As the food and hygiene kits were packed into individual white bags in the city of Cucuta, just across the river from Venezuela, US officials and Venezuelan opposition leaders appealed to the military to the let the aid through.
But Freddy Bernal, a longtime official in Maduro’s government denied that the bridge was blocked and said other material was allowed in the night before.”The coup is a media show, an international show, it is real nonsense,” he said.
The emergency supplies have become the focus of Venezuela’s political struggle between Maduro and opposition leader Juan Guaido, who declared interim presidential powers in late January, accusing Maduro of being illegitimate following an election last year widely viewed as a sham.
The goods, including packaged corn flour, lentils and pasta, arrived Thursday in what the opposition is hoping will be the first of many shipments of humanitarian aid from countries around the world.
Opposition leaders said three countries in the region will become aid hubs and that some nations, like Colombia, will likely have more than one collection site.The first shipment includes food kits for 5,000 Venezuelans and high-protein nutritional supplements that can treat an estimated 6,700 young children with moderate malnutrition.
Additional aid is being stored in Miami and Houston.