‘Don’t mess with Venezuela’: Nicolas Maduro warns Britain over Navy warship sent to protect Guyana

Nicolas Maduro, the president of Venezuela, warned Britain “don’t mess” with his country as he deployed thousands of troops in response to a Royal Navy ship sent to the region.

Mr Maduro called Britain a “decadent, rotten, ex-empire” as he ordered troops into defensive manoeuvres ahead of HMS Trent arriving to support neighbouring Guyana in a territorial row.

Britain said on Sunday that it would divert the patrol vessel to the former British colony, amid the South American country’s simmering dispute over the oil-rich Essequibo region.

A Guyana foreign ministry source, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP that the ship was due to arrive on Friday and would be in its territory for “less than a week” for open sea defence exercises. The ship will not dock in Georgetown.

Mr Maduro said he was launching “a joint action of a defensive nature in response to the provocation and threat of the United Kingdom against peace and the sovereignty of our country”.

The television broadcast accompanying Mr Maduro’s announcement showed fighter jets taking part in the Venezuelan exercise, as well as ships and ocean patrol vessels.

The Venezuelan government earlier asked Guyana, in a statement, “to take immediate action for the withdrawal of the HMS Trent,

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