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Internal purges and external tutelage: Venezuela’s Chavista regime rebuilds its faith on Maduro’s ruins 

A woman holds a sign with images of Nicolás Maduro and former First Lady Cilia Flores, during the peace march in Caracas on April 9, 2026. 

For months, Venezuela’s Chavista regime prepared to die, but not to emerge badly wounded. Of all the scenarios considered during Donald Trump’s offensive against Nicolás Maduro, the president being captured alive wasn’t on anyone’s radar. “I had never held a pistol or a rifle in my life... and I prepared myself [for] months to face any situation that might arise. But [I didn’t expect] this one,” says a prominent member of the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), founded by former president Hugo Chávez, who governed from 1999 until his death in 2013.

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A woman holds a sign with images of Nicolás Maduro and Cilia Flores at the peace march.Jorge Rodríguez at the Legislative Palace in Caracas, Venezuela, on April 10, 2026. Dairobi Orta Brito, pictured in downtown Caracas, Venezuela, on April 15, 2026. 
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‘Have you been to Caracas yet?’: the question investors are asking about Venezuela

At an elite club in northern Bogotá, some fifty Colombian investors listened last Tuesday to a statement that sums up Venezuela’s current economic situation better than any report. It was uttered by Ángel Cárdenas, infrastructure manager at CAF, the Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean: “Among investors in the region, the debate is no longer whether the country represents an opportunity or a risk. The question is whether or not you’ve already been to Caracas.” After years of freefall, the country with the world’s largest oil reserves has returned to the global radar.

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© Carlos Becerra (Bloomberg)

Petróleos de Venezuela headquarters in Caracas, in March 2023.
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Brutal terrorist attack in Colombia exposes the standoff between armed groups and the state

An explosion rocked a road in the department of Cauca, in southwestern Colombia, last weekend, leaving at least 20 dead in one of the deadliest attacks against civilians in Colombia’s violent history. The attack, attributed to the front commanded by alias Iván Mordisco — leader of the main dissident group of the former Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) — is not an isolated incident: it is the latest chapter in an ongoing power struggle between armed groups and the Colombian state, and a direct blow to the “total peace” platform on which President Gustavo Petro came to power.

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© Sebastian Marmolejo / Zuma Press (Sebastian Marmolejo / Zuma Press)

Emergency services respond to the attack in Cauca, Colombia, on April 25.
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Why the thaw between Colombia and Venezuela works in Trump’s favor

Gustavo Petro and Delcy Rodríguez at the Miraflores Palace in Caracas, Venezuela on April 24.

It was a bilateral meeting, but a third country had a major interest in what was being discussed. The encounter on Friday April 24, in Caracas between the acting president of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, and the Colombian president, Gustavo Petro, wrapped with an important statement: the two countries will draw up joint military plans and open mechanisms to share intelligence “immediately.”

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Venezuela, a provisional country

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There are two pairs of eyes that have shaped the lives of Venezuelans for more than two decades. Symbolic eyes, once adorning building facades, t-shirts, and the city’s staircases. They were the eyes of Hugo Chávez: a gaze designed to suggest authority, surveillance, omnipresence. A gaze that, even after his death in 2013, remained, as if power no longer needed a body, only presence.

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A woman holds a sign of Hugo Chávez at a march organized by Chavismo in Caracas, on April 9.Nancy Peñaloza, the mother of political prisoner José Moreno, protests in front of the Legislative Palace last February.Diners at the Dos Puntos restaurant in Caracas, on April 11.Workers and retirees clash with the Bolivarian National Police in downtown Caracas.A woman gets off a bus in downtown Caracas.A woman watches the sunset on Bolivar Avenue.
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In a Caracas without Maduro, ‘everything is a priority right now’

On a Saturday evening, in an upscale Caracas neighborhood, a bar fills up. Well-dressed men, smelling of cologne, recount their week. Women with sleek hair and long eyelashes take selfies in the bathroom. People on the street talk on their cell phones, engaging in heated discussions about current events, while a DJ spins vinyl records. There are signature cocktails being served. Everything is in its usual place.

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A woman picks up a pump to collect water in Petare, Caracas.David Rondón and Oscar Fonseca, partners of the Dos Puntos bar, in Caracas, on April 15.Damali Matos and her daughter Valeria, in the Petare neighborhood of Caracas, on April 11.

© Andrea Hernández Briceño

María Velásquez sells empanadas in the Petare neighborhood of Caracas on April 11.

© Andrea Hernández Briceño

A group of women walking through the Petare neighborhood.

© Andrea Hernández Briceño

Young people play during a volleyball tournament in the Petare neighborhood on April 11.

© Andrea Hernández Briceño

A little girl buys an empanada at María Velásquez's stand.

© Andrea Hernández Briceño

A street vendor and a woman in Petare, Caracas.

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© Chelo Camacho y Andrea Hernández Briceño

A family on a bus in Caracas, April 9.
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The Caracas Marriott, the hotel where the future of Venezuela is being decided

Aerial view of the Marriott in Caracas.

At 8 a.m., the 20 Marines staying at the JW Marriott in Caracas go down for breakfast. It is a unique spectacle. They are between 30 and 40 years old and almost all of them sport a chevron mustache, Freddie-Mercury-style. The tattoos reach the elbow, sometimes the knees. Caps, shorts and T-shirts are emblazoned with slogans that sit oddly in Donald Trump’s war-mongering era. “No war team,” read one of them last week.

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Gustavo Petro, the first head of state to meet Delcy Rodríguez in post-Maduro Venezuela

Colombian President Gustavo Petro and Venezuela’s acting president, Delcy Rodríguez, are preparing for a second attempt at holding a bilateral meeting. Petro announced that the two leaders are scheduled to meet in Caracas at midday on Friday — the first official visit by a head of state to Venezuela since Nicolás Maduro’s removal, and another step in Rodríguez’s consolidation of power.

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© Massimiliano Minocri, Leonardo Fernandez Viloria (REUTERS)

Gustavo Petro and Delcy Rodríguez.
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The easing of US bank sanctions against Venezuela gives Delcy Rodríguez a lifeline amid social unrest

U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday threw a valuable lifeline to Delcy Rodríguez, Venezuela’s interim president. Bradley T. Smith, director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), signed two licenses that significantly ease the sanctions imposed on the Venezuelan financial system, providing a boost to the Caracas government’s efforts to revive the country’s ailing economy.

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© Palacio de Miraflores

Delcy Rodríguez at meeting with US delegates at the Miraflores Palace this Tuesday.
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