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| The President of El Salvador Nayib Bukele has granted Venezuelan diplomats 48 hours to leave the country (AFP Photo/Nicholas Kamm) |
San Salvador (AFP) - El Salvador ordered Venezuela's diplomats to leave the country in a challenge to their president Nicolas Maduro, prompting his government to respond by expelling Salvadoran envoys in Caracas on Sunday.
El Salvador
under its new President Nayib Bukele is one of more than 50 countries that have
declared Maduro's government in Venezuela illegitimate.
They have
switched their recognition to his lead rival, national assembly speaker Juan
Guaido, who has declared himself Venezuela's acting president.
Bukele said
El Salvador had ordered "the diplomatic corps from the regime of Nicolas
Maduro" to leave the country within 48 hours, in a statement posted on his
Twitter account late Saturday.
In
response, the Venezuelan foreign ministry said in a statement on Sunday it had
declared each of the Salvadoran diplomatic staff in Caracas "persona non
grata" and gave them 48 hours to leave.
Maduro's
leftist government has jailed opposition leaders and is accused of using
torture and arbitrary arrests as it struggles to hold on to power amid a
collapsing economy.
But his
government still has support from Russia and China.
Before his
election in June, Bukele said he would maintain a "distant" relationship
with Caracas and close ties with the United States, Maduro's biggest diplomatic
foes.
US
Ambassador Ronald Johnson reacted warmly to El Salvador's decision.
"We
applaud the government of President Nayib Bukele for ensuring that El Salvador
is on the right side of history," he said on Twitter.
US
President Donald Trump was one of the first leaders to recognize Guaido when
the opposition leader mounted an unsuccessful bid to oust Maduro in April.

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