Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Protesters mourn, pray in Venezuela

- FABIOLA SANCHEZ

CARACAS, Venezuela — Thousands of Venezuelan­s dressed in white, some walking with their hands up, marched Saturday in a silent protest in homage to the at least 20 people killed in unrest generated after the nation’s Supreme Court stripped congress of its last powers, a decision it later reversed.

Walking with black bands tied around their arms and carrying signs denouncing President Nicolas Maduro, protesters in Caracas were heading toward the Venezuelan Episcopal Conference to pray for those killed in the violence.

Saturday’s protest was the latest mass gathering in a wave of tumult that has rocked the nation over the past three weeks as demonstrat­ors continue to press for new elections. Throughout the protests, state security forces have confronted protesters with tear gas, drawing internatio­nal condemnati­on. Those killed include protesters and bystanders struck by gunfire and a dozen dead in overnight clashes and looting that destroyed more than two dozen businesses in a working-class neighborho­od.

“We should remember there are people who were killed fighting for the cause we are defending,” opposition lawmaker Freddy Guevara told demonstrat­ors walking through Caracas on Saturday. “And if they died for this we don’t have the right to rest.”

The opposition contends rogue, armed pro- government groups are fomenting the violence. Government leaders claim the violence is being generated by rightwing opposition forces working with criminal gangs in an attempt to remove them from power.

“These are terrorist groups on a mission to sow hate and death,” Diosdado Cabello, leader of the ruling socialist party, told supporters last week.

For the first time, protesters were able to cross on Saturday from the east to the western side of Caracas without being confronted by state security, an act that Guevara compared in a tweet to “crossing the Berlin wall” that divides one half from the other. Eastern Caracas is home to some of the city’s wealthiest neighborho­ods, while the western side has poorer communitie­s.

Among the demonstrat­ors gathered in Caracas was Andres Ramirez, a 34-year-old agricultur­al engineer, who marched with a giant cross draped in the Venezuelan flag.

“I am here carrying this cross for the peace of all Venezuelan­s,” he said. “We ask God to protect us in these moments of crisis and suffering.”

 ?? AP/ARIANA CUBILLOS ?? Silent marchers fill the streets Saturday in Caracas, Venezuela, to honor the people killed in recent unrest.
AP/ARIANA CUBILLOS Silent marchers fill the streets Saturday in Caracas, Venezuela, to honor the people killed in recent unrest.

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