Announcement comes as Juan Guaidó’s wife met with Donald Trump and Vice-President Mike Pence in Washington

This article is more than 1 year old

This article is more than 1 year old

The opposition figurehead battling to topple Nicolás Maduro has told supporters to prepare for a final nationwide push against Venezuela’s authoritarian leader after the country suffered its fourth massive blackout in less than three weeks.

Addressing a rally in Caracas, Juan Guaidó said it was time for Venezuelans of all social classes to increase pressure through what he called Operación Libertad (Operation Freedom) – a mobilization across the country that would culminate in a massive march through the capital.

Although he did not say when the march would take place, members of his team say it could end at one of its most politically sensitive addresses: the Miraflores presidential palace.

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“At its heart, Operation Freedom means [exerting] maximum popular political pressure of the kind never before seen in Venezuela,” said Guaidó, who most western governments now recognize as Venezuela’s legitimate interim leader.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Supporters of Juan Guaido attend a rally in which he gave details of what he calls ‘Operation Freedom’, in Caracas on 27 March 2019. Photograph: Federico Parra/AFP/Getty Images

Referring to some of Caracas’ most populous slums and working class communities – traditionally loyal to Maduro’s predecessor Hugo Chávez – Guaidó said: “We must march from Catia, from La Vega, from Antímano, from Caricuao … from Petare, from El Valle. There must be 20, 30 or 40 different assembly points [around Caracas] so there is no way they can repress us.”

Guaidó admitted such a huge demonstration could not be organized “from one day to the next” and would be preceded by a rehearsal on 6 April. The opposition leader said he would spend the coming weeks and months touring Venezuela and liaising with local committees to prepare.

He also hinted at the potential risks of marching on such a sensitive location, saying “responsibility” was needed in the demonstration’s planning: “We will not be cannon fodder.”

But after the latest breakdown in Venezuela’s electricity service, Guaidó said it was necessary to up the ante.

“Today Venezuelans woke up in the dark once again because of an inefficient, corrupt and thieving regime … What we are asking for, and what we are fighting for every single day, is to live normally,” he said.

As Guaidó spoke in Caracas, his wife Fabiana Rosales was in Washington, where she was given a high-profile reception by Donald Trump and his vice-president Mike Pence. “We are with Venezuela,” the US president said, at the start of a meeting with Rosales and other opposition figures.

Maduro and his inner circle have put a brave face on the latest power cuts, which struck on Wednesday morning, less than three weeks after the start of a six-day nationwide blackout.

“United Venezuela will prevail,” tweeted Delcy Rodríguez, the vice-president, shortly before Wednesday’s power failure. She denounced the “criminal imperialist attack” her administration accuses of attacking the national grid in order to topple Maduro.

But there was anger and on the streets of Venezuela’s capital – where many citizens are now living without water as well as light – as citizens faced up to another period of profound uncertainty and deprivation.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Donald Trump meets with Fabiana Rosales, the wife of Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido, at the Oval Office of the White House in Washington DC. Photograph: UPI/Barcroft Images

Despite government claims, many people suspect the blackouts are the result of crumbling infrastructure caused by years of corruption, incompetence and under-investment.

“I feel hopelessness and despair,” said Nohelia van Praag, a 43-year-old preschool teacher from Caracas.

Franklin Piccone, a teacher and activist from eastern Caracas who works in the city’s slums, said: “There is no way this government can last six years. They have shown they have no answers. It’s just failure after failure.”

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“We are talking about a failed state,” Piccone added. “We are in a situation of total lawlessness.”

The internet monitoring organisation NetBlocks reported that 91% of Venezuela was knocked offline by Wednesday’s blackout.

Maria Laura Antunes, a 59-year-old Caracas resident who had turned out for Guaidó’s rally, said she had fled Angola, the country of her birth, in 1975 because of the war there and feared having to abandon her adopted home because of Venezuela’s collapse.

“This is so serious. If there isn’t change, it will be impossible to stay here,” she said.