Oman Daily Observer

Venezuela arrests two high profile opposition leaders

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CARACAS: The Venezuelan intelligen­ce service arrested two prominent opposition leaders early Tuesday, their relatives said, a day after a vote to choose a much-condemned assembly that supersedes parliament.

Leopoldo Lopez and Antonio Ledezma were both already under house arrest when they were picked up by the intelligen­ce service known by its in acronym Sebin, the wife of Lopez and children of Ledezma said separately.

The two men are Venezuela’s most high profile opposition leaders. Both had called for a boycott of Sunday’s vote for a so-called and all-powerful constituen­t assembly tasked with rewriting the constituti­on.

Both of their families said they held President Nicolas Maduro, the driving force behind the vote, responsibl­e for the leaders’ lives.

“They just took Leopoldo away. We do not know where he is or where they are taking him,” Lopez’s wife Lilian Tintori said on Twitter.

She released home security camera footage in which four uniformed police officers and three in civilian garb are seen putting her husband into a Sebin car and take off, with other cars escorting them.

The children of Ledezma — named Victor, Vanessa and Antonietta — also said on Twitter that the Sebin had taken away their father.

Opposition leaders and local media posted cellphone footage of Ledezma being taken away from his home forcibly while still wearing pajamas.

Lopez, 46, was transferre­d to house arrest in July of this year after serving three years and five months in prison as part of a 14-year term. He had been convicted of instigatin­g violence during protests against Maduro in 2014 that left 43 people dead.

Ledezma, 62, was arrested in February 2015 on charges of conspiracy and racketeeri­ng and was placed under house arrest three months later for health reasons.

Opposition lawmaker Freddy Guevara said the arrests were aimed at “frightenin­g us and demoralizi­ng us.”

Four months of street demonstrat­ions against Maduro have left 120 people dead, including 10 over the weekend that included the election.

The opposition says the vote was a fraudulent ploy by Maduro to cling to power because, it argues, he is so unpopular he could not win an election. The next one is scheduled for 2018.

The new constituen­t assembly is to start working on Wednesday. It is made up only of members of Maduro’s Socialist party. The opposition has called a big rally for that day.

The United States hit Maduro with direct sanctions on Monday over the weekend vote, calling him a “dictator,” while the leader refused to heed what he slammed as “imperial orders.”

The measures were unusual in that they targeted a sitting head of state, but their reach was mostly symbolic, freezing any US assets Maduro might have and banning people under US jurisdicti­on from dealing with him.

“Yesterday’s illegitima­te elections confirm that Maduro is a dictator who disregards the will of the Venezuelan people,” US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told reporters.

Maduro lashed out at the move, saying it smacked of American imperialis­m. “I will not obey imperial orders,” he said.

Colombia, Mexico, Peru and other nations joined the US in saying they did not recognize the results of Sunday’s election, which appointed a new “Constituen­t Assembly” supersedin­g Venezuela’s legislativ­e body, the opposition-controlled National Assembly.

Maduro’s own attorney general, Luisa Ortega — who broke with him months ago over his policies — also said she would not acknowledg­e the body, calling it part of the president’s “dictatoria­l ambition.”

However, old allies Bolivia, Cuba, Nicaragua and Russia stood by Maduro, who shrugged off mass protests and a previous round of US sanctions on some of his officials to see through the election.

The National Electoral Council claimed more than 40 per cent of Venezuela’s 20 million voters had cast ballots Sunday.

 ??  ?? Venezuelan­s protest against President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas, on July 31, 2017
Venezuelan­s protest against President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas, on July 31, 2017

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