The Citizen (KZN)

‘Terrorist attack a hoax’

MILITARY DEPLOYED AFTER ROGUE ACTOR-COP’S HELICOPTER ASSAULT

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Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro vowed on Wednesday to fend off what he called a coup attempt after a rogue cop allegedly dropped grenades from a helicopter in an attack the opposition and analysts said could be a hoax.

The socialist president put the military on alert after the attack, a potentiall­y dramatic escalation of the violence gripping the oilrich South American country.

The death toll rose by two more on Wednesday to 79 in three months of daily street protests against Maduro, blamed for a crisis marked by shortages of food, medicine and other basics.

Maduro blamed the chopper attack on Oscar Perez, a police pilot-turned-actor who appeared in a video online claiming that he and other officers were launching an “aerial deployment” to push Maduro to quit.

Beyond his police work, Perez has acted in a Venezuelan action film, Suspended Death, and has posted photograph­s on social media of himself posing with some weapons.

“We are a coalition of military, police and civilian public servants... opposed to this transition­al, criminal government,” said Perez, flanked by four masked figures in black, two of them armed.

Maduro has for months been fending off calls for elections to replace him, from opponents who blame him for a desperate economic crisis that has sparked hunger and deadly violence.

He so far retains the public backing of the military high command – a factor that analysts say is decisive if he is to remain in power.

Venezuela has seen three attempted military coups since 1992.

Maduro said no one was hurt in the helicopter attack, but branded it a “terrorist attack”, part of an “escalation” by right-wing “coup” plotters.

Vice-President Tareck El-Aissami said later that the helicopter used in the attack had been found in Osma, a town near Caracas. No arrests had been made, he added.

Leaders of the opposition MUD coalition said there was not yet enough informatio­n to comment on the issue.

“Some people say it is a hoax, some say it is real, some say that it was police personnel who really are fed up,” opposition legislativ­e speaker Julio Borges told reporters. – AFP

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