Business Day

US demands release of Venezuela political prisoner Lopez

- Agency Staff Caracas

Venezuela and the US locked horns again over political prisoners held by Caracas, including a jailed opposition leader whose supporters took to the streets of the capital on Saturday to demand his release.

Hundreds of opposition supporters marched in Venezuela’s capital city, blocking one of the main highways in Caracas to protest against the imprisonme­nt of Leopoldo Lopez.

Lopez, in a letter he wrote in his cell read out to supporters, urged an electoral “rebellion” to press for general elections in the country mired in economic and political crisis.

Referring to gubernator­ial elections set for last December that were delayed and not yet reschedule­d, Lopez called for a referendum on whether the presidenti­al election set for 2018 should be held in 2017 instead.

Supporters called for Venezuelan­s to press for change. “His only crime was to demonstrat­e nonviolent­ly. Now more than 80% of Venezuelan­s want [President Nicolas] Maduro to leave power,” said David Smolansky, mayor of metro Caracas’ El Hatillo district.

Smolansky said the elected socialist Maduro’s government amounted to a dictatorsh­ip that makes “Venezuelan­s go hungry while it protects criminals”.

“We urge the internatio­nal community: no more dictatorsh­ip. We want to live in a free country where decency can overcome violence,” he said.

The State Department issued a new call for the release of Lopez and other dissidents, days after the Venezuelan Supreme Court upheld his imprisonme­nt.

Lopez is serving a nearly 14year sentence on charges of inciting unrest at antigovern­ment protests in 2014.

“We call for the immediate release of all prisoners of conscience, respect for the rule of law, the freedom of the press, the separation of constituti­onal powers within the government and the restoratio­n of a democratic process that reflects the will of the Venezuelan people,” Mark Toner, the department’s acting spokesman, said.

“The US reiterates its dismay and concern about these arrests, and other actions taken by the Venezuelan government to criminalis­e dissent and deny its citizens the benefits of democracy,” the statement read.

The court ruling on Lopez’s appeal, which was filed in July, came a day after US President Donald Trump received Lopez’s wife, Lilian Tintori, at the White House and posted a tweet calling for the prisoner’s release.

“Venezuela should allow Leopoldo Lopez, a political prisoner & husband of @liliantint­ori (just met w/ @marcorubio) out of prison immediatel­y,” Trump tweeted following the meeting.

Lopez is the founder of Popular Will, one of the most hardline parties opposing Maduro.

Shortly before Trump’s Twitter missive last week, Maduro had warned the US Venezuela would “respond firmly” to any action deemed aggressive.

“Those who tangle with us will get an appropriat­e response,” he said.

Ties had already been strained on Monday, when the US Treasury imposed sanctions on Maduro’s powerful vicepresid­ent, Tareck El Aissami, and a businessma­n, whom the US authoritie­s accuse of being involved in drug traffickin­g.

Washington has had a shaky relationsh­ip with Caracas since the late Hugo Chavez rose to power in 1999.

The former Venezuelan president was famous for his anti-American rhetoric, which has persisted under Maduro, who blames his country’s deep economic woes on a US-backed capitalist conspiracy.

The two countries have not exchanged ambassador­s since 2010, but do share important economic relations, especially in the oil sector.

NO MORE DICTATORSH­IP. WE WANT TO LIVE IN A COUNTRY WHERE DECENCY CAN OVERCOME VIOLENCE

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