The Phnom Penh Post

Venezuela’s attorney general goes after judges

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VENEZUELA’S attorney general raised the stakes in her standoff with the government onTuesday by demanding eight Supreme Court judges loyal to President Nicolás Maduro be put on trial.

A staunch figure of the ruling party, Attorney General Luisa Ortega, 59, is the highest public official to break ranks with Maduro over the country’s deadly political crisis.

She has accused him and his allies of acting unconstitu­tionally in their standoff against the opposition in recent months of anti-government protests.

In her latest manoeuvre to pressure the socialist president, she told reporters she’d filed a case accusing the eight judges of allowing “a breakdown in constituti­onal order”.

The charge refers to a ruling by the court in late March that seized power from the opposition-controlled National Assembly legislatur­e.

The court later revoked the decision under internatio­nal pressure, but it sparked a series of protests that has continued ever since.

Clashes between demonstrat­ors and police have left 67 people dead, according to prosecutor­s.

Ortega said in a radio interview on Monday intelligen­ce officials had been threatenin­g and harassing her family.

Pro-government lawmaker Pedro Carreno filed a motion in the assembly calling for the court to order that Ortega be examined by a psychologi­st.

“It is clear that this lady is not in her right mind,” he told reporters. He called for experts to declare she was suffering from “insanity” and should be fired.

Analysts say Ortega’s legal challenges to the government could widen divisions in Maduro’s camp, making it harder for him to stay in power.

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