The Phnom Penh Post

Opposition votes for Maduro trial

- Maria Isabel Sanchez

VENEZUELAN President Nicolas Maduro accused the opposition-majority legislatur­e on Tuesday of staging a “parliament­ary coup” after lawmakers voted to put him on trial amid a tense political and economic crisis.

Accused by the legislatur­e of “abandoning his post” and “criminal and political responsibi­lity” for Venezuela’s descent into crisis, Maduro fired back by calling a meeting of his National Defense Council yesterday – the same day the opposition plans massive anti-government protests.

“We will not permit a parliament­ary coup of any kind,” he told cheering supporters at a rally in Caracas, after jetting back from an internatio­nal tour.

Lawmakers earlier voted to open a “political and criminal trial” against Maduro over what they themselves have declared a coup: authoritie­s’ decision last week to halt their efforts to call a referendum on removing the leftist leader from power.

It is unclear what impact Tuesday’s legislativ­e vote will have. The Supreme Court – which the opposition claims Maduro controls – has ruled the National Assembly’s decisions invalid.

Maduro accused the “useless” legislatur­e of trying to “harm Venezuela,” and urged his opponents to agree to talks.

The offer to open talks has sown deep divisions in the opposition. On Monday, opposi- tion leaders first accepted and then rejected a proposal by Pope Francis for a “national dialogue” on Venezuela’s crisis.

Some top opposition leaders said they had only learned on TV about the proposal to hold talks on the Caribbean island of Margarita starting on Sunday.

The rift lay bare the tension in the opposition Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD), a shaky coalition united mainly by shared hatred of Maduro.

Leading opposition figure Henrique Capriles accused Maduro of using the pope’s goodwill for his own ends.

“What you must know is that we in Venezuela are fighting against Satan. This is the devil we’re facing, they are devils. They believe in nothing, they have no principles. They say they’re Christians when it’s convenient,” he said.

Political analysts were meanwhile sceptical about the prospects for talks to resolve the crisis.

“Even if Pope Francis comes here dressed up as Superman, dialogue won’t resolve” Venezuela’s problems, said political scientist Nicmer Evans.

The MUD said on Monday it would only agree to talks if the government respected the constituti­onal right to a referendum and freed its imprisoned activists and leaders.

Analysts have warned of a risk of violent unrest in Venezuela. Clashes at anti-government protests in 2014 left 43 people dead. On Monday a students’ group said 27 people were injured in clashes with police at a protest in the western city of San Cristobal.

Hit by the fall of global oil prices, Venezuela’s economy has crashed, sparking protests and looting driven by shortages of food, medicine and basic goods.

Maduro calls the economic crisis a capitalist conspiracy.

His opponents say it is the result of severe mismanagem­ent during 17 years of socialist rule under Maduro and his late mentor, Hugo Chavez.

In recession since the begin- ning of 2014, Venezuela’s economy is facing a contractio­n of 10 percent this year and inflation of 475 percent, rising to 1,660 percent next year, the IMF forecasts. A recent poll found more than 75 percent of Venezuelan­s disapprove of Maduro.

The centre-right opposition rode that discontent to a landslide win in legislativ­e elections last December – only for the Supreme Court to block its every move in the National Assembly.

Tension was set to rise again yesterday – the day the opposition was to have begun collecting the four million signatures needed to trigger a recall referendum. Instead, the opposition now plans massive nationwide protests, even as Maduro huddles with his so-called National Defense Council, which includes the heads of the various branches of government.

Venezuelan authoritie­s detained at the airport three Peruvian journalist­s working for the Mexican network Televisa and an Argentine photograph­er for the Associated Press. The four were slated to be deported, according to a diplomatic source.

Maduro meanwhile flexed his muscle on Tuesday with a rally of thousands of supporters, almost immediatel­y after arriving home from his trip abroad.

Besides meeting Pope Francis – with whom he said he had a “deeply human, spiritual conversati­on” – Maduro pushed leaders in the Middle East to cut oil output in hopes of raising prices.

 ?? JUAN BARRETO/AFP ?? Opposition deputies raise their hands while voting to open a political trial against President Nicolas Maduro on Tuesday during a special session of the National Assembly in Caracas.
JUAN BARRETO/AFP Opposition deputies raise their hands while voting to open a political trial against President Nicolas Maduro on Tuesday during a special session of the National Assembly in Caracas.

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