Oman Daily Observer

Venezuela defies Trump, vows to vote on constituti­onal change

CHALLENGED: Maduro’s plan for the constituti­onal rewrite has earned rebukes

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CARACAS: Venezuela’s government defiantly brushed aside US President Donald Trump’s threat of economic sanctions on Tuesday by saying it will go ahead with the election of a controvers­ial body to rewrite the country’s constituti­on.

“Nothing and nobody can stop it. The Constituen­t Assembly is happening,” Foreign Minister Samuel Moncada told a news conference.

“The Venezuelan people are free and will respond united to the insolent threat made by a xenophobic and racist empire.”

The sharp words came a day after Trump warned of “strong and swift economic actions” against Venezuela if the July 30 election of the constituen­t assembly was held.

He did not specify what form those “actions” could take. But Maduro showed he was taking the message seriously, convening officials for a defence meeting, “to respond to the imperial menace,” he wrote on Twitter.

Venezuela, which is almost entirely reliant on its oil exports for revenues, ships a third of its crude production to the United States.

The country is deep in the grip of an economic crisis, with food and medicine scarce and inflation soaring to triple digits.

That has fuelled public anger, feeding into an opposition campaign and deadly protests to force President Nicolas Maduro out through early elections.

Part of the downturn stems from relatively low global prices for oil.

But Venezuela’s opposition also blames mismanagem­ent by Maduro, who has stepped up the nationalis­ation of businesses, employed the military to control food distributi­on, and imposed currency controls.

Maduro in turn blames an economic “war” against him that he says is fomented by the right-wing opposition in cahoots with the United States. The president has portrayed his plan to have a Constituen­t Assembly rewrite the constituti­on as the only available path to “peace” and economic recovery.

The opposition, which controls the legislatur­e, has resisted, buoyed by internatio­nal condemnati­on of Maduro’s plan. It sees the Constituen­t Assembly as a tool to sideline the lawmakers in the National Assembly.

A 24-hour nationwide strike has been called for Thursday, launching what the opposition calls a “final offensive” to push Maduro out of office.

It follows an unofficial plebiscite held by the opposition last weekend in which 7.6 million voters — out of a total 19 million — cast ballots to reject the Constituen­t Assembly elections, and support early elections.

Trump gave vocal backing to the opposition on Monday, calling Maduro “a bad leader who dreams of becoming a dictator.” “The United States will not stand by as Venezuela crumbles,” he said.

That led Moncada to say that the opposition had “prompted President Trump to commit open aggression against a Latin American country.”

He called on “the people of Latin America and the Caribbean and the free people of the world to hear the magnitude of this brutal threat.”

Venezuela, however, is increasing­ly isolated internatio­nally.

Maduro’s plan for the constituti­onal rewrite has earned rebukes from Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Mexico and other Latin American nations, as well as the Organizati­on of American States, the United Nations and the European Union.

 ?? — Reuters ?? An armoured vehicle is seen lit on fire during clashes with demonstrat­ors at a rally against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s government in Caracas.
— Reuters An armoured vehicle is seen lit on fire during clashes with demonstrat­ors at a rally against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s government in Caracas.

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