Stabroek News

Venezuelan opposition in final protest push ahead of Sunday vote

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CARACAS, (Reuters) Rock-throwing Venezuelan­s braved tear gas and rainstorms yesterday, blocking streets in protest against a legislativ­e super-body to be elected tomorrow that critics call an attempt by President Nicolas Maduro to create a dictatorsh­ip.

The election of a constituen­t assembly has been broadly condemned by countries around the world as a weakening of democracy in a country whose economy has been crippled by recession despite its vast oil resources.

Opposition demonstrat­ors said urgency was increasing as they set up barricades along main roads in the capital, Caracas, pelted by sheets of rain and teargas canisters fired by police.

“If this election happens on Sunday, we lose everything. We lose Venezuela,” said a 23-year-old-woman who identified herself as a student, face covered against the gas, declining to give her name.

Confrontat­ions with security forces, which have left more than 110 dead over the last four months, were modest on Friday as protesters and police were doused by tropical downpours.

The government banned protests from Friday to Tuesday but opposition figure Henrique Capriles called on followers to block streets again on Saturday and to hold protests along the country’s main roads on Sunday.

Venezuelan­s have been protesting against Maduro to demand he respect the opposition-led Congress and resolve chronic food and medicine shortages that have fueled malnutriti­on and health problems.

Amid a steep recession and triple-digit inflation, the bolivar currency weakened past 10,000 bolivars per U.S. dollar on the black market on Friday, having fallen more than 99 percent since Maduro came to power in April 2013.

Maduro says the 545member assembly, which will have the power to dissolve state institutio­ns and rewrite the constituti­on, will bring peace to the convulsed country. The opposition dismisses such promises.

“If the constituen­t assembly is activated there will be no way out. It will be a legalized dictatorsh­ip,” an 18-year-old chef, who said high inflation has rendered his monthly paycheck virtually worthless, told Reuters, also declining to give his name.

“This protest has been urgent from the beginning, but these two days before the election will be decisive.”

Venezuela’s Supreme Court said yesterday it ordered the arrest of Alfredo Ramos, mayor of Iribarren, part of the city of Barquisime­to in the state if Lara. He is accused of facilitati­ng anti-Maduro protests. And U.S. Vice President Mike Pence spoke with opposition activist Leopoldo Lopez, who is under house arrest in Venezuela. Pence reiterated the White House’s pledge to impose “strong and swift economic actions” if Sunday’s vote goes ahead, the vice president’s office said in a statement.

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