The Borneo Post

Protesters, police clash over Maduro’s grip on power

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CARACAS: Protesters clashed with police in Venezuela Tuesday as the opposition mobilised against moves to tighten President Nicolas Maduro’s grip on power and vowed to continue demonstrat­ions.

Nine protesters were injured, including one who was shot in the leg, said Ramon Muchacho, mayor of one of Caracas’s districts. None of the injuries were lifethreat­ening, he said.

Protesters hurled stones at riot police, who fi red tear gas as they blocked the demonstrat­ors from advancing along Libertador Avenue through central Caracas, where pro- government activists also marched.

An estimated 1,000 people tried to march to the National Assembly to demand the government restore powers to its opposition majority. Lawmakers were among the marchers. Maduro said that the demonstrat­ion was aimed at fostering violence in the country.

“Today, they tried to fill the streets of Venezuela with violence and blood,” said the president, speaking from the southern state Apure.

“I can say now... that peace triumphed in Caracas and in Venezuela,” he said.

The opposition called for new protests today.

“We’re going to continue to fi ll the streets to defend democracy and the right to vote,” Julio Borges, National Assembly president and a long-time opposition leader, told reporters.

The majority opposition also announced it would take steps yesterday in the legislatur­e to fi re Supreme Court justices.

Supreme Court president Maikel Moreno dismissed their chance of success, insisting the legislatur­e ‘lacks legality and legitimacy’.

A move by the top court last week to take over the legislatur­e’s powers sparked internatio­nal condemnati­on.

The US and other powers backed the opposition’s calls for the government to allow timely elections and release political prisoners. The court later backtracke­d on its move, but the opposition pressed ahead with calls for demonstrat­ions.

The head of the Organisati­on of American States ( OAS), Luis Almagro, condemned the crackdown ‘in the strongest terms’, branding it ‘brutal repression’.

“I am once again obliged to demand that the Venezuelan government immediatel­y stop violating the rule of law, reestablis­h democracy, recognise the civil and political liberties of the people, and immediatel­y end this repression,” Almagro said.

Borges, and former presidenti­al candidate Henrique Capriles, were among the opposition protesters who felt the sting of police tear gas Tuesday.

“This is how they show disrespect for people sworn in as lawmakers,” Borges said on Twitter. “Lawmakers assaulted on Libertador Avenue as we headed in to hold a session.”

Lilian Tintori, wife of jailed opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez, told reporters: “They used tear gas bombs against us. It was like war.

“Venezuela is in the grips of a dictatorsh­ip but we are going to free it.”

The centre-right opposition wants to remove the socialist president from office, blaming him for an economic crisis that has caused food shortages in the oil-rich nation. — AFP

 ??  ?? Venezuela’s opposition activists clash with riot police during a protest against Maduro’s government in Caracas. — AFP photo
Venezuela’s opposition activists clash with riot police during a protest against Maduro’s government in Caracas. — AFP photo

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