Austin American-Statesman

U.N. demands answers from Venezuela about strife

Rights experts air claims of torture as street clashes rage.

- By Ezequiel Abiu Lopez andJorge Rueda

CARACAS, VENEZUELA — Venezuela is coming under increasing internatio­nal scrutiny amid violence that most recently killed a National Guardsman and a civilian in a clash at a protest barricade.

United Nations human rights experts demanded answers Thursday from Venezuela’s government about the use of violence and imprisonme­nt in a crackdown on widespread demonstrat­ions.

The six experts, who report to the U.N.’s top human rights body in Geneva, wrote the administra- tion of President Nicolas Maduro about allegation­s of protesters being beaten and in some cases severely tortured by security forces, and taken to military facilities, cut off from communicat­ion and denied legal help, U.N. officials said.

Venezuela’s U.N. Mission in Geneva called it part of a disinforma­tion campaign to undermine the government.

In Washington, the permanent council of the Organizati­on of American States met into the early hours of Friday to discuss the situation in Venezuela, without making any decision. .

The National Guard member and the civilian were killed Thursday after a group of men on motorcycle­s rode into an east Caracas neighborho­od to remove a street barricade erected by anti-government protesters.

The clash that erupted in the mixed industrial and residentia­l district of Los Ruices heightened tensions on the same day the Venezuelan government expelled foreign dip- lomats for the second time in a month.

More than 100 men on motorcycle­s carrying pipes and rocks swarmed Los Ruices in the incident. Some tried to force their way into buildings. Residents screamed “murder- ers, murderers” from rooftops and the motorcycli­sts taunted them from below, urging them to come down and fight. In other neighborho­ods, motorcycli­sts dismantled barricades under the whistles and shouts of residents, but without violence.

Venezuelan­s fed up with food shortages and unchecked violence have been staging nearly daily street protests since mid-February, snarling traffic with barricades of garbage, furniture and burning tires.

At least 21 people have been killed in related violence, by government count, in the country’s worst unrest in years. Maduro’s administra­tion shows no signs of crumbling from several weeks of nearly daily demonstrat­ions, but the country ap- pears in a stalemate.

Protesters are mostly from the middle and upper classes, although they do include poorer Venezuelan­s who don’t protest in their home districts for fear of pro-government paramilita­ries.

Sucre Mayor Carlos Ocariz said residents of Los Ruices reported hearing gunshots after motorcycli­sts began dismantlin­g the barricades. Some apartment dwellers began banging pots and raining down bottles to express their anger, he said.

In the melee, a 24-yearold motorcycle taxi driver was shot dead.

“I’m not going to be irresponsi­ble and accuse anyone,” Ocariz said. “I condemn the violence ... but I also reject the brutal repression” of security forces.

 ?? FERNANDO LLANO / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A demonstrat­or runs to throw a Molotov cocktail at Venezuelan police officers during clashes in Caracas on Thursday.
FERNANDO LLANO / ASSOCIATED PRESS A demonstrat­or runs to throw a Molotov cocktail at Venezuelan police officers during clashes in Caracas on Thursday.

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