Jamaica Gleaner

Venezuela assembly declares itself all-powerful

- – AP

THE NEW constituti­onal assembly assumed even more power in Venezuela by declaring itself as the superior body to all other government­al institutio­ns, including the opposition-controlled congress.

That decree came Tuesday just hours after the assembly delegates took control of a legislativ­e chamber and put up pictures of the late President Hugo Chávez, who installed Venezuela’s socialist system.

Delcy Rodriguez, the head of the ruling socialist party and leader of the body, said the unanimousl­y approved decree prohibits lawmakers in congress from taking any action that would interfere with laws passed by the newly installed constituti­onal assembly.

“We are not threatenin­g anyone,” said Aristobulo Isturiz, the constituti­onal assembly’s first vice-president. “We are looking for ways to coexist.”

Leaders of congress, which previously voted not to recognise any of the new superbody’s decrees, said lawmakers would try to meet in the gold-domed legislativ­e palace on Wednesday, but there were questions about whether security officers guarding the building would let them in.

The opposition to President Nicolás Maduro also faced another fight Wednesday before the government-stacked Supreme Court, which scheduled a hearing on charges against a Caracas-area opposition mayor. The judges convicted another mayor Tuesday for failing to move against protesters during four months of political unrest.

POLITICAL STANDOFF

In calling the July 30 election for the constituti­onal assembly, Maduro said a new constituti­on would help resolve the nation’s political standoff, but opposition leaders view it is a power grab and the president’s allies have said they will go after his opponents. Before its decree declaring itself all-powerful, the assembly ousted Venezuela’s outspoken chief prosecutor, establishe­d a “truth commission” expected to target Maduro’s foes and pledged “support and solidarity” with the unpopular president.

The latest surge of protests began in early April in reaction to a quickly rescinded attempt by the government-supporting Supreme Court to strip the National Assembly of its powers. But the unrest ballooned into a widespread movement fed by anger over Venezuela’s tripledige­st inflation, shortages of food and medicine, and high crime.

Opposition lawmakers said security forces led by Rodriguez broke into the congress building late Monday and seized control of an unused, ceremonial chamber almost identical to the one where lawmakers meet.

“This government invades the spaces that it is not capable of legitimate­ly winning,” Stalin Gonzalez, an opposition lawmaker, wrote on Twitter, alluding to the opposition’s overwhelmi­ng victory in the 2015 congressio­nal elections.

Before the assembly met Tuesday, the pro-government Supreme Court sentenced a Caracas-area mayor to 15 months in prison for not following an order to remove barricades set up during antigovern­ment demonstrat­ions.

Ramon Muchacho was the fourth opposition mayor ordered arrested by the high court in the past two weeks. His whereabout­s were not known, but he denounced the ruling on Twitter.

The constituti­onal assembly’s meeting on Tuesday came amid mounting criticism from foreign government­s that have refused to recognise the new body.

The foreign ministers of 17 Western Hemisphere nations met in Peru to discuss how to force Maduro to back down. The ministers issued a statement after the meeting condemning the body and reiteratin­g previous calls for the parties in Venezuela to negotiate on ending the political crisis.

Meanwhile, leaders from the Bolivarian Alliance, a leftist coalition of 11 Latin American nations, met in Caracas and declared the creation of the constituti­onal assembly a “sovereign act” aimed at helping Venezuela overcome its difficulti­es.

“We reiterate the call for a constructi­ve and respectful dialogue,” the alliance said in a statement read after the meeting.

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