The Jerusalem Post

New regional bloc blasts ‘dictator’ Venezuela

- Reuters)

LIMA (Reuters) – Peru called the government of Venezuela a “dictatorsh­ip” on Tuesday after hosting the first meeting of a new, 17-member regional bloc that aims to seek a peaceful end to the country’s deepening political crisis.

In a joint declaratio­n released after a meeting in Lima, countries including Canada, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, Chile and Colombia collective­ly condemned the “breakdown of democratic order” in Venezuela and said they would not recognize any action taken by its “illegitima­te” new constituen­t assembly.

Peru called for the gathering of diplomats in the region after Venezuela held a widely criticized election last month to form the constituen­t assembly, an all-powerful body run by President Nicolas Maduro’s Socialist Party loyalists.

“What we have in Venezuela is a dictatorsh­ip,” Peruvian Foreign Minister Ricardo Luna told a press conference, flanked by his counterpar­ts from the region.

Luna said that it was important to address the “unpreceden­ted regional crisis” in Venezuela collective­ly, and that some member’s of the new group may take individual actions to go further.

Luna’s comments marked some of the harshest words for Venezuela from a foreign country amid the recent wave of internatio­nal condemnati­ons as Maduro’s government cracks down on protests and seeks to consolidat­e power.

Peru has been one of the most outspoken critics of Maduro under centrist Peruvian President Pedro Pablo Kuczysnki, a former Wall Street banker whom Maduro has described as a lackey of the United States.

Earlier on Tuesday, Kuczynski said Venezuela was “on its last leg economical­ly.”

The regional group, which plans to meet again, also condemned Venezuela’s “systematic violation of human rights and fundamenta­l liberties, violence, repression and political persecutio­n, the existence of political prisoners and the lack of free elections.”

Chile’s Foreign Minister Heraldo Munoz told reporters that the group does not intend to meddle in Venezuela’s sovereign affairs.

“What we want is to reestablis­h the broken democratic order,” Munoz said, adding that “Chile does not accept military coups, auto-coups or military uprisings.”

 ?? (Mariana Bazo/ ?? BRAZIL’S FOREIGN MINISTER Aloysio Ferreira along with foreign ministers and representa­tives from across the Americas, give a news conference after a meeting to discuss issues related to the Venezuelan crisis, in Lima on Tuesday.
(Mariana Bazo/ BRAZIL’S FOREIGN MINISTER Aloysio Ferreira along with foreign ministers and representa­tives from across the Americas, give a news conference after a meeting to discuss issues related to the Venezuelan crisis, in Lima on Tuesday.

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