil companies would move into the country to fix infrastructure “and start making money for the country”.

    But despite the US president’s claims, Maduro’s allies remain in charge.

    In comments made to the US magazine The Atlantic on Sunday once it became clear Rodriguez would be sworn in, Trump warned she could “pay a very big price, probably bigger than Maduro” if she “doesn’t do what’s right”.

    During a cabinet meeting, Rodriguez indicated her government would engage in some cooperation with the US, saying: “We invite the US government to collaborate with us on an agenda of co-operation orientated towards shared development within the framework of international law.”

    Thousands of Venezuelans gathered outside the Federal Legislative Palace to show support for Maduro, his wife and the interim president Rodriguez as she was sworn in.

    Speaking after taking her oath, Rodriguez told the National Assembly she did so “with pain” because of the suffering caused by “illegitimate military aggression”.

    She vowed to guarantee the peace of the country, “the spiritual tranquillity of our people, the economic and social tranquillity of our people”.

    The assembly also heard from Maduro’s son who expressed his support for his parents – saying that they “will return” to Venezuela.

    He also offered his “unconditional support” to Rodriguez.

    The next court hearing in Maduro’s case has been scheduled for 17 March.



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  • Cuba defiant as it braces for post-Maduro era

    Cuba defiant as it braces for post-Maduro era


    Will GrantBBC’s Mexico, Central America and Cuba correspondent

    EPA/Shutterstock Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel holds Cuban and Venezuelan flags as he speaks at a rally in Havana in support of Venezuela. Photo: 3 January 2026EPA/Shutterstock

    Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel addressed a rally in Havana in support of Venezuela, condemning Washington’s operation

    After Venezuela, there is no nation in the Americas more affected by the events in Caracas than Cuba.

    The two nations have shared a political vision of state-led socialism since a fresh-faced Venezuelan presidential candidate, Hugo Chávez, met the aged leader of the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro, on the tarmac at Havana airport in 1999.

    For years, their mutual ties only deepened, as Venezuelan crude oil flowed to the communist-run island in exchange for Cuban doctors and medics travelling in the other direction.

    After the deaths of the two men, it was Nicolás Maduro – trained and instructed in Cuba – who became Chávez’s handpicked successor, chosen partly because he was acceptable to the Castro brothers. He represented continuity for the Cuban revolution as much as the Venezuelan one.

    Now he, too, is gone from the seat of power in Caracas, forcibly removed by the US’s elite Delta Force team. The prospects for Cuba in his absence are bleak.

    For now, the Cuban government has robustly denounced the attack as illegal and declared two days of national mourning for 32 Cuban nationals killed in the US military operation.

    Their deaths revealed a key fact long-known about Cuban influence over the Venezuelan presidency and military: Maduro’s security detail was almost entirely made up of Cuban bodyguards. Cuban nationals are in place in numerous positions in Venezuela’s intelligence services and military too.

    Cuba had long denied having active soldiers or security agents inside Venezuela, but freed political prisoners have often claimed they were interrogated by men with Cuban accents while in custody.

    Furthermore, despite endless public proclamations of solidarity between the two nations, in truth the Cuban influence behind the scenes of the Venezuelan state is believed to have driven a wedge between ministers most-closely aligned with Havana and those who feel that the relationship first established by Chávez and Castro has become fundamentally unbalanced.

    In essence, that faction considers that these days Venezuela gets little in return for its oil.

    Venezuela is believed to send around 35,000 barrels of oil a day to Cuba – none of the island’s other main energy partners, Russia and Mexico, even come close.

    Getty Images A man rummages through a dumpster in Havana, Cuba. Photo: 15 July 2025Getty Images

    Food shortages have worsened in Cuba as it grapples with a severe economic crisis

    The Trump administration’s tactic of confiscating sanctioned Venezuelan oil tankers has already begun to worsen the fuel and electricity crisis in Cuba and has the potential to become very acute, very quickly.

    At best, the future looks increasingly complex for the beleaguered Caribbean island without Maduro at the helm in Caracas. Cuba was already in the grip of its worst economic crisis since the Cold War.

    There have been rolling blackouts from end to end of the island for months. And the impact on ordinary Cubans has been taxing in the extreme: weeks without reliable electricity, food rotting in fridges, fans and air-conditioning not running, mosquitoes swarming in the heat and the fester of uncollected rubbish.

    The island has experienced a widespread outbreak of mosquito-borne diseases in recent weeks with huge numbers of people affected by dengue fever and chikungunya. Cuba’s healthcare system, once the jewel in the revolution’s crown, has struggled to cope.

    It is not a pretty picture. Yet it is the daily reality for most Cubans.

    The idea that the flow of Venezuelan oil to Cuba could be turned off by Delcy Rodríguez fills Cubans with dread, especially if she looks to placate the Trump administration following the US raid against her predecessor and stave off the spectre of more violence.

    EPA/Shutterstock Venezuelans in Miami, Florida, hold a picture of US Secretary of State Marco Rubio during a rally in support of the US operation in Venezuela. Photo: 3 January 2026EPA/Shutterstock

    President Trump insists Washington is calling the shots in Venezuela now.

    While those comments were walked back – to an extent – by his Secretary of State Marco Rubio, there is no doubt that the Trump administration now expects nothing less than total compliance from Rodríguez as acting president.

    There would be further, potentially worse consequences, Trump threatened, if she “doesn’t behave”, as he put it.

    Such language – not to mention the US operation in Venezuela itself – has shocked and angered Washington’s critics, who say the White House is guilty of the worst form of US imperialism and interventionism seen in Latin America since the Cold War.

    The removal of Maduro from power amounted to kidnapping, those critics argue, and the case against him must be thrown out at his eventual trial in New York.

    Unsurprisingly, Trump appears unfazed by such arguments, warning he might even carry it out again in against the president of Colombia if need be.

    He has dubbed the worrying new circumstances in Latin America the “Donroe Doctrine”, in a nod to the Monroe Doctrine – a 19th Century colonialist foreign policy principle which warned European powers against meddling in the US sphere of influence in the Western hemisphere.

    In order words, Latin America is the US’s “backyard”, and Washington has the unalienable right to determine what happens there. Rubio used that very term – backyard – about the region as he justified the actions against Venezuela on US Sunday talk shows.

    He also remains key to what comes next for Cuba. The US economic embargo has been in place for more than six decades and failed to remove the Castro brothers or their political project from power.

    Rubio – a Cuban American former Florida senator and son of Cuban exiles – would like nothing more than to be the man, or the man behind the man, who brought an end to 60 years of communist rule in his parents’ homeland.

    He sees the strategy of removing Maduro and laying down stark conditions to a more-compliant Rodríguez government in Caracas as the key to achieving that self-professed goal in Havana.

    Cuba has faced tough times in the past, and the government remains defiant in the face of this latest act of US military intervention in the region.

    The 32 “brave Cuban combatants” who died in Venezuela would be honoured, said Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel, for “taking on the terrorists in imperial uniforms”.

    “Cuba is ready to fall,” retorted Trump on Air Force One.



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