The Borneo Post

Venezuelan court targets Guaido’s immunity

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CARACAS: Venezuela’s Supreme Court called for Juan Guaido to be stripped of his legislativ­e immunity, tightening the noose on the opposition chief just days after authoritie­s announced a ban on him holding public office.

Guaido is locked in a power struggle with President Nicolas Maduro that has drawn in neighbouri­ng states as well as superpower­s such as the US and Russia.

As the political battle plays out, the country has been hit by a series of devastatin­g blackouts that have left millions without water, prompting the government to replace the country’s energy minister and institute power rationing in a bid to address the outages.

The decision by the Supreme Court – which is controlled by Maduro loyalists – to call on the ruling Constituen­t Assembly legislatur­e to strip Guaido of his immunity could open the way for the opposition chief to be prosecuted.

The court ruling 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 Thursday that it had stripped Guaido of the right to hold public office for 15 years, a decision he rejected as invalid.

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 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.

On Sunday, 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.

Street lights and traffic lights go dark, pumps at fuel stations stand idle, and cell phone and internet service is non- existent.

But people try to find water wherever they can: from springs, leaky pipes, gutters, government­provided tankers and the little that flows through the Guiare River in Caracas.

“We fill up from a well near here but we don’t know if its drinkable.

But we’re using it,” said Erimar Vale, who lives in the capital.

Guaido has asked his supporters to protest each time there is a blackout. — AFP

 ??  ?? Guaido speaking to supporters during a gathering in Caracas. — Reuters photo
Guaido speaking to supporters during a gathering in Caracas. — Reuters photo

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