The Standard (St. Catharines)

Opposition leader’s family seeks charges

- ARITZ PARRA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MADRID — Relatives and lawyers of jailed Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez want the Red Cross to verify his health and are seeking to bring the government of President Nicolas Maduro before a Spanish Court for alleged crimes of terrorism.

Spain’s laws allow judges to take on cases for crimes committed outside of the country as long as the victims are Spanish.

The family’s lawyers said Friday that at least two opposition leaders with Spanish passports are currently held in Venezuelan prisons in circumstan­ces similar to Lopez’s.

Lopez’s father and sister also said they doubt the veracity of the video released Thursday by the leader of the ruling socialist party in Venezuela, Diosdado Cabello, in response to rumours spreading online about Lopez’s health.

In the video, Lopez appears “unrecogniz­able,” said Diana Lopez, the opposition leader’s sister. “We have big doubts about this video and we don’t accept it as proof of him being alive,” she said.

Venezuela is being roiled by almost-daily protests that have shaken Maduro’s grip on power and left more than 30 people dead.

The crackdown by security forces is the bloodiest since Lopez led weeks of protests in 2014, for which he was jailed and later sentenced to nearly 14 years for what are widely seen as trumped-up charges of inciting violence.

“They are fearful of Leopoldo’s words, that’s why they condemned him, they imprisoned him and now they keep him isolated,” the sister said, adding that Lopez has not received a visit from relatives or lawyers since April 7.

The Lopez family’s Spanish lawyers wrote to the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross, or ICRC, asking the organizati­on to verify, “through a direct personal contact”, the whereabout­s and health of Lopez.

The lawyers also announced that they would take the cases of two imprisoned Spaniards in Venezuela, Andrea Gonzalez and Yon Goicoechea, hoping to prompt action by the anti-terrorism prosecutor in Spain against Venezuelan authoritie­s and later expand the case to other prisoners, including Lopez himself.

“If the government is arming paramilita­ry groups, allowing them and encouragin­g them, then authoritie­s are also responsibl­e for the crimes committed by these terrorists,” said Alberto Ruiz Gallardon, a member of the legal team and former minister of Justice.

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