Venezuela’s best-known opposition leader, the Nobel peace prize winner María Corina Machado, has made a dramatic appearance in Norway after slipping out of her authoritarian homeland by boat.
The Venezuelan politician and pro-democracy activist stepped out on to the balcony of Oslo’s iconic Grand Hotel at just before 2.30am local time, after spending the past 11 months in hiding in Venezuela’s capital, Caracas.
Dozens of supporters chanted “Courageous!” and “Freedom!” in front of the hotel and sang the Venezuelan national anthem as she appeared. “Glory to the brave nation, which shook off the yoke!” they cried out.
It was Machado’s first public appearance in almost a year, having been forced into hiding in Venezuela by the country’s dictator, Nicolás Maduro, after he was accused of stealing the July 2024 presidential election.
Minutes after appearing on the balcony outside the hotel’s storied Nobel suite, the 58-year-old conservative came down on to the street and climbed over metal barricades to embrace supporters who had gathered outside the 19th-century building’s glimmering facade in the early hours of Thursday.
Hours earlier, on Wednesday, the Nobel laureate’s 34-year-old daughter, Ana Corina Sosa Machado, accepted the Nobel peace prize on her mother’s behalf after she failed to arrive in Oslo in time for the ceremony.
Speaking at that event, the chair of the Norwegian Nobel committee, Jørgen Watne Frydnes, urged Maduro to step down, having lost last year’s presidential election to Machado’s ally, Edmundo González. “Let a new age dawn,” Frydnes said, hailing Machado’s “struggle to achieve a peaceful and just transition from dictatorship to democracy” in Venezuela.
Numerous past Nobel laureates have been unable to collect their awards in Oslo because of the political situation in their home countries, among them the Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo, the Burmese politician and activist Aung San Suu Kyi and the Polish unionist and future president Lech Wałęsa.
Machado was reportedly delayed by bad weather as she attempted to escape Venezuela the previous day, by secretly taking a boat towards the Caribbean island of Curaçao.
Members of Maduro’s regime denounced Machado’s award, with the vice-president, Delcy Rodríguez, describing the Nobel ceremony as “a total failure” that her adversary had failed to attend. “They say she was scared,” Rodríguez added, claiming the 2025 Nobel prize was “stained with blood”.
Speaking at a rally in Caracas, Maduro urged the Trump administration – which has spent recent months trying to topple his administration – to cease its “illegal and brutal interventionism”. He said citizens should be ready “to smash the teeth of the North American empire if necessary”.
Machado appears well placed to lead Venezuela if Trump succeeds in forcing Maduro from power. But his downfall is far from certain. Maduro rode out Trump’s 2019 “maximum pressure” campaign to topple him with a cocktail of sanctions and threats. Some observers suspect the Venezuelan strongman will survive Trump’s latest intervention.



