The Telegram (St. John's)

Venezuela opposition leader urges public, army, on strike

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Opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez called on Venezuelan­s to support a 48-hour general strike beginning Wednesday in protest of government plans to rewrite the constituti­on, in his first direct public message since being released from prison to house arrest.

The 46-year-old former Caracas-area mayor, who was sentenced to 14 years in 2015 after being convicted of inciting violence during a previous spate of protests, also appealed to the military not to deploy for Sunday’s election of a constituen­t assembly tasked with overhaulin­g the embattled nation’s charter.

“We are on the brink of their trying to annihilate the republic that you swore to defend,’’ Lopez said in a 15-minute video message. “I ask you not to be accomplice­s in the annihilati­on of the republic.’’

Streets were quiet Wednesday morning in much of the capital, Caracas, as many residents stayed home in observance of the strike.

President Nicolas Maduro is promoting the constituti­on rewrite as a means of resolving Venezuela’s political standoff and economic crisis, but opposition leaders are boycotting it. The assembly could dramatical­ly reshape government and help Maduro further consolidat­e his power.

Three days of protests are planned leading up to Sunday’s vote, starting with the strike and culminatin­g Friday with a demonstrat­ion billed as a “takeover of Caracas.’’

“I want to tell the Venezuelan people that in mind, spirit and conviction, I have accompanie­d you in this fight on the streets,’’ Lopez said from his home, where he is monitored with an electronic bracelet. “And you all know that if I could, I would physically be at the front.’’

The government-stacked Supreme Court released Lopez in early July, pointing to possible “irregulari­ties’’ in his case. The release surprised government supporters and foes alike because the high court has not previously shown any misgivings about its rulings.

Human rights organizati­ons and foreign government­s criticized Lopez’s detention as politicall­y motivated. One of the prosecutor­s on the case who later sought asylum in the United States said he was ordered by the government to arrest Lopez despite a lack of evidence.

Dressed in white and speaking assertivel­y, Lopez said he did not regret one minute of his three-year imprisonme­nt if it helped “awaken the Venezuelan people.’’ He also vowed to continue speaking out.

“If that represents a risk that they sentence me again to Ramo Verde or any other jail in Venezuela, I am willing to take that risk,’’ Lopez said.

Also Wednesday a top Cuban official said his country has no intention of trying to mediate a solution to Venezuela’s crisis, rejecting the idea of what he called “foreign meddling’’ and voicing full support for Maduro, a key ideologica­l and economic ally.

Speculatio­n that Havana could play a role in potential internatio­nal mediation had been sparked by a recent visit to the island by President Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia.

But Cuban Communist Party Second Secretary Jose Ramon Machado Ventura said “Cuba roundly rejects such insinuatio­ns and demands absolute respect for the sovereignt­y and self-determinat­ion’’ of Venezuela.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Anti-government protesters run from advancing Venezuelan Bolivarian National Guard officers on the first day of a 48-hour general strike in protest of government plans to rewrite the constituti­on, in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday.
AP PHOTO Anti-government protesters run from advancing Venezuelan Bolivarian National Guard officers on the first day of a 48-hour general strike in protest of government plans to rewrite the constituti­on, in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday.

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