Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Venezuela activist’s trip halted

Wife of top critic can’t go to Paris

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Aritz Parra of The Associated Press.

CARACAS, Venezuela — A prominent anti-government activist was barred from leaving Venezuela on Saturday for planned meetings with European leaders, dealing a setback to opposition attempts to rally internatio­nal pressure on President Nicolas Maduro.

Lilian Tintori posted a photo on Twitter of herself at Caracas’ internatio­nal airport holding a document signed by immigratio­n officials ordering the seizure of her passport as she was preparing to board an afternoon flight. Tintori said she had a meeting planned for Monday in Paris with French President Emmanuel Macron.

No explanatio­n for the travel ban was given, but the move came a day after she was ordered to appear before a judge Tuesday to answer questions about a lot of cash found in her vehicle.

Tintori, the wife of the nation’s most prominent detained activist, Leopoldo Lopez, said she was also scheduled to meet with the leaders of Germany, Spain and the United Kingdom.

“The evidence is clear why the dictatorsh­ip is stirring the pot against me,” Tintori tweeted. “They want to keep me from talking about the humanitari­an crisis we are living in Venezuela.”

On Friday, Tintori received notice that she was being investigat­ed after authoritie­s discovered in her car some 200 million bolivars, around $60,000 at the nation’s weakest official exchange rate or $10,000 at the widely used black market rate.

She denounced the investigat­ion as politicall­y motivated, pointing out in a video that it’s not a crime to have cash in one’s possession. She said the money, found in her car as it was parked at her mother-in-law’s home, was to pay for family emergencie­s including the hospitaliz­ation of her 100-year-old grandmothe­r.

Tintori said she kept such a large sum because of spiraling triple-digit inflation that has pulverized the value of Venezuela’s currency and because no local bank would open an account for such an outspoken critic of the government.

While it’s not clear what possible crime Tintori is being investigat­ed for, some government supporters have accused her of using the funds to finance “terrorism” — a term they frequently use to describe violent protests that have rocked Venezuela.

Tintori suggested that other members of Venezuela’s opposition would take her place at the meetings. Julio Borges, the opposition head of congress, said Saturday on Twitter that in the “coming days” he will meet with Macron, Germany’s Angela Merkel, the United Kingdom’s Theresa May and Spain’s Mariano Rajoy.

“They cannot silence the voice of 30 million Venezuelan­s,” Tintori said at a news conference. “Not even jail will stop our denunciati­on. … They cannot hide the crisis our country is living through.”

Pressure is building on Europe’s leaders to join Washington in sanctionin­g Maduro’s government and top officials as they move forward with plans to rewrite Venezuela’s constituti­on and consolidat­e power.

More than 120 people were killed in four months of protests in Venezuela, with the majority of the deaths caused by security forces and pro-government groups, according to the U.N.

Rajoy, whose public schedule for Tuesday lists a meeting with Tintori and Borges, called the travel ban “sad.”

“They can lock up people but not their ideals,” Rajoy said on Twitter.

Venezuelan Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza later tweeted in response: “President of the Spanish Government, in your obsession against Venezuela you protect grave crimes of corruption and question our judicial system.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States