Khaleej Times

Maduro plots moves against opposition amid tensions

- AFP

caracas — Political tensions in crisis-wracked Venezuela simmered on Wednesday as the opposition-controlled legislatur­e was to convene, after a rival assembly loyal to President Nicolas Maduro created a “truth commission” seen as targeting lawmakers.

The establishm­ent of the commission — which Maduro wants to examine alleged crimes committed by opposition leaders — was the latest in a series of moves by the new Constituen­t Assembly and the supreme court to crack down on challenges to Maduro’s rule.

They include the jailing of an opposition mayor who allowed antigovern­ment protests to happen in his Caracas district, and the firing of the attorney general, Luisa Ortega, who is an outspoken critic of the president.

A powerful member of the Constituen­t Assembly and close Maduro ally, Diosdado Cabello, said parliament­ary immunity could be lifted “for everyone” in the legislatur­e to open the way to prosecutio­n.

The new assembly, ostensibly brought in to rewrite the constituti­on but handed sweeping powers to override all other branches of government, was elected on July 30 in polls marred by violence and allegation­s of fraud.

The developmen­ts have prompted cries from the United States and major Latin American nations that Venezuela has become a “dictatorsh­ip.”

On Tuesday, a dozen nations in the region, plus Canada, condemned Venezuela for “breaking democratic rule.”

The group — including Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia and Mexico — said they would not recognize the Constituen­t Assembly or its decisions.

The United States has imposed direct sanctions on Maduro, and warned further punishment could follow. US Vice President Mike Pence is to visit Latin America next week to hold discussion­s on “shared economic and security goals.” The UN rights office has slammed Venezuela’s “excessive force” against protesters who object to the Constituen­t Assembly and are angry about an economic crisis that has seen lines for scarce food and medicine, runaway inflation and a tanking currency.

Since the protests turned violent four months ago, nearly 130 people have died.

But Venezuela is not entirely isolated internatio­nally. It can count

The right wing across Latin america has broken the rules of the game and our way of living side by side Nicolas Maduro, president

on the support of Russia and China — which have granted tens of billions of dollars in loans to Venezuela — as well as leftist allies Cuba, Bolivia and Ecuador, and small Caribbean nations to which it gives cheap oil.

Maduro and Defense Minister General Vladimir Padrino described the attackers as “terrorists” with links to the US, insisting they were not part of any insurgency within the armed forces. —

 ?? AFP ?? Anti-government activists demonstrat­e against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro at a barricade set up on a road in Caracas. —
AFP Anti-government activists demonstrat­e against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro at a barricade set up on a road in Caracas. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates