Venezuelan Opposition Holds Massive Protest to Demand Recall Vote

Shortages, poverty and inflation have the country on edge.

The demonstrators have arrived in the capital by bus, by car and even by foot from all corners of the country, including from the southern state of Amazonas bordering Brazil, the eastern states on the Atlantic Coast and the western Andes.

This demonstration could turn violent, with pro-government national guard officers and militias roaming the streets, tear gas in hand, according to local reports and protesters in contact with ABC News. The country's national guard has already blocked access to several demonstration routes in the city; a prominent government party leader, Diosdado Cabello, said Wednesday that government sympathizers would block entry to the city.

"Not only will [protesters] not come in," he said at a rally, "but they also won't go out."

Opposition organizers have called for a peaceful gathering, but Maduro and other government leaders are calling today's demonstration an attempted coup orchestrated by the U.S. He blames an "economic war" planned by the opposition and the U.S. government as the cause for many of the country's woes.

Recently Maduro declared that if anyone attempted to stage a coup against his government, he would make Turkey's recent purge of adversaries look "like child's play."

Just this week, a former opposition mayor detained after the 2014 protests was transferred from house arrest to a military prison. Two opposition youth leaders arrested after the 2014 clashes were transferred from one prison to another, according to family members. A current opposition mayor in the central state of Aragua was also detained, as were 11 opposition youth leaders in the eastern state of Anzoategui.

The demonstration today is the latest push for a presidential recall referendum, with the opposition facing a deadline to stage a vote to oust the president.

Earlier this year, opposition politicians collected nearly 2 million signatures in four days in favor of the referendum — more than the number required to start the recall process in the country of 30 million. When Venezuela's electoral authority required signatures to be revalidated, people lined up to sign again, officially starting the recall process. Now referendum supporters are asking the electoral authority to initiate the next step, allowing them to collect 20 percent of eligible signatures favoring a recall.

But the call for a referendum has faced backlash from government supporters. In July a group of opposition leaders touring the country to boost support for the recall were met by angry protesters. While the opposition coalition won control of the Venezuelan Congress in the country's most recent election in December, loyalty to the late Chavez is still palpable among different sectors around the country, even as Maduro's approval rating is in the single digits.

Today protesters are asking for a date to submit the new signatures. After that, the country's electoral authority would have to set a date for the referendum. If a vote is not held this year, even if the pro-referendum block wins, the presidency would stay in the hands of pro-Maduro forces, since Venezuela's Constitution stipulates that the vice president, Aristobulo Isturiz, would assume power.

Maduro has said no votes will be held until 2017.

If a recall vote takes place, it would be the second since the socialist party, PSUV, led by Chavez, came to power in 1998. The first presidential recall referendum was held in 2004 to oust Chavez but failed to gather enough support.