The Phnom Penh Post

Venezuela opposition leader back in prison

-

VENEZUELA sent an opposition leader who was under house arrest back to jail Saturday and expelled a delegation of Ecuadoran lawmakers, amid rising political tension over a campaign to recall leftist President Nicolas Maduro.

Former San Cristobal Mayor Daniel Ceballos was abruptly taken from his home before dawn by members of the Venezuelan intelligen­ce services, his wife said on Twitter.

The interior and justice ministries said intelligen­ce services learned that Ceballos was getting ready to escape and “lead and coordinate violent acts around the country”.

Patricia de Ceballos said her husband was loaded into an ambulance where he was shown an order transferri­ng him to a prison in a distant state.

Ceballos was the mayor of San Cristobal, a city near the border with Colombia, when he was arrested in 2014, accused of inciting a wave of anti-government protests in which 43 people were killed.

Meanwhile, theVenezue­lan Foreign Ministry confirmed the expulsion of a group of Ecuadoran lawmakers who had met in Caracas with opposition leaders, accusing them of “destabiliz­ing” activities.

CynthiaVit­eri, a member of the Ecuadoran Congress, said the group was intercepte­d on Friday by government intelligen­ce personnel outside a military prison where Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez is jailed.

“What we have lived through in #Venezuela was terrifying,” she said on Saturday, adding that the group had now arrived back home.

The incident comes amid rising political tensions as Maduro fends off pressure to hold a recall vote this year that could force him from office.

The opposition has called for a massive march on Caracas September 1 to press its constituti­onally sanctioned demand for the referendum.

“Everything the government does is done to make people afraid, but the more outrages the government commits, the more people will march on September 1,” said opposition leader Henrique Capriles, joining other opposition figures in condemning the decision to jail Ceballos.

Widespread food shortages, inflation topping 700 per cent, a deep recession plus rampant crime have all fuelled calls for a change after 17 years of socialist rule under Maduro and his predecesso­r, the late Hugo Chavez.

Viteri, who arrived inVenezuel­a on Thursday, had met with opposition leaders in the National Assembly and members of the main opposition coalition. She and her group were waiting outside the Ramo Verde military prison to meet with Lopez’s wife, Lilian Tintori, when they were picked up, she said.

The agents took their passports and told them they were being “expelled”, she said.

The Venezuelan Foreign Ministry charged that Viteri’s group had “flagrantly” interfered in the country’s internal affairs.

The Ecuadorans “engaged in proselytis­ing and destabiliz­ing activities in a sovereign country, [which is] expressly prohibited by Venezuelan migratory norms”, it said in a statement.

 ?? JUAN BARRETO/AFP ?? Former mayor of San Cristobal Daniel Ceballos with his family on August 12, 2015.
JUAN BARRETO/AFP Former mayor of San Cristobal Daniel Ceballos with his family on August 12, 2015.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia