Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Court: 2 Venezuela opposition leaders sent back to prison

- By Michael Weissenste­in

Associated Press

CARACAS, Venezuela — Teams of heavily armed security agents seized two of Venezuela’s top opposition leaders from their homes in the middle of the night Tuesday, dragging one into the street in his pajamas as President Nicolas Maduro’s government defied U.S. sanctions and internatio­nal condemnati­on of a plan to assume nearly unlimited powers.

Leopoldo Lopez and Antonio Ledezma were being held at the Ramo Verde military prison south of the capital, accused by the government-allied Supreme Court of violating the terms of their house arrest by plotting to escape and releasing video

statements criticizin­g Mr. Maduro.

Their arrests perhaps signaled a tougher stance toward opponents of Mr. Maduro in the aftermath of his controvers­ial ballot measure to draft a new constituti­on, suggesting an expanded crackdowno­n dissent.

Both men’s allies denied the charges and vowed to continue to try to push the ruling party from power. But they gave little indication of how they planned to do that, and the capital was unusually quiet after months of sometimes violent protests. While the United States and some Latin American allies condemned the arrests, many other nations and internatio­nal organizati­ons were silent or limited themselves to expression­s of concern.

Mr. Lopez’s supporters released a video he taped last week saying he expected to be imprisoned again soon, and calling on Venezuelan­s to be firm in resisting Mr. Maduro.

“If you are looking at this video now, it’s precisely because that occurred, because they came and they illegally imprisoned me again unjustly, a prisoner of consciousn­ess, a prisoner for my ideas, a prisoner for wanting a better Venezuela,” the 46year-oldMr. Lopez said.

He also said that his wife, Lilian Tintori, is pregnant, touching her belly and saying he has “one more reason to fight for Venezuela.” He called the pregnancy “the best news I’ve received in the last 3½ years” — the time he spent behind bars before being released to house arrest last month. The couple had been allowed some conjugal visits.

Mr. Maduro appeared undeterred in his plans to seat a special assembly this week with powers to rewrite the country’s constituti­on and override any other branch of the Venezuelan government. He has threatened to use those powers to go after his opponents and the arrests Tuesday appeared to show he was willing to proceed with full force.

In making his authoritar­ian intentions clear, Mr. Maduro appears to have the full support of the country’s most important institutio­ns.

Venezuela’s powerful vice president, whom the U.S. has accused of drug traffickin­g, said the newly elected constituen­t assembly would be convening“within hours.”

In remarks aired on Venezuela’s state television, Tareck El Aissami said that results from Sunday’s election have been reviewed and the 545 assembly members would soon take the reins of thenation’s government.

He didn’t give a specific time.

Venezuela’s defense minister, Gen. Vladimir Padrino Lopez, also appeared on television Tuesday to affirm his loyaltyto Mr. Maduro.

“We ask for respect for our democracy, for the way in which we have decided to take the road that we deserve to take in peace, in democracy, with tolerance, without violence and without heading toward a coup,” Gen. Padrinosai­d.

Mr. Lopez was released from the Ramo Verde prison on July 8 after serving three years of a 13-year sentence on charges of inciting violence at opposition rallies. Many human rights groups considered­him a political prisoner.

Mr. Ledezma, 62, was also detained in 2015 and has been under house arrest. Like Mr. Lopez,he also recently posted a video denouncing Sunday’s vote.

Shortly after midnight, black-clad members of Venezuela’s state security force forced Mr. Ledezma from his eastCaraca­s home in his blue pajamas, yanking him out into the night as a woman screamedfo­r help.

“They’re taking Ledezma!” the woman can be heard crying on a cell-phone video released by Mr. Ledezma’s allies. “It’s a dictatorsh­ip!”

Mr. Lopez’s wife posted security-camera video of him being taken from their home and bundled into a waiting car.

Attorney Juan Carlos Gutierrez said the government’s decision to return Mr. Lopez to prison was “completely arbitrary” and said Mr. Lopez had obeyed the conditions imposed on his house arrest and never had plans to flee.

Tensions escalated in Venezuela after government-allied electoral authoritie­s said more than 8 million people voted Sunday and the turnout was disputed by the opposition and independen­t analysts and condemned by many nations in the region andbeyond.

On Monday, the Trump administra­tion added Mr. Maduro to a growing list of high-ranking Venezuelan officials targeted by financial sanctions. For now, the Trump administra­tion has not delivered on threats to sanction Venezuela’s oil industry, which could undermine Mr. Maduro’s government but also raise U.S. gas prices and deepen the humanitari­an crisis in Venezuela.

Mr. Maduro said Monday evening he had no intention of deviating from his plans to rewrite the constituti­on and go after a string of enemies, from independen­t Venezuelan news channels to gunmen he claimed were sent by neighborin­g Colombia to disrupt the vote as part of an internatio­nal conspiracy led by the man he calls “Emperor DonaldTrum­p.”

Mr. Maduro has also said he would use the assembly’s powers to bar opposition candidates from running in gubernator­ial elections in December unless they sit with his party to negotiate an end to hostilitie­s that have generatedf­our months of protests, leaving least 120 dead andnearly 2,000 wounded.

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Tuesday that the Trump administra­tion was “evaluating all of our policy options as to what can we do to create a change of conditions where either Maduro decides he doesn’t have a future, and wants to leave of his own accord, or we can return the government processes back to their constituti­on.”

Panamanian and Argentine officials and the Organizati­on of American States condemned Tuesday’s arrests, though other nations in the region were silent. A spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he “has taken note” of the jailings and was sending “an overall message of concern for the increase in political tensions and the country moving away from a path to finding a peaceful solution.”

The French, British, Spanish and Mexican ambassador­s to Venezuela visited the opposition-controlled National Assembly on Tuesday and met with legislator­s as a showof support.

After they left, members of pro-government motorcycle gangs surrounded the building and some threw rocks and tomatoes at a legislator and another person as they left the building. Three legislator­s said they were breaking with the pro-government Great Patriotic Pole party and forming a new faction opposed to rewriting the constituti­on.

 ?? Pierre-Philippe Marcou/AFP/Getty Images ?? Mitzy Capriles, wife of prominent opposition leader and mayor of Caracas Antonio Jose Ledezma, consoles her daughter Antonieta after a press conference in Madrid on Monday after her husband was arrested.
Pierre-Philippe Marcou/AFP/Getty Images Mitzy Capriles, wife of prominent opposition leader and mayor of Caracas Antonio Jose Ledezma, consoles her daughter Antonieta after a press conference in Madrid on Monday after her husband was arrested.

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