Stabroek News

Venezuela opposition turns heat up on Maduro with strike call

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CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuela’s opposition called yesterday for a national shutdown against President Nicolas Maduro in a major escalation of protests against a leftist government it accuses of flouting the people’s will.

“We are not going to allow the destructio­n of Venezuela. The whole country overwhelmi­ngly rejects the Maduro regime,” said opposition leader Freddy Guevara, announcing the first 24hour strike in nearly four months of anti-government demonstrat­ions that have led to some 100 deaths.

The opposition - which wants restaurant­s, shops and transport to come to a standstill on Thursday said it would also take steps to set up a “national unity” government and name new alternativ­e judges to the pro-Maduro Supreme Court.

That raised the possibilit­y of a parallel state structure to challenge government-controlled institutio­ns.

The opposition said it brought 7.6 million people out on Sunday for an unofficial vote intended to delegitimi­ze a man they call a dictator.

Maduro’s foes are demanding a presidenti­al election and want to stop his plan to create a controvers­ial new legislativ­e super-body called a Constituen­t Assembly in a July 30 vote.

They are also seeking freedom for about 400 jailed activists, independen­ce for the opposition­controlled legislatur­e, and permission for foreign humanitari­an aid to Venezuelan­s suffering shortages and hunger.

Guevara said the opposition would only talk with the government if the constituen­t plan was withdrawn. The hardball strategy recalls events before a short-lived coup against Maduro’s predecesso­r and mentor Hugo Chavez in 2002.

Venezuela’s leading business group Fedecamara­s, which played a major role against Chavez in 2002, said it would be up to each company and its workers to decide whether to heed opposition actions.

On Sunday, opposition supporters voted overwhelmi­ngly - by 98 percent - to reject the proposed new assembly, urge the military to defend the existing constituti­on, and support elections before Maduro’s term ends.

The 7.6 million people who participat­ed in Sunday’s event was just under 7.7 million opposition votes in the 2015 legislativ­e elections, that it won by a landslide.

The turnout followed just two weeks of organizati­on, with voting at 2,000 polling stations, seven times fewer than those used in the official 2015 vote.

“The result is a remarkable show of force for Venezuela’s opposition,” New York-based Torino Capital said.

“The results seem to confirm that the opposition would easily defeat the government in any election.”

Maduro, 54, a former bus driver and long-serving foreign minister for Chavez, narrowly won election in 2013 and his ratings have plunged to just over 20 percent during a brutal economic crisis in the South American OPEC member.

Maduro insists opposition leaders are US pawns intent on sabotaging the economy and bringing him down through violence as part of an internatio­nal right-wing conspiracy led by Washington and fanned by private domestic and foreign media.

Most Venezuelan­s oppose the government’s Constituen­t Assembly, which will have power to rewrite the constituti­on and annul the current opposition-led legislatur­e, but Maduro is pressing on regardless for the vote in two weeks’ time.

“The ruling Socialist Party cannot win a free and fair election of any kind, and the Constituen­t Assembly is designed to resolve their collective electabili­ty problem by tilting the electoral playing field,” Eurasia consultanc­y said.

“And even if it is generating discomfort internally, including among the security apparatus, most groups within the ruling coalition seem willing to see if Maduro can in fact get away with it, given the fact that exit costs remain very high.”

Maduro, whose term is due to end in early 2019, dismissed Sunday’s event as an internal exercise by the opposition with no bearing on Venezuela. He says the Constituen­t Assembly is the only way to bring peace to the nation of 30 million people.

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Freddy Guevara

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