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US-Venezuela as it happened: Maduro appears in New York court; UN condemns US strike; Machado praises Trump’s ‘courageous vision’

Ellen Connolly, Jack Gramenz and Daniel Lo Surdo
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 4.11pm on Jan 6, 2026
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Maduro pleads not guilty, Trump mulls next move

By Daniel Lo Surdo and Jack Gramenz

Thank you for reading our live coverage of the events following the US capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, who remains in custody after he and wife Cilia Flores pleaded not guilty to drug and weapons charges in a New York federal court on Tuesday morning (AEDT).

Attention has now turned to what US President Donald Trump might do next, after threatening further strikes in Venezuela and similar operations in a handful of Latin American nations. Here’s the latest:

  • Maduro was shackled at the ankles while pleading not guilty in court, telling the judge he was a “decent man” who had been “kidnapped” by US authorities. A man in the public gallery who claimed he had been imprisoned by the Venezuelan regime called Maduro an “illegitimate” president as he stood to leave, prompting the ousted president to respond: “I am a kidnapped president. I am a prisoner of war.”
  • Flores’ legal counsel said she had been injured during her capture in Venezuela, and required medical attention for a possible rib fracture. Bruises appeared on Flores’ face as she fronted court, while Maduro’s court-appointed lawyer raised “questions about the legality of his military abduction”. The case was adjourned to March 17, with pretrial filings expected to contest the legality of the capture.
  • Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth have briefed select US lawmakers on the Venezuela operation, in which questions were raised after Congress leaders weren’t given notice of the strikes. Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer said “so-called nation building” undermines US interests, noting that he “left the briefing feel that it would [happen] again”.
  • Senior White House aide Stephen Miller has suggested the US could take Greenland without contest, while questioning Denmark’s basis for its control of the territory. Trump escalated his rhetoric pushing for the control of Greenland after the Venezuela operation, building on remarks that have continued since his return to the White House. Greenland Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen dismissed suggestions the territory could be claimed overnight, as Trump’s comments were criticised by European leaders.

  • Delcy Rodríguez has been sworn in as Venezuela’s interim president, while opposition leader Maria Corina Machado has promised to transform the nation into the “energy hub of the Americas” should she gain power. Machado was confident of winning a free and fair democratic election, whenever that may occur, with her call for investment in natural resources reflecting the wishes of Trump, who has claimed she “doesn’t have the support or the respect” to govern Venezuela.

Pinned post from 11.18am on Jan 6, 2026
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Maduro faces court: What you need to know

By

Ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores made their first appearance in a New York court where they pleaded not guilty to drug and weapons charges. We’ll bring you updates from the courtroom, key legal developments, and reactions from Washington and around the world.

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro (left) and his wife, Cilia Flores, appear in Manhattan federal court with their defence lawyers Mark Donnelly (second from left) and Andres Sanchez.AP

Here is a recap of key points:

  • Maduro was shackled at the ankles as he appeared before the court about 4am this morning. He pleaded not guilty to the numerous charges, telling the judge: “I am innocent, I am not guilty. I am a decent man”.
  • “I’m the president of the republic of Venezuela ... I am here kidnapped,” he said before District Judge Alvin Hellerstein cut him off.
  • As Maduro stood to leave, a man in the audience called him an “illegitimate” president.
  • As deputy US marshals led Maduro from the courtroom, the deposed leader looked directly at the man, 33-year-old Pedro Rojas who later said he had been imprisoned by the Venezuelan regime, and shot back: “I am a kidnapped president. I am a prisoner of war.”
  • Flores also pleaded not guilty. Her counsel told the court she was injured during her capture in Venezuela and required medical attention for a possible rib fracture. She also appeared to have bruising to her face when she fronted court.
  • Maduro’s court-appointed lawyer told the judge there were “questions about the legality of his military abduction” and that there would be “voluminous” pretrial filings to address those legal challenges. The case was adjourned to March 17.
  • Maduro and Flores were taken to the US on Saturday night following their capture in an audacious military campaign by US forces that had been months in the planning.
  • The dramatic capture has emboldened US President Donald Trump who implied last night that he could take military action in Colombia and Greenland, and told Mexico to get its “act together”.
  • The United Nations this morning condemned the US strike, saying it was concerned the US had not respected the rule of international law – and the precedent it could set.
  • A briefing on the Trump administration’s plans for the future of Venezuela is expected to be given to the US Congress later today.
  • British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has joined other leaders in telling Donald Trump to drop his attempt to gain control of Greenland.
  • Venezuela’s vice president and oil minister Delcy Rodríguez has been formally sworn in as the country’s interim president.
  • The Swiss government has frozen any assets held in Switzerland by Maduro and those close to him.
Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores (obscured) arrive at the heliport ahead of their transfer by vehicle to the courthouse.Bloomberg via Getty Images
Maduro and Flores surrounded by security.GC Images
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Pinned post from 5.52am on Jan 6, 2026
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Maduro faces court: What you need to know

By

Ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores made their first appearance in a New York court where they pleaded not guilty to drug and weapons charges. We’ll bring you updates from the courtroom, key legal developments, and reactions from Washington and around the world.

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro (left) and his wife, Cilia Flores, appear in Manhattan federal court with their defence lawyers Mark Donnelly (second from left) and Andres Sanchez.AP

Here is a recap of key points:

  • Maduro was shackled at the ankles as he appeared before the court about 4am on Tuesday (AEDT). He pleaded not guilty to the numerous charges, telling the judge: “I am innocent, I am not guilty. I am a decent man”.
  • “I’m the president of the republic of Venezuela ... I am here kidnapped ... ,” he said before District Judge Alvin Hellerstein cut him off.
  • As Maduro stood to leave, a man in the audience called him an “illegitimate” president.
  • As deputy US marshals led Maduro from the courtroom, the deposed leader looked directly at the man, 33-year-old Pedro Rojas who later said he had been imprisoned by the Venezuelan regime, and shot back: “I am a kidnapped president. I am a prisoner of war.”
  • Flores also pleaded not guilty. Her counsel told the court she was injured during her capture in Venezuela and required medical attention for a possible rib fracture.
  • Maduro’s court-appointed lawyer told the judge there were “questions about the legality of his military abduction” and that there would be “voluminous” pretrial filings to address those legal challenges. The case was adjourned to March 17.
  • Maduro and Flores were taken to the US on Saturday night following their capture in an audacious military campaign by US forces that had been months in the planning.
  • The dramatic capture has emboldened US President Donald Trump who implied last night that he could take military action in Colombia and Greenland, and told Mexico to get its “act together”.
  • The United Nations this morning condemned the US strike, saying it was concerned the US had not respected the rule of international law – and the precedent it could set.
Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores (obscured) arrive at the heliport ahead of their transfer by vehicle to the courthouse.Bloomberg via Getty Images
Maduro and Flores (right) are seen handcuffed at the heliport ahead of their transfer to the court.GC Images
Maduro and Flores surrounded by security.GC Images

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Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado has promised to transform the nation into the energy powerhouse of the Americas and free itself of cartel activity, pledging security for foreign investment and to bring home the millions forced to flee the Maduro regime.

Machado, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in October for her fierce advocacy against Nicolás Maduro, also warned the US against working with interim president Delcy Rodríguez following Maduro’s capture, describing her as a “one of the main architects of torture, persecution, corruption [and] narco trafficking” in Venezuela.

Venezuela opposition leader Maria Corina Machado in 2024.AP

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Machado was confident of winning a free and fair democratic election in Venezuela, whenever that may occur, upon which she plans to promote the natural resources investment called for by Trump in the hours after the strike.

Why Trump’s latest strike has set off alarms in Denmark

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Denmark was worried about US intentions towards Greenland even before Donald Trump sent his troops and bombers into Venezuela over the weekend, but now the Danes are truly alarmed – and so they should be.

Even if its vast island territory isn’t the next item on the US president’s acquisition list (which surely features Colombia), he seems determined to take it before leaving office.

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Trump’s escalating rhetoric has forced the Danes to take the matter increasingly seriously.

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Read more here.

Machado praises Trump’s ‘courageous vision’

By Daniel Lo Surdo

Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado has heaped praise on the Trump administration’s strikes that captured Nicolás Maduro in Caracas, days after the US president declined to back Machado as a future leader of the South American nation.

Machado, who sparked White House anger after winning the Nobel Peace Prize in October, said the American strikes on Venezuela represented a “huge step for humanity” and would be remembered as the day that “justice defeated a tyranny”.

Maria Corina Machado in December.AP

Machado dedicated the Nobel Peace Prize in part to Trump, saying she “believed he deserved it”, adding that he hasn’t spoken to the US president since the prize was awarded last year.

“I do want to say on behalf of the Venezuelan people, how grateful we are for the courageous vision, the historical actions taken against this narco terrorist regime, and dismantling this structure and bringing Maduro to justice,” Machado told Fox News.

Machado was in hiding in Venezuela for more than 16 months amid fears for her safety under the Maduro regime, before making a rare public appearance in Norway last month.

Trump resisted suggestions Machado could lead Venezuela following the removal of Maduro in the hours after the strikes, saying she “doesn’t have the support or the respect within the country”.

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Marjorie Taylor Greene laments ‘concerning’ strike

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Outgoing Republican congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene has delivered a fresh rebuke against the Trump administration’s strike on Venezuela, criticising the “concerning” events out of Caracas while urging the US president to return to the America First agenda spruiked in the 2024 election campaign.

Greene, who will leave Congress in a matter of hours after falling out with Donald Trump last year, said the prospect of chaos and confusion in Venezuela after the capture of president Nicolás Maduro was “disturbing”, and said it bore the hallmarks of previous regime change triggered by the US in countries such as Iraq and Syria.

Outgoing congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene.AP

“It’s concerning to see what’s happening, and the direction the Trump administration is moving in,” Greene told CNN.

“We can say thankfully that Maduro is arrested, we can say we’re happy or Venezuelan people, but we can look to all regime change before ... we watched those countries fall into turmoil ... that’s what many Americans don’t want to see happen.”

Greene said “strong domestic policy” should be atop Trump’s priorities, after the president signalled potential further strikes in Venezuela and similar operations in Colombia. She said it’s “not OK” for the administration to “pull their full focus into foreign countries”.

‘Obviously Greenland should be part of the United States’: Miller

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Senior White House aide Stephen Miller says nobody would fight the US for Greenland.

In an interview on CNN, Miller questioned Denmark’s basis for controlling Greenland or having it as part of its territory, saying US control “as part of our overall security apparatus” was the best thing for NATO allies.

White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller pictured in August.AP

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US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth have briefed a select group of politicians on the raid to capture Nicolás Maduro from Venezuela.

A number of those briefed questioned why senior leaders in the Congress and Senate were not given notice of the operation, The New York Times reported.

US President Donald Trump talks with CIA Director John Ratcliffe and Secretary of State Marco Rubio as Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth monitors the Venezuelan operation.AP

Attorney-General Pam Bondi also attended the group briefing along with CIA director John Ratcliffe and the US’ highest-ranking military officer General Dan Caine.

The group known as the Gang of Eight, which includes House and Senate leaders from both parties, along with the chairs and ranking members of each chamber’s intelligence committees, is meant to be briefed ahead of covert operations.

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‘So-called nation building’ hurts the US, Schumer says after briefing

By Jack Gramenz

Democratic senator Chuck Schumer, the minority leader of the US senate, says the Trump administration’s actions in Venezuela will hurt the US.

“When the United States engages in this kind of regime change, and so-called nation building, it always ends up hurting the United States,” Schumer said following a briefing on the military operation to Congress by the administration.

“I left the briefing feeling that it would again.”

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.Bloomberg

Claims Maduro’s wife suffered ‘significant injuries’ during arrest

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Cilia Flores, the wife of ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, appeared to have bruising to her face when she fronted a New York court alongside her husband early this morning.

Cilia Flores appeared to have bruising to her face.GC Images

Lawyer Mark Donnelly told the court Maduro’s wife suffered “significant injuries” during the arrest by an elite US military unit, including bruised or broken ribs.

In court, she appeared to have a bruise on her forehead, Bloomberg reported.

Pinned post from 11.18am on Jan 6, 2026

Maduro faces court: What you need to know

By

Ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores made their first appearance in a New York court where they pleaded not guilty to drug and weapons charges. We’ll bring you updates from the courtroom, key legal developments, and reactions from Washington and around the world.

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro (left) and his wife, Cilia Flores, appear in Manhattan federal court with their defence lawyers Mark Donnelly (second from left) and Andres Sanchez.AP

Here is a recap of key points:

  • Maduro was shackled at the ankles as he appeared before the court about 4am this morning. He pleaded not guilty to the numerous charges, telling the judge: “I am innocent, I am not guilty. I am a decent man”.
  • “I’m the president of the republic of Venezuela ... I am here kidnapped,” he said before District Judge Alvin Hellerstein cut him off.
  • As Maduro stood to leave, a man in the audience called him an “illegitimate” president.
  • As deputy US marshals led Maduro from the courtroom, the deposed leader looked directly at the man, 33-year-old Pedro Rojas who later said he had been imprisoned by the Venezuelan regime, and shot back: “I am a kidnapped president. I am a prisoner of war.”
  • Flores also pleaded not guilty. Her counsel told the court she was injured during her capture in Venezuela and required medical attention for a possible rib fracture. She also appeared to have bruising to her face when she fronted court.
  • Maduro’s court-appointed lawyer told the judge there were “questions about the legality of his military abduction” and that there would be “voluminous” pretrial filings to address those legal challenges. The case was adjourned to March 17.
  • Maduro and Flores were taken to the US on Saturday night following their capture in an audacious military campaign by US forces that had been months in the planning.
  • The dramatic capture has emboldened US President Donald Trump who implied last night that he could take military action in Colombia and Greenland, and told Mexico to get its “act together”.
  • The United Nations this morning condemned the US strike, saying it was concerned the US had not respected the rule of international law – and the precedent it could set.
  • A briefing on the Trump administration’s plans for the future of Venezuela is expected to be given to the US Congress later today.
  • British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has joined other leaders in telling Donald Trump to drop his attempt to gain control of Greenland.
  • Venezuela’s vice president and oil minister Delcy Rodríguez has been formally sworn in as the country’s interim president.
  • The Swiss government has frozen any assets held in Switzerland by Maduro and those close to him.
Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores (obscured) arrive at the heliport ahead of their transfer by vehicle to the courthouse.Bloomberg via Getty Images
Maduro and Flores surrounded by security.GC Images
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