The Manila Times

Venezuela snubs regional powers as more die in unrest

- AFP civil war in Syria, but acknowledg­es carrying out air strikes there to stop what it says are deliveries of advanced weapons to Hezbollah.

CARACAS: Venezuela says it is quitting the Organizati­on of American States in anger at pressure from the bloc over the government’s handling of a deadly political crisis.

The announceme­nt late Wednesday raised internatio­nal tension over Venezuela, where unrest has left 28 people dead this month.

Echoed by the United States and European Union, the OAS has led an internatio­nal chorus of concern over the economic and political chaos in the major oil-exporting country.

Bristling at the pressure, Venezuelan Foreign Minister Delcy Rodriguez said late Wednesday the government would launch a two-year process to pull out of the Washington-based regional diplomatic grouping.

On Thursday, “we will present a letter of complaint to the OAS and we will begin a process that will take 24 months,” she said in a televised address.

She branded the OAS an “interventi­onist coalition” led by Washington.

A defiant President Nicolas Maduro tweeted “I’m calling for the people’s civic-military unity in this battle for independen­ce and peace for our country.”

Democracy concerns

OAS Secretary General Luis Almagro has dubbed Venezuela’s the opposition.

On Wednesday, the permanent council of the 35- nation OAS agreed to hold a meeting of their foreign ministers to discuss the Venezuelan opposition activists clash with riot police during a protest march against President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas on April 26, 2017. crisis – a decision Venezuela had forewarned would prompt it to exit.

The OAS has voiced concern about the state of democracy in Venezuela, where Maduro is resisting opposition pressure to remove

So far this month, 28 people have been killed in anti-government protests that have erupted into clashes with riot police, the attorney general’s department says.

Venezuela has suffered an economic collapse fueled by a plunge in internatio­nal prices for its crucial oil exports.

Maduro says the shortages and the protests are part of a US-backed plot to topple him.

More protests

Opposition parliament­ary leader Julio Borges told a news conference further street protests were planned for Thursday.

He said lawmakers would hold a session on proposals to “rescue democracy” and then march to where one of the latest casualties died in eastern Caracas.

That fatality occurred Wednesday, as security forces elsewhere fired tear gas, water cannon and plastic bullets to stop protesters advancing into central Caracas. Protesters threw stones and petrol bombs.

Children were evacuated from a school to escape tear gas, with teachers holding handkerchi­efs over the pupils’ faces.

Interior Minister Nestor Reverol tweeted that two soldiers were wounded in Caracas by armed men on motorbikes who he said were “contracted by the terrorist rightwing.”

Maduro supporters also staged a counter-rally.

“We call on the opposition to leave the path of violence,” said one of his supporters, Freddy Gutierrez.

The opposition blames Maduro for severe shortages of food, medicine and other essentials in the oil-rich country. President Xi Jinping to mark the 20th anniversar­y of the handover of the city by Britain back to China in 1997 on July 1.

DAMASCUS BLAST CONSISTENT WITH ISRAELI POLICY: ISRAEL MINISTER

JERUSALEM: Israeli Intelligen­ce Minister Yisrael Katz said a massive explosion near Damascus Internatio­nal Airport on Thursday was consistent with Israel’s policy, but stopped short of confirming his country was behind it. Israeli warplanes have hit the airport and other bases around the Syrian capital in the past, targeting what it said were weapons stockpiles of its Lebanese foe Hezbollah, which is allied with the Syrian government. “We are acting to prevent the transfer of sophistica­ted weapons from Syria to Hezbollah in Lebanon by Iran,” Katz told army radio. “When we receive serious informatio­n about the intention to transfer weapons to Hezbollah, we will act. This incident is totally consistent with this policy.” In line with its usual practice, Israel’s military has declined to comment on the incident. Israel has sought to avoid being dragged into the six- year

MISSING TREKKERS FOUND IN NEPAL AFTER 7 WEEKS, 1 DEAD

KATHMANDU: Rescuers on Wednesday found two Taiwanese trekkers who went missing in a remote mountainou­s part of Nepal seven weeks ago, but only one survived the ordeal. Liu Chen-chun, 19, died just three days before the rescue team located the couple in northwest Nepal, but her boyfriend managed to survive despite running out of food. Liang Sheng-yueh, 21, is being treated in hospital in Kathmandu where he was airlifted after being rescued from the steep slope where the couple had been trapped for over a month. “He was sleeping when we found them,” one of the rescuers Madhav Basnyat told AFP. “He woke up after he heard us. We were very surprised to find him alive. He said that the girl died three days earlier.” Basnyat said that the two had followed a river downhill in the hope of finding a village but became stuck when they reached the edge of a waterfall and were unable to climb back up. “They had been trapped there for 47 days when we reached,” he said.

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AFP PHOTO

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