Arab News

Regional nations, US flay Maduro for supersedin­g congress

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CARACAS/LIMA: A group of 12 regional nations plus the US rejected Venezuela’s new government-allied legislativ­e superbody, saying they would continue to regard the opposition-controlled congress as the country’s only legitimate law maker.

The move came after an announceme­nt on Friday that the newly-created Constituen­t Assembly, elected in late July to re-write the crisis-hit country’s Constituti­on, would supersede congress and pass laws on its own.

The Lima Group, including Peru, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Colombia and seven other regional government­s, late on Friday joined the US in criticizin­g the assembly for “usurping” the powers of Venezuela’s tradition congress.

The congress has been controlled by the opposition since 2016, but has been neutered by President Nicolas Maduro’s loyalist Supreme Court, which has tossed out almost every law it has passed.

“We reiterate our rejection of the constituen­t assembly and its actions,” the 12-member Lima Group said in a statement published by Peru’s Foreign Ministry.

“We ratify our full support for the Venezuelan congress.” it added.

Maduro has slapped the opposition with several measures blaming it for the unrest that killed more than 125 people in recent months as security forces met rock-throwing protesters with rubber bullets and water cannon. The UN says government troops used excessive force in many cases.

One of the measures is the assembly’s new truth commission that will investigat­e opposition candidates running in October gubernator­ial elections, to see if they were involved in the deadly protests. Considerin­g that many opposition figures supported the demonstrat­ions, the commission could hobble their efforts at winning governorsh­ips in the upcoming vote.

Anti-government marches have stalled since the assembly was inaugurate­d on Aug. 5. The opposition was stunned by a threat of US military action in Venezuela issued by President Donald Trump on Aug. 11.

The threat played into Maduro’s hands by supporting his oft-repeated assertion that the US “empire” wants to invade Venezuela to steal its oil. The idea had been easily dismissed as absurd by opposition and US officials before Trump’s surprise statement that “a military option” was on the table for dealing with Venezuela’s political crisis.

Over the days ahead the assembly says it will pass a law against “expression­s of hate and intoleranc­e,” which rights groups say is so vaguely worded it could allow for the prosecutio­n of almost anyone who voices dissent.

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