Armed
militias deployed in Venezuela as regime attempts to impose authority
Paramilitary
groups known as colectivos patrol streets with assault rifles, stop and search
cars and people’s phones
María de
los Ángeles Graterol in Caracas and Rory Carroll
Tue 6 Jan
2026 18.58 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jan/07/caracas-venezuela-paramilitary-groups
Venezuela’s
rulers have deployed armed militias to patrol streets, operate checkpoints and
check people’s phones in a crackdown to consolidate authority after the US
attack on Caracas.
Paramilitary
groups known as colectivos criss-crossed the capital with motorbikes and
assault rifles on Tuesday in a show of force to stifle any dissent or
perception of a power vacuum.
The
patrols stopped and searched cars and demanded access to people’s phones to
check their contacts, messages and social media posts in a stark demonstration
to the population that the regime remained in charge despite the abduction of
president Nicolás Maduro.
Anyone
who was suspected of supporting Saturday’s US raid was liable for arrest, said
Mirelvis Escalona, 40, a resident in the western Caracas neighbourhood of
Catia. “There’s fear. There are armed civilians here. You never know what might
happen, they might attack people.”
A
semblance of normality returned to much of the city, with shops and bakeries
reopening and people going to work – but uncertainty over what will happen next
created a febrile mood.
The
interim president, Delcy Rodríguez, has sought to project a sense of calm and
control since being sworn in on Monday but there was no disguising the
government’s shock and jitteriness.
On
Tuesday, Rodríguez appeared to harden her tone against the US, saying in a
televised address that “no external agent governs Venezuela” – a clear rebuttal
to Donald Trump’s claim that the US was running the South American country.
It marked
another shift in tone from Maduro’s former vice-president who released a
conciliatory statement late on Sunday in which she “invited the US government
to work together on an agenda of cooperation”.
In
addition to the humiliation of Maduro’s appearance in a New York court on
narco-trafficking charges, authorities in Caracas face the risk of a fresh US
attack, economic collapse, internal regime fracture and the return of
overseas-based opposition leaders.
Gunfire
erupted on Monday night when security forces shot at unauthorised drones which
reportedly were mistaken for another US operation. “There was no confrontation,
the entire country remains completely calm,” Simon Arrechider, the deputy
information minister, told reporters.
But it is
a tense calm.
On Monday
at least 14 journalists and media employees, including 13 members of
international media organisations, were detained in Caracas. All but one were
later released.
An
emergency decree has sought to stamp out any public celebration of Maduro’s
ouster and ordered police to seek and detain “everyone involved in the
promotion or support for the armed attack by the United States”.
Footage
posted on social media showed colectivos – some wearing masks – blocking
highways, roving pro-opposition neighbourhoods and questioning residents,
prompting people to warn friends and family via WhatsApp and other platforms to
leave phones at home or to scrub them of political content.
An
emergency decree has sought to stamp out any public celebration of Maduro’s
ouster.
The
interior minister, Diosdado Cabello, posted a photo of himself posing with
police who cradled weapons and chanted “always loyal, never traitors”.
Jeaneth
Fuentes, 53, a doctor at a private clinic in Caracas, said the presence of
armed groups – some in uniform, others in civilian clothes – made her commute
to and from work feel like a gamble. “It’s frightening, terrifying.”
The
gunfire on Monday night compounded the sense that anything might happen, she
said. “I can’t plan, it’s living each minute at a time.” She leaves home only
for work, and never after 6pm.
Fuentes
expressed hope the current turmoil might lead to the end of rule by chavismo,
the movement Hugo Chávez brought to power in 1999. “If something was built over
so many years, it can’t be torn down in a day.”
Government
supporters, in contrast, condemned the abduction of Maduro and said they would
defend Venezuela’s sovereignty. “There is a fighting spirit inherent in the
Venezuelan people,” said Willmer Flores, a finance ministry employee. “We are
the liberators of America, and we are not intimidated by anything.” He pledged
solidarity with Maduro.
With the
Trump administration warning of potential fresh military strikes, and a
blockade on oil exports squeezing revenues, there is speculation about
divisions within the regime over how to accommodate Trump while retaining
anti-imperialist credentials. Unlike Rodríguez, who faces no criminal charges
in the US, ministers like Cabello who are accused of narco-trafficking could
lose not just their power but their liberty.
Another
concern for the government is María Corina Machado, the fugitive opposition
leader who mobilised millions of voters last year, slipped to Oslo to collect
her Nobel peace price and is now vowing to return.
“I’m
planning to go as soon as possible back home,” she told Fox News. “We believe
that this transition should move forward,” she told Fox News in an interview.
“We won an election by a landslide under fraudulent conditions. In free and
fair elections, we will win over 90% of the votes.”
Trump
however has publicly dismissed Machado, saying she lacks support in Venezuela,
and tacitly endorsed continued chavista rule under Rodríguez – on condition she
meets US demands, including favoured access for US oil companies.

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