"The main purpose is to stop the takeover of the Embassy by the opposition, the fake government that President Trump is trying to put forward as part of the coup… We plan to stay, we plan to resist, we'll risk arrest if necessary," Zeese, a lawyer and activist, told Sputnik on Tuesday.
The Embassy Protection Collective activist group has been living inside the Venezuelan Embassy in the United States for the past two weeks working with diplomats who were ordered to leave by 24 April.
— Kevin Zeese (@KBZeese) April 21, 2019
Zeese said Thursday is the likely day when police and perhaps opposition figures try to take possession of the embassy. The group, he added, plans to have people outside the Embassy protesting as well as inside the Embassy resisting.
"The United Nations still recognizes the Maduro government. So they are the legitimate government of Venezuela recognized by the world…. which makes it outrageous that the United States would take this Embassy. It's very important for the credibility of this action that they are the UN-recognized government. That's who we are here with permission of," Zeese explained.
Zeese said the activist group has been in contact with the Venezuelan Foreign Ministry and secured their permission to stay at the Embassy prior to arriving two weeks ago. The activists are in constant communication with the Venezuelan Embassy staff and plan to remain in touch after the diplomats' departure, he added.
Zeese described the accommodations as "very comfortable," noting that the group members have access to showers, a kitchen, and couches to sleep on. Many of the group members, he added, even have their own individual rooms.
— Kevin Zeese (@KBZeese) April 22, 2019
The group has used the building as their work space during the day while holding nightly "political education" events, Zeese said, which have been attended by anywhere from fifteen to one hundred people on a regular basis.
"We've done events on Venezuela of course, we've done events on Africa, we've done events on Julian Assange," Zeese said.
On Wednesday, former CIA agent John Kiriakou is scheduled to talk about the US government's "regime change activity" from an insider's perspective, Zeese noted.
In January, Guaido illegally attempted to declare himself interim president of Venezuela after disputing Maduro's reelection victory in May. Washington immediately endorsed Guaido, called on Maduro to step down and seized billions of dollars' worth of the country's oil assets.
Russia, China, Cuba, Bolivia, Turkey and a number of other countries have voiced their support for Maduro as the only legitimate president of Venezuela.
UN special rapporteurs and human rights lawyers have described US economic sanctions on Venezuela as war crimes that could lead to starvation and medical shortages.