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In response to the decision constituent Assembly that this Tuesday deprived of immunity to the parliamentary leader Juan Guaidó, Leader of the Opposition and interim President of Venezuela, said he remained in the country and challenged the regime of Nicolás Maduro"If you want to move forward, do it, but badume the consequence."
It is feared that with the ruling of the Constituent Assembly, the interim president of Venezuela will be arrested by the regime's forces. Guaidó warned that if this were to happen it would be a kidnapping and said that tomorrow (Wednesday) he would continue his normal activities of the day.
"Nothing will stop us," Guaidó told reporters and supporters Tuesday night.
"It will not be violence, intimidation that will stop us," added the opposition leader.
The Speaker of the Parliament, recognized as interim President of Venezuela by more than 50 countries, insisted that the Constituent Assembly did not have the necessary legitimacy to evade jurisdiction and thereby give fire green to a criminal trial by the Prosecutor. Supreme Court of Justice (TSJ).
"We must not respond to an organization that does not exist, we must react to the people of Venezuela," said the deputy, calling his supporters to participate mbadively next Saturday in an event already scheduled.
"I want to know who armed forces or security forces will lend to kidnap the President of the RepublicGuaidó, on whom the TSJ is investigating for allegedly usurping the duties of Maduro.
The opposition commented that after the decision, "dozens" of Presidents and Foreign Ministers had called by telephone "concerned" to express their support.
"We know that they (the government) have only brute force, we have boldness," he said.
"People are determined and nothing will stop us, they only earn a little time that the Venezuelan loses in hours without light, without water, with loss of life … There is no turning back in this process, "Guaidó told a group of supporters and journalists.
On 29 January, the Supreme Court opened an investigation against Guaidó for allegedly usurping the duties of President Nicolás Maduro, who also accused him of planning an attack against him.
"Sometimes the law takes time, but in this case, it will come," warned Cabello, number two of Chavismo, closing the debate at the Federal Legislative Building.
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