Red Cross to take aid to Venezuela if process isn't politicized

March 29 -- The Red Cross is willing to move humanitarian aid near the Venezuelan border in Colombia and Brazil, if the process is free of any politics, Venezuelan media reported.
"If the aid now in Cucuta and Brazil meets our protocol of no-politicisation, we can distribute it without a problem," the president of the International Federation of the Red Cross, Francesco Rocca, said Friday at a news conference, El Nacional reported.

"We do not accept, and would never accept that children die because of lack of electricity," he added, according to El Nacional, referencing the continuing blackouts that have plagued the cash-strapped nation this month.

Rocca said the help will be provided "as long as rules of no military intervention are respected," VPItv reported.

President Nicolas Maduro has largely shunned accepting the international aid that has stockpiled just across from Venezuela's borders, saying it was collected under political motivations by countries that include the United States. Maduro has also called for an end to U.S. sanctions that he said are hurting the Venezuelan economy.

National Assembly leader Juan Guaido, who is trying to organize an interim government to replace Maduro after the legislature declared the presidency vacant earlier this year, said Friday that "the announcement by the Church and the Red Cross about the entry of humanitarian aid is a great achievement in our fight."

"We will not stop. We well go for the aid to our electrical system and to prepare Operation Freedom to stop the usurpation," Guaido said on Twitter.

The help to introduce the aid is "the result of our pressure and insistence," Guaido said, adding that he believes medical supplies will enter Venezuela in coming days.

Guaido initially planned for aid to be introduced by masses of people into Venezuela, but on Feb. 23, those goods were rejected at the Colombian-Venezuelan border.

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