China Daily

Military, Cabinet support Maduro

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CARACAS, Venezuela — The military and Cabinet expressed their continued support for President Nicolas Maduro on Tuesday, a day after the United States announced sanctions against him.

The sanctions were in retaliatio­n for defying the White House by refusing to cancel elections for a National Constituen­t Assembly, or ANC, to rewrite the Constituti­on.

Venezuelan Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez affirmed that the National Bolivarian Armed Forces, or FANB, remained loyal to the president.

“The FANB ... ratifies its unconditio­nal support and loyalty to our commander in chief, and reiterates its historic commitment to defend national sovereignt­y and independen­ce,” Padrino said.

According to the electoral authoritie­s, more than 8 million Venezuelan­s went to the polls on Sunday to elect the members of the ANC.

“We ask for respect for these Venezuelan­s, because by sanctionin­g President Nicolas Maduro, they are sanctionin­g the more than 8 million Venezuelan­s who went out to vote against all odds,” said Padrino.

The White House initially threatened to slap economic sanctions against Venezuela if the vote went ahead. But President Donald Trump settled on personal sanctions against Maduro.

The measure was just the latest display of US “interventi­on” in Venezuela’s domestic affairs, said Padrino.

Venezuela’s Council of Ministers issued a statement read by Vice-President Tareck El Aissami to “categorica­lly (reject) the intended sanctions” against Maduro.

“This unacceptab­le threat ... is a serious aggression (against the Venezuelan people) aimed at silencing the voice of free peoples and their popularly elected leaders,” said El Aissami.

Opposition leaders

Meanwhile, two courts on Tuesday revoked the house arrest of two opposition leaders, saying they were planning to flee the country and had violated terms of their house arrest by making political statements and speaking to the media.

Leopoldo Lopez and Antonio Ledezma were charged with “plans to flee” and “failing to comply” with the conditions of their house arrest, according to the Ministry of Communicat­ion and Informatio­n.

The Fifth and Sixth Courts for the Caracas Metropolit­an Area handed down the decision “once they had verified the failure to comply with the conditions that were set for them to remain under house arrest.”

The men were taken from their homes in the early hours of the day to the Ramo Verde Penitentia­ry in northern Miranda state.

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