Global Times

Maduro to contact pope over child protesters

Both sides in increasing­ly violent Venezuela conflict seek Church help

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Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro said on Sunday he would ask Pope Francis to persuade opponents that children should not participat­e in violent protests that have rocked the country, as both sides of the conflict seek help from the Catholic Church.

Young teenagers wearing face masks and throwing rocks are a common sight at anti- government protests that have roiled the capital, Caracas, since April. At least six of the 67 people killed in the protests were under 18.

Maduro said opposition parties were “training children for terrorist groups,” using his preferred terminolog­y for the protesters he says are intent on over- throwing the government.

“I am going to ask Pope Francis to help us so the opposition end the violence, but more than anything to stop looking for children to involve in violent acts,” he said on a weekly television broadcast.

Demanding that delayed elections be held and angry at shortages of food and medicine, thousands of mostly peaceful protesters have been on the streets since April. Smaller groups throwing rocks and petrol bombs have been met with tear gas grenades, water cannons and other riot- control methods.

Both sides have turned to the Vatican to mediate a solution, but church- mediated talks late last year quickly broke down in acrimony. Relations with Venezuela’s Catholic hierarchy and the government have become increasing­ly strained this year, with a spate of violent incidents at churches.

Venezuela’s bishops’ conference delivered a letter on Thursday to the pope that accused the government of being a dictatorsh­ip. The bishops also sided with the opposition view that Maduro’s plan for a new legislativ­e body charged with rewriting the constituti­on after elections on July 30 is a plot aimed at changing the rules of the game to consolidat­e power.

Human rights groups have criticized the government’s response to the pro- tests, saying its “excessive use of force” and militariza­tion have escalated the violence, while government officials say the world is turning a blind eye to opposition brutality including shootings of security officials.

Opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez, who has been held in a military prison for three years, called on Venezuelan soldiers on Sunday to rebel to enforce the constituti­on and oppose government orders to act against protesters.

“You have the right and duty to rebel,” he said in a video posted on Twitter apparently recorded in his prison cell.

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