The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Venezuelan lawmakers strip Guaido of immunity

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CARACAS: Venezuelan lawmakers loyal to President Nicolas Maduro stripped opposition leader Juan Guaido’s immunity Tuesday — and authorised the high court to criminally prosecute him for proclaimin­g himself the crisishit country’s ruler.

Guaido had earlier expressed fears of being abducted by government agents following a request by the Supreme Court to the Constituen­t Assembly to lift his parliament­ary immunity.

Critics of the controvers­ial twoyear-old body say it was created to rubber-stamp Maduro’s decisions and sideline the opposition-controlled National Assembly.

The Constituen­t Assembly’s president, Diosdado Cabello, announced pro-Maduro lawmakers had unanimousl­y authorised the Supreme Court to prosecute Guaido, leaving him also liable to be charged for breaching a Jan 29 government ban on leaving the country.

The court had been investigat­ing Guaido for usurping Maduro’s powers by declaring himself interim president on Jan 23 — a move which rapidly gained internatio­nal support.

“The people are determined and nothing is going to stop us,” said a defiant Guaido in response.

“There is no turning back in this process.”

Guaido recognises neither the court nor the Constituen­t Assembly and insisted the decision was invalid.

The court ruling, issued Monday, cited Guaido’s violation of a ban on his travel outside Venezuela when he visited Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador and Paraguay from late February to early March.

The move came after Venezuela’s auditor general’s office announced last week that it had stripped Guaido of the right to hold public office for 15 years, a decision he rejected as invalid.

Parallel to the political battle, the country has been hit by a

The people are determined and nothing is going to stop us. There is no turning back in this process.

series of devastatin­g blackouts that have left millions without water, prompting the government to replace the country’s energy

Juan Guaido, opposition leader

minister and institute power rationing in a bid to address the outages.

Three major blackouts hit Venezuela in March, worsening already dire living and economic conditions in the country, and prompting authoritie­s to take steps aimed at curbing the outages.

Maduro — whose government has blamed ‘terrorists’ for alleged attacks that have damaged the country’s main hydroelect­ric power plant — announced that he was appointing Igor Gavidia Leon to replace retired general Luis Motta Dominguez as energy minister.

The new minister “is an electrical industry worker with 25 years of experience, an engineer who had many responsibi­lities,” Maduro said.

Maduro announced 30 days of electricit­y rationing, after his government said it was shortening the workday and keeping schools closed due to blackouts.

The measures are a stark admission by the government that there is not enough electricit­y to go around, and that the power crisis is here to stay.

With no electricit­y, pumping stations can’t work, so water service is limited. Schools and universiti­es are scheduled to reopen on Wednesday. — AFP

 ??  ?? Cabello attends a session in Caracas,Venezuela. — Reuters photo
Cabello attends a session in Caracas,Venezuela. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Juan Guaido
Juan Guaido

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