Venezuela’s acting president meets cabinet ministers

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Following Nicolas Maduro’s abduction, Venezuela’s interim president Delcy Rodriguez met with the nation’s cabinet of ministers. Donald Trump warned of serious consequences if she doesn’t cooperate, while she has indicated her willingness to work with the US.

Syria’s new currency removes al-Assad family images, seeks to boost economy

As the fledgling government tries to recoup some of the value lost during the past ten years of conflict, new banknotes have been released at money exchanges across Syria.

The redesigned notes are the product of a wider effort to stabilize, revitalize, and rebrand the state. They have been developed over the course of months.

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The Syrian pound’s value has been depleted, and inflation has recently reached triple digits. Unnamed officials informed the Reuters news agency that the Central Bank of Syria only had $200 million in foreign exchange reserves at the end of 2025. At the end of 2010, it had $17bn.

Recurrent internal and external security challenges are among the biggest challenges facing Syria’s new authorities, along with improving the standing of the pound.

In a process known as redenomination, two zeros have been removed from old currencies.

Syrian leader Ahmed al-Sharaa claimed the new currencies “the end of a previous, unlamented phase and the beginning of a new phase that the Syrian people aspire to” after they were unveiled last week.

The new currency’s design is an “abdication from individual veneration” and represents a “new national identity”

On January 1, the new bills, which range from 10 to 500 Syrian pounds, were released in circulation. They display images of Syria’s famous agricultural symbols, including roses, wheat, olives, oranges, and other agricultural symbols.

Syrians were forced to carry large numbers of used banknotes for even basic needs, [Screengrab/Al Jazeera]

Al-Assad’s “Ridiculous” status on the pound

A Damascus resident named Muhammad Zaar expressed his satisfaction with the change, according to Al Jazeera.

“We at least remove this previous president. He claimed that seeing his image on our money is absurd.

Ayman Oghanna, a journalist from Damascus, reported on the report’s Al Jazeera that the move was intended to streamline transactions, boost economic growth, and rebrand the nation.

According to Oghanna, “What a nation prints on its currency says a lot about what it wants to be.”

“These new denominations are intended to legitimize Syria’s new government while making a clean break from its past.”

After nearly 14 years of a ruinous civil war, the Syrian government has made an effort to restore stability to the country’s flat-line economy, including its payment systems.

Before it was denominated, the pound had fallen from 50 to about 11, 000 dollars since the start of the war in 2011. Even for basic needs, such as grocery shopping, were carried by Syrians in large wads of banknotes.

The currency’s value is not affected by the zero’s removal.

After years of economic isolation, the United States announced that the so-called Caesar sanctions would permanently be lifted, allowing for the return of investment to Syria.

Additionally, significant financial investments in the Gulf Arab states, including Qatar and Saudi Arabia, have provided a vital economic resource.

Syria economy [Screengrab/Al Jazeera]
After the changes, Damascus residents claim it will be simpler to move money around [Screengrab/Al Jazeera]

The Yemeni crisis: More complexity and many repercussions

The Arab coalition supporting the internationally recognized government in Yemen, led by Saudi Arabia, and the so-called “Southern Transitional Council,” supported by the United Arab Emirates, are now at an all-time high in violent clashes.

Many view these developments as a natural outcome of a long, cumulative trajectory of complexities the country has experienced since the civil war erupted in late 2014, and the humanitarian and economic repercussions that followed.

External factors significantly contributed to the political and administrative chaos that led to the breakdown of the legitimate state and the subsequent weakness of its most crucial sovereign tools, including territorial unity and decision-making. Yemen will not be spared from the effects of these events, which add complexity to an already complex picture.

On the other hand, others view the situation from another, less bleak angle. The Yemeni president’s (chairman of the Presidential Leadership Council, or PLC) and the Saudi-led Arab coalition are both leading a strong response to the STC’s actions, which is a novel and significant factor in comparison to the conventional course of events. Therefore, there is a chance that these occurrences and adjustments will inaugurate a new era of adjustment and imbalances that have followed the Arab coalition’s intervention for more than ten years.

Watching carefully are the Houthi rebels in northern Yemen, who have remained silent, apparently waiting to see what these events will produce as they continue to strike at the unity of the components of the Arab coalition’s leadership and undermine the legitimate government. In any case, they are aware that their final decision will be decided in their favor. According to multiple reports, the Houthis are currently redeploying and dispersing their forces along the theater of operations near the contact points on the fronts: the northeast (Marib) and the southwest (Taiz and Bab al-Mandeb), preparing for zero hour.

So, what is the nature and background of this bilateral conflict between allies? Where has Yemen been and where has the current situation led? And what impact will they have on the region’s and the nation’s future?

There is broad agreement that what is happening today is merely an initial result of a deep internal conflict of interests between the two main coalition states — Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Although the majority of this conflict was still hidden, its accumulations remained as a snowball.

We must first understand the causes of this rivalry and conflict in order to understand how things got to this point where there was an escalation of conflict between allies.

In late March 2015, Saudi Arabia led a coalition of 10 Arab and Muslim countries to intervene militarily in Yemen — later it was called the Coalition to Support Legitimacy in Yemen, with the aim of restoring the authority of Yemen’s former legitimate president, Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, from the grip of the Houthi coup forces.

Prior to the conflict erupting between the two main allies, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, the coalition had significant, tangible successes on the ground.

The UAE’s involvement in this conflict was thought to have been motivated solely by geopolitical and strategic interests, according to widespread and well-established theory. Some argue, however, that this was not necessarily the case at the beginning, but that it may later have turned to exploiting weakness, vacuum, and internal divisions in order to redraw its strategy anew in light of that.

The UAE used local forces loyal to it to pursue its own goals away from the coalition and the legitimate government on the ground and through training and funding. Within two years of its intervention, it was able to impose control over all important maritime ports along southern and eastern Yemen, extending to the western coast of Taiz governorate in the southwest of the nation, where the crucial Bab al-Mandeb Strait is located, through its own local forces.

Over 10 years of the coalition’s intervention, the UAE established and built a hard-hitting army of its own militias, becoming the strongest force on the ground and the greatest threat to the interests of its ally (Saudi Arabia) in Yemen, including the system and the legitimate government that it had supported and sponsored from the outset. It can be argued that Riyadh made fatal strategic errors in handling these deviations, lying silent and failing to take decisive action on the ground to stop its allies’ overreach, perhaps settling for minor protective measures and frequently acting only as a “mediator” to settle disputes that occasionally flared up until the axe finally struck the head.

a militarized upheaval

In early December, the STC, which was founded and backed by the UAE, triggered a military escalation by seizing control of the governorates of Hadramout and al-Mahra in eastern Yemen. Saudi Arabia was enraged by this, which forced it to abandon its customary diplomatic and tranquility. Many people believe that this significant change in its policy is a result of Riyadh’s understanding that these two eastern governorates bordering it are a geographic extension of its national security and that any compromise to these two eastern governorates poses a direct threat to that nation’s security, as it specifically stated in recent statements released in response to the crisis.

Accordingly, the head of the PLC dealt with these developments with great seriousness, describing them as unacceptable “unilateral measures”. He demanded a military intervention from the Saudi-led Arab coalition under the authority granted by the Power Transfer Declaration (April 2022).

Military equipment was being transported from the UAE’s Fujairah port to Mukalla in Hadramout by coalition aircraft the following day. In response, Yemeni President Rashad al-Alimi declared a state of emergency and called on the UAE to end its presence in Yemen. The UAE Ministry of Defense later announced the withdrawal of all of its forces from Yemen (the UAE had previously stated in October 2019 that it was pulling its forces out of Yemen).

Major, rapidly developing military and political repercussions resulted from the military escalation, particularly after the STC continued to refuse to acknowledge threats and calls from the Yemeni president to pull its forces out of the two governorates.

Someone could ask: Why does the STC refuse to withdraw its forces despite the threats and successive strikes? The answer is that doing so would severely harmed its separatist project. The council’s annexation of these two governorates, both of which reject its project, undoubtedly raised prospect for declaring their state, but Saudi Arabia’s decisive intervention (in the name of the Arab coalition) dealt a crushing blow to that project.

Escalation and repercussions

With the help of coalition aircraft and under the guise of “Homeland Shield,” which was established by the Yemeni president on January 27, 2023, the government ground forces moved to Hadramout and al-Mahra (east) to free them from STC forces, under air cover and support, and liberation and control operations started. In response, Giants Brigade forces from Taiz’s western coast made their way to Hadramout governorate to bolster and assist STC forces.

Amid the accelerating escalation and its repercussions, the head of the STC, Aidarous al-Zubaidi — also a member of the PLC — moved quickly to issue what he called a “constitutional declaration” (January 2, 2026), in which he announced what he termed the independent “State of the Arab South”, during a two-year transitional period.

Although this declaration has been ignored by the country’s official institutions at the national, regional, and international levels, many Yemenis have handled it ambivalently, each based on their political affiliations and beliefs.

The state’s announcement was a huge success for the Southern separatists, but their opponents criticized it as a leap over the top, an attempt to evade reality, and local and international laws and regulations. Some considered it merely a desperate attempt to rid the council of the pressure of promises it had made to those dreaming of secession, at a time when it became evident that secession was no longer easy after the recent events and developments.

Despite interpretations, this declaration will have no legal effect, even if it has no legal effect. Whether it will lead to deeper divisions between Yemen’s elite and the public (North-South), preserve the Yemeni state’s legal standing, or even ensure continuity with managing the fragile state will be difficult to predict.

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, what is the danger of the main conflict’s efforts to bring about the state’s restoration and relieve Yemenis from the effects of decades of hostility and state collapse.

Clearly, the Yemeni scene is becoming more complex, with events accelerating, positions erupting, and reactions escalating. No one is certain of the direction the Yemeni situation will take.

Who is Cilia Flores, Venezuela’s ‘first combatant’?

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores were abducted by the Delta Force at the presidential residence in Caracas on January 3rd.

According to Venezuelan officials, the operation brought the nation’s first couple to New York in the US, where they are scheduled to go on trial on Monday. This is in addition to the attacks on the capital that have left at least 40 people dead.

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But who is Venezuela’s alleged “first combatant,” Cilia Flores?

Early life

Flores, 69, was born in Tinaquillo, central Venezuela, on October 15, 1956. She was born in a “working-class neighbourhood” in western Caracas, according to CNN.

She received her law degree from the Caracasan university, with a focus on labor and criminal law. Her legal rise to prominence came when she led the effort to stop then-Venezuelan President Carlos Andres Perez from attempting to overthrow him in 1992.

Flores reportedly assisted in Chavez’s release from prison in 1994, paving the way for his eventual, popular, presidential bid in 1999.

She would play a significant role in Chavez’ Chavismo movement. She met her future husband, 63, who refers to her as “Cilita” after meeting her through the Chavismo movement. For more than three decades, the two have been partners.

She previously married three more children.

a political career

Flores’ rise to fame was not solely attained as Maduro’s partner. Before becoming Venezuela’s “first combatant,” the Chavismo term used instead of “first lady,” she established her own political standing.

Chavez won the presidency in 1999. In 2000, Flores was elected to Cojedes, her home state, as the leader of Venezuela’s National Assembly, the state’s federal body.

In 2005, she won re-election, and in 2006, she took over as the first woman to serve in Venezuela’s parliament.

Flores was appointed Venezuela’s United Socialist Party’s second vice president in 2009, and Chavez appointed her attorney general in 2012.

Maduro won an election to challenge opposition candidate Henrique Capriles after Chavez passed away in 2013. After dating for more than 20 years, Maduro and Flores got married in July 2013.

Flores began working behind the scenes and stepping into her new role as the “first combatant.”

She was elected to the Constituent Assembly, a body that was responsible for drafting the new Venezuelan constitution, in 2017. She then made a comeback to politics. She was reelected to the National Assembly in 2021.

She was still a deputy in the National Assembly at the time of her abduction.

She has been accused of nepotism inside Venezuela by appointing close-knit individuals to powerful political positions.

Charges and capture

International repercussions have also been caused by Flores’ inclusion within Maduro’s inner circle. Following the Organization of American States’ claim that the Maduro government had crimes against humanity, she received sanctions from the US and Canadian authorities in 2018.

She and Maduro are scheduled to appear in court in New York on Monday following her abduction on Saturday. Flores wasn’t seen exiting a plane in the US while Maduro was.

According to Bondi’s post on X, “Narco-Terrorism Conspiracy, Cocaine Importation Conspiracy, Possession of Machineguns and Destructive Devices, and Conspiracy to Possess Machineguns and Destructive Devices against the United States,” she has been indicted in New York’s Southern District, and US Attorney General Pam Bondi has issued her charges in the vein of those against Maduro.

According to The Guardian, Flores is accused of accepting hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes in 2007 to arrange a meeting between the head of Venezuela’s National Anti-Drug Office and a “large-scale drug trafficker.”

Flores’s nephews were previously detained in the US and given 18-year prison sentences in 2017 for conspiring to import cocaine into the country. In 2022, they were freed as part of a seven US citizens who were currently imprisoned there.

The US claims that Flores’s nephews were allegedly intercepted in Venezuelan Maduro’s presidential hangar on recordings that showed their intention to bring hundreds of kilograms of cocaine into the US.

In recent months, US boats carrying Venezuelan nationals have been attacked at least 30 times, killing more than 100 people.

Venezuelan interim leader tones down criticism, ready to ‘work with the US’

In a significant shift in tone since the US special forces abducted leader Nicolas Maduro shortly after a military operation, interim president Delcy Rodriguez declared she is ready to work with the US on Venezuela’s future.

We make it our top priority to achieve a just and respectful relationship between the US and Venezuela, Rodriguez wrote on Sunday on Telegram.

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We ask the US government to work together on a cooperation plan aimed at shared development, she continued.

After Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores were detained in the most well-known and risky US military operation since the US Navy’s SEAL team killed al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in a safe house in Pakistan’s Abbottabad in 2011, the Venezuelan Supreme Court appointed Rodriguez interim leader.

Rodriguez blasted US actions as “an atrocity that violates international law” in a televised address on Saturday, insisting that “President Nicolas Maduro is the only president of Venezuela.”

Trump had previously suggested in the days following Maduro’s arrest that US officials were in contact with her and that she was willing to cooperate, but Rodriguez’s televised remarks sparked a rift with him.

Trump quickly changed his tone from calling Rodriguez “gracious” to directly threat her after Rodriguez described his administration as a group of “extremists” on television.

In an interview early on Sunday, Trump said, “She will pay a very large price, probably more than Maduro,” adding that Trump would do it.

The US president reiterated that the US was now “in charge,” and that additional strikes against Venezuela could be launched. He also said that he would not rule out putting “boots on the ground” there.

Trump’s actions and stance, which have sparked protests in the US and around the world, contradict both his previous criticism of regime change and his election promise of an “America First” stance and keeping the nation out of endless wars.

Rodriguez’s statement on Sunday, “Headed by a commission to demand the release of Maduro and Flores from US detention,” in which the Venezuelan leader is accused of “narcoterrorism conspiracy, cocaine importation conspiracy, possession of machineguns and destructive devices, and conspiracy to possess machineguns and destructive devices,” was followed by another statement.

Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yvan Gil and her brother Jorge, the nation’s president, will co-chair the commission.

In the wake of the US invasion of Panama, Maduro faces a similar fate as Manuel Noriega, who was imprisoned in his nation’s Vatican embassy in 1990 after hiding out in his country.

Prior to receiving a 40-year prison sentence, Noriega, a staunch US ally, also faced similar charges of “racketeering, drug smuggling, and money laundering.” His sentence was commuted to 17 years for good behavior, but he later received additional sentences in Panama and were imprisoned until he passed away in 2017.

On Monday, Maduro will show up in a federal court in New York.

According to officials from the Trump administration, the seizure is intended to hold Maduro accountable for the 2020 criminal charges against him for conspiring to commit narco-terrorism.