HomeAmericaFactbox-Who is Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela's president?

Factbox-Who is Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela’s president?

-

Jan 3 (Reuters) - Following are ​some key facts about Nicolas Maduro, the Venezuelan president who President Donald Trump said had been captured by U.S. forces on Saturday.

Trump, whose government has accused Maduro ⁠of running drug cartels and other crimes, had been pressuring the strongman to leave office for months. 

- Maduro was born into a working-class family on November ‍23, 1962, son of a trade union leader. He worked as a bus driver during the time ​army officer Hugo Chavez led a failed coup attempt in 1992. 

- He campaigned for Chavez’s release from prison and became a fervent supporter of his leftist agenda. He ​won a seat in the legislature following Chavez's 1998 election.

- He rose to become president of the National Assembly and then foreign minister, travelling the globe to build international alliances through oil-financed assistance programs.

- Chavez named him as his hand-picked successor and Maduro was narrowly elected president in 2013 following Chavez's death.

- His ‌administration oversaw a spectacular economic collapse characterized by hyperinflation and chronic shortages. His rule ‌became best known for allegedly rigged elections, food shortages and rights abuses, including harsh crackdowns on protests in ​2014 and 2017. Millions of Venezuelans emigrated abroad.

- His government was subject to aggressive sanctions by the U.S. and other powers. In 2020 Washington indicted him on ‌corruption and other charges. Maduro rejected the accusations.

- He was sworn in for a third ⁠term in January 2025 following a 2024 election that was widely ‌condemned by international observers and the opposition ​as fraudulent. Thousands of people who protested the government's declaration of victory were jailed.

- A U.N. Fact-Finding Mission found last month that the country's Bolivarian National Guard (GNB) committed ⁠serious human rights violations ⁠and crimes against humanity over more than a decade in targeting political opponents, often with ​impunity.

- His government's repressive measures were highlighted by the award of the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize to opposition leader ‌Maria Corina Machado.

(Compiled by Frances Kerry)

tagreuters.com2026binary_LYNXMPEM02064-VIEWIMAGE

Author

Stay Connected

1,800FansLike
259FollowersFollow
119FollowersFollow
1,263FollowersFollow
90,000SubscribersSubscribe

Related articles

Latest posts

Share on Social Media

spot_img