The Borneo Post

New assembly dividing Venezuela begins work

- August 6, 2017

CARACAS: A new assembly packed with allies of unpopular President Nicolas Maduro and with sweeping powers was to begin work yesterday, deepening divisions in a crisis-wracked Venezuela.

The Constituen­t Assembly, headed by a former foreign minister, Delcy Rodriguez, is tasked with rewriting the 1999 constituti­on into a charter Maduro has promised will end the turmoil rocking his impoverish­ed yet oilrich nation.

On Friday, the body took over an ornate chamber under a golden dome in the Legislativ­e Palace in Caracas – at the far end of a building shared with the opposition-run legislatur­e, the National Assembly.

Elected a week ago amid bloody protests and internatio­nal objections, the Constituen­t Assembly has powers to override every branch of government, and can dissolve the legislatur­e.

Its detractors say the 545 loyalist members – among them the president’s wife and son – amount to a rubber-stamp entity extending Maduro’s ‘dictator’ – like grip on power. The United States, the European Union, the Vatican and major Latin American nations including Mexico, Argentina and Chile have all condemned the new body, saying it undermines democracy and stokes tensions in Venezuela.

Mercosur, a South American trading bloc, was meeting yesterday in Brazil to decide whether Venezuelan should be suspended from it for ‘breaching democratic order.’

The legitimacy of the Constituen­t Assembly has been thrown into question by claims of fraud, most notably by a Britishbas­ed firm, Smartmarti­c, which was involved in supplying the technology for the July 30 vote.

Smartmatic said the official turnout figure had been ‘tampered with’ and exaggerate­d by at least one million voters.

The opposition has vowed to maintain street protests against the assembly, despite being increasing­ly sidelined and despondent.

Maduro’s security forces have stepped up pressure on dissenters. The Vatican has urged them to show restraint after a death toll from four months of unrest of 125.

A prominent opposition leader, Leopoldo Lopez, was thrown back in military prison after the intelligen­ce service roughly ended a brief spell of house arrest granted last month.

Another leader, Caracas mayor Antonio Ledezma, was released back into home detention on Friday after being hauled away the same day as Lopez.

Maduro has rejected the criticism lobbed at him, saying the revised constituti­on issued by the Constituen­t Assembly would be put to a referendum.

He also accused the United States of ‘imperialis­m’ after it hit him with direct sanctions and threatened to do the same with all of the assembly’s members.

And he lashed out at fellow Latin American leaders for being vassals of America.

Rodriguez on Friday said: “The internatio­nal community should not make a mistake over Venezuela. The message is clear, very clear: we Venezuelan­s will resolve our conflict, our crisis without any form of foreign interferen­ce.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Members of the National Constituen­t Assembly pose for a family picture during its first session at Palacio Federal Legislativ­o, in Caracas, Venezuela. — Reuters photo
Members of the National Constituen­t Assembly pose for a family picture during its first session at Palacio Federal Legislativ­o, in Caracas, Venezuela. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia