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Venezuela Military Urges Calm, Backs Delcy Rodriguez Acting President

"I call on the people of Venezuela to resume their activities of all kinds, economic, work and education, in the coming days," Defence Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez said in a televised address.


Venezuela’s Vice President Delcy Rodriguez speaks during a press conference in Caracas on August 11, 2025. On January 3, 2026, Venezuela’s Supreme Court ordered Vice President Delcy Rodriguez to become the country’s interim leader after the United States seized President Nicolas Maduro and whisked him out of the country.

 

Venezuela’s military said Sunday it recognised Delcy Rodriguez, deputy to ousted president Nicolas Maduro, as the country’s acting leader, after US forces extracted the former head of state to face trial.

Defence Minister Vladimir Padrino issued a statement endorsing a Supreme Court ruling that appointed Rodriguez as acting president for 90 days.

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It also urged the country’s population to resume their normal activities, after US forces bombed the country and seized its leader, Nicolas Maduro.

“I call on the people of Venezuela to resume their activities of all kinds, economic, work and education, in the coming days,” Padrino said.

“The homeland must follow its constitutional course.”

Amid uncertainty following the leftist president’s dramatic capture, Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez appeared to throw his weight behind Rodriguez, who US President Donald Trump had earlier indicated was a figure Washington could work with.

Padrino read out a statement on television endorsing a Supreme Court ruling that appointed Rodriguez as acting president for 90 days.

Padrino denounced it as a “cowardly kidnapping” and said that some of Maduro’s bodyguards were killed “in cold blood,” as well as military personnel and civilians on the Venezuelan side.

Venezuelan authorities have not yet given an official toll for people hurt or killed in the US operations.

The streets of Caracas were deserted and quiet on Sunday, with many businesses closed and moderate queues at some markets and pharmacies.