Windsor Star

THE TREATMENT OF ANTI-GOVERNMENT PROTESTERS IN CARACAS HAS PROMPTED FEARS VENEZUELA IS SLIDING INTO DICTATORSH­IP.

TO MARK THE 100TH ANNIVERSAR­Y OF THE BATTLE OF VIMY RIDGE, THE NATIONAL POST WILL BE TELLING SOME OF THE INCREDIBLE STORIES FROM THE LEGENDARY BATTLE. A WEEK-LONG SERIES BEGINS TODAY.

- JORGE RUEDA AND JOSHUA GOODMAN

CARACAS, VENEZUELA • Security forces violently repressed protests that broke out in Venezuela’s capital on Friday with fears mounting around the world that the troubled country was sliding towards a dictatorsh­ip.

Protesters took to the streets, blocking motorways and chanting for President Nicolas Maduro’s removal after the pro-government Supreme Court shut down parliament.

National guardsmen in riot gear fired buckshot and swung batons at a small group of students who gathered outside the Supreme Court after it ruled that the National Assembly was “in contempt” of the country’s laws and could no longer sit in session.

Several protesters were arrested and some journalist­s covering the demonstrat­ion had their cameras seized by the police before the group reassemble­d elsewhere.

In a surprise pronouncem­ent, Chief Prosecutor Luisa Ortega Diaz, normally a government loyalist, said it was her “unavoidabl­e historical duty” as a Venezuelan citizen and the nation’s top judicial authority to denounce what she called the Supreme Court’s “rupture” of the constituti­onal order.

“We call for reflection, so that the democratic path can be retaken,” she said to the loud applause of several aides gathered around her.

“This isn’t any old sentence. It marks a point of no return on the road to dictatorsh­ip,” said Freddy Guevara, the National Assembly’s deputy leader.

The assembly has been controlled by opponents of Maduro since December 2015 and has fought to find legal measures to oust the embattled leader, who presides over a nation crippled by food shortages, soaring crime and triple-digit inflation.

Government­s across Latin America condemned the power grab, which the head of the Organizati­on of American States likened to a “self-inflicted coup” by the socialist Maduro. The United Nations’ top human rights official expressed “grave concern” and called on the high court to reverse its decision.

The Supreme Court ruled late Wednesday that as long as lawmakers remained in contempt of court rulings that nullified all legislatio­n passed by the chamber, the high court, or an institutio­n it designates, can assume the constituti­onally assigned powers of the National Assembly.

The ruling and another earlier in the week limiting lawmakers’ immunity from prosecutio­n capped a feud that began when the long marginaliz­ed opposition won control of the legislatur­e by a landslide and then mounted a campaign to force Maduro from office. The leftist leader responded by relying on the Supreme Court to unseat several lawmakers and then routinely nullify all legislatio­n voted there.

“What we’ve lived the last few hours has to be called what it is: a coup and an attempt to instil a dictatorsh­ip in Venezuela,” National Assembly President Julio Borges said at a news conference Friday in which he announced that lawmakers had appealed the ruling to Ortega Diaz’s office.

The decision triggered a frenzy of diplomatic activity, from Buenos Aires, Argentina, where foreign ministers of the Mercosur trade bloc were to gather Saturday to discuss the crisis, to Washington, where the OAS secretary general called for an emergency meeting.

The U.S. State Department reiterated its call for Maduro to free political prisoners and hold immediate elections to resolve the crisis.

 ?? STR / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ??
STR / AFP / GETTY IMAGES

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada