The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Venezuela officials raid home of fired attorney-general

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CARACAS: Venezuelan intelligen­ce officers on Wednesday raided the home of the former attorney-general, who was fired th is month after she broke ranks with President Nicolas Maduro, while her replacemen­t urged the arrest of her lawmaker husband.

Four motorbikes and seven patrol cars belonging to the SEBIN intelligen­ce service were seen outside the Caracas home of the ex-attorney general, Luisa Ortega, AFP journalist­s observed.

“At this moment SEBIN is searching my home as revenge by this government for my fight against totalitari­anism,” Ortega wrote on Twitter.

She did not say where she and her husband were.

Ortega was sacked two weeks ago as the first act of a new supreme assembly loyal to Maduro that has set about quashing dissent and hemming in the opposition, which controls the rival legislatur­e.

Earlier Wednesday, her successor, Tarek William Saab, said he had asked officials to go after Ortega’s husband, German Ferrer, a former loyalist lawmaker who has split from the ruling Socialist Party.

The charges have ‘nothing to do with’ the political leanings of Ferrer or Ortega, Saab said.

He accused Ferrer of being part of a network trying to extort money from businessme­n linked to Venezuela’s all-important oil sector, promising them protection from prosecutio­n on corruption allegation­s in exchange for money.

A decision on whether to grant an arrest warrant against Ferrer — who has parliament­ary immunity — rests with Venezuela’s supreme court, which up to now has systematic­ally sided with Maduro.

Ortega in recent weeks accused Maduro of ‘dictatoria­l ambitions’.

She rebelled against his administra­tion in April when the supreme court tried — before reversing course — to assume the powers of the legislativ­e National Assembly.

Her criticism sharpened when Maduro then set about creating the rival Constituen­t Assembly, which is packed with his supporters.

Most major countries in the Americas, including the US, Canada, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico and Chile have dismissed the Constituen­t Assembly as illegitima­te and a tool to under mine Venezuelan democracy. — AFP

 ??  ?? Members of the Bolivarian National Intelligen­ce Service (SEBIN) standing guard outside the house of Ortega in Caracas. — AFP photo
Members of the Bolivarian National Intelligen­ce Service (SEBIN) standing guard outside the house of Ortega in Caracas. — AFP photo

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