Waterloo Region Record

Venezuelan opposition calls for strike

Nationwide protest to derail president’s plan to rewrite constituti­on

- Michael Weissenste­in and Fabiola Sanchez

CARACAS, VENEZUELA — Venezuelan opposition leaders called for a 24-hour nationwide strike to increase pressure on the socialist government after more than 7 million people rejected a plan to rewrite the constituti­on and consolidat­e the ruling party’s power over the country, which has been stricken by shortages and inflation and riven by more than 100 days of clashes between protesters and police.

The opposition also said Monday the country’s National Assembly, which it controls, would name new members to the government-dominated Supreme Court, setting up a showdown with President Nicolas Maduro, whose party controls all but a few state institutio­ns. Opposition parties also plan to sign a declaratio­n calling for the formation of an alternativ­e “government of national unity,” a step toward total rejection of government authority.

“Overall the package is pretty radical, especially the idea of a parallel government,” said David Smilde, a Tulane University expert on Venezuela. “I think it could lead to real chaos within the government.”

He noted, however, that the opposition moves were to be implemente­d in phases over the next week, starting with the nationwide strike on Thursday, giving both sides the opportunit­y to negotiate possible concession­s.

Earlier in the day, opposition parties had floated the idea of escalating more than three months of street protests, which have left at least 93 people dead and 1,500 wounded. More than 500 protesters and government opponents have been jailed.

“Right now we have to escalate and deepen this street movement,” National Assembly President Julio Borges told local radio station Exitos ahead of Monday’s opposition announceme­nt, which was delayed for hours as government opponents discussed their next steps behind closed doors.

Speaking at an afternoon news conference, opposition leader Freddy Guevara made little mention of more protests, a sign that the opposition had decided to change tactics in the wake of Sunday’s vote.

“We call on the whole country to launch a 24-hour national strike this Thursday, a massive, non-violent protest, as a way to pressure the government and to prepare for the final steps, which will be next week, to confront this fraud on the constituti­onal and to restore constituti­onal order,” he said. He didn’t say what the final steps would be.

The opposition said 7,186,170 Venezuelan­s participat­ed in Sunday’s symbolic referendum rejecting Maduro’s plans for the July 30 election of an assembly that would remake the country’s political system. Maduro’s allies have called on the assembly to impose executive branch authority over the few remaining institutio­ns outside the control of Venezuela’s socialist ruling party.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos planned to discuss the Venezuelan crisis during a visit with President Raúl Castro of Cuba, Venezuela’s closest regional ally, Colombia’s foreign minister said from Havana.

“It would be hard for two presidents to meet these days without discussing Venezuela, because of its importance and the concern the whole continent has about Venezuela,” Foreign Minister Maria Angela Holguin said. “The situation in Venezuela will be part of the conversati­on with President Castro, seeing how we can come to a solution, that dialogue is re-establishe­d, that there are paths to a deal.”

Colombia has dealt with rising tensions and a growing number of people crossing the border from Venezuela as the crisis in the oil-rich country deepened.

Sunday’s vote was a strong but not overwhelmi­ng showing that fell short of the 7.7 million votes garnered by the opposition in 2015 legislativ­e elections and the 7.5 million votes that brought Maduro to power in 2013. Opposition leaders said that was because they were only able to set up 2,000 polling places in a symbolic exercise the government labelled as illegitima­te.

Some supporters said they were disappoint­ed.

“I thought it was going to be more,” said Mariela Arana, a 56-year-old school counsellor. “But these 7 million people spoke and it was plenty.”

Sunday’s vote was marred by violence when a 61-year-old woman was killed and four people wounded by gunfire after government supporters on motorcycle­s swarmed an opposition polling site at a church in western Caracas.

The opposition only released turnout numbers, not tallies of responses, although virtually all who voted were believed to have answered “yes” to the central rejection of the constituti­onal rewrite.

In smaller numbers in many parts of the capital, government supporters also went to polling stations on Sunday in a rehearsal for the July 30 vote.

Maduro and the military dominate most state institutio­ns but the opposition controls the National Assembly and holds three of 23 governorsh­ips. The country’s chief prosecutor has recently broken with the ruling party.

Opponents of Venezuela’s government blame it for turning one of the region’s most prosperous countries into an economic basket case with a shrinking economy, soaring inflation and widespread shortages. The government blames the crisis on an economic war waged by its opponents and outside backers.

 ?? ARIANA CUBILLOS, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? National Assembly first Vice President Freddy Guevara speaks to the press accompanie­d by fellow lawmakers in Caracas, Venezuela, on Monday.
ARIANA CUBILLOS, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National Assembly first Vice President Freddy Guevara speaks to the press accompanie­d by fellow lawmakers in Caracas, Venezuela, on Monday.

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