Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Venezuela democracy dies by degrees

Series of moves by government has limited opposition

- By Mery Mogollon and Chris Kraul Special to Los Angeles Times Special correspond­ent Mery Mogollon reported from Caracas and Chris Kraul from Bogota, Colombia.

CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuela has been gripped by near daily protests for the last 11 weeks, resulting in 69 deaths, 1,235 arrests and millions of dollars in property damage.

The demonstrat­ions started in late March after the Supreme Court, which is controlled by President Nicolas Maduro, ruled that it was taking over the powers of the legislatur­e and intensifie­d a week later when the government disqualifi­ed a leading member of the opposition from running for office for the next 15 years.

But the protests have also been years in the making, as Maduro and his predecesso­r, the late Hugo Chavez, the founder of a socialist movement known as Chavismo, chipped away at democracy by canceling elections, shutting down news outlets and arresting political opponents.

Food shortages and rising crime have only added to the anger.

“This is a new chapter in the conflict between Chavismo and the opposition, a chapter animated by the catastroph­ic government of Maduro,” said Luis Salamanca, a professor at Central University of Venezuela in Caracas. “Citizens are struggling to make the government respect their constituti­onal rights.”

Public protests may be the only recourse left to the opposition, experts said.

“The cumulative effect of increasing­ly severe and blatant authoritar­ian measures can be seen in the wave of street protests in Caracas and elsewhere,” said Michael Shifter, president of the Inter-American Dialogue think tank in Washington. “The opposition has pursued other avenues to press for change but has consistent­ly hit a wall.”

Here are some ways that the government has worked to limit the opposition’s power:

In 2007, Chavez refused to renew the broadcasti­ng license of RCTV, the most widely followed anti-government station, forcing it to shut down and sparking nationwide protests.

Since then, an estimated 300 independen­t smalltown radio stations have either been shut down or forced to change to government-friendly formats, according to Marcelino Bisbal, a professor at Andres Bello Catholic University.

Globovisio­n, the last television station to broadcast anti-government editorials, was forced to sell in 2013 after owners complained of mounting government fines and political harassment. The new owners are businessme­n with ties to Maduro.

CNN, El Tiempo TV, NTN24 and other Spanish language cable channels that have criticized the government have been banned from broadcasti­ng in Venezuela.

In nationwide elections in December, opposition candidates won the two-thirds majority needed to control the National Assembly. That should have allowed the opposition sweeping powers to overturn Maduro’s decisions and take control of the budget.

But before the new congress was installed, Maduro added 13 new justices to the Supreme Court. With Maduro allies in control, the court then disqualifi­ed three newly elected assembly members from Amazonas state by claiming voting irregulari­ties.

That deprived the opposition of super-majority powers in the legislatur­e and preserved Maduro’s political potency.

The Supreme Court gave all legislativ­e powers to Maduro on March 29 and eliminated parliament­ary immunity, making all members subject to prosecutio­n. Domestic and internatio­nal reaction to the ruling was so negative that the court reinstated immunity two days later. Maduro was allowed to keep his new powers.

Last month, he extended a state of emergency for an eighth straight two-month period, maintainin­g discretion­ary powers and the suspension of certain individual constituti­onal rights.

Soon after the opposition-controlled assembly took its seats, the majority began a campaign to exercise its constituti­onal right to hold a recall election to remove Maduro from power.

Despite the collection of 1.3 million signatures in the first phase of the campaign last year, the Maduro-controlled National Electoral Council delayed the process so long that even if the opposition had won the vote, Maduro’s vice president would have served out his term ending 2019.

Elections for state governors and mayors were supposed to have been held in December of last year. But the electoral council has postponed them.

One by one, leading opposition candidates have been disqualifi­ed from running for office, often on flimsy pretexts.

On April 7, the controller’s office said that Henrique Capriles, the governor of Miranda state who finished a close second to Maduro in the 2013 presidenti­al re-election to replace Chavez, was ineligible to run for any public office until 2032 because of alleged misuse of funds. Capriles rejected the charges and described the action as a “coup” to eliminate a competitor in the 2019 presidenti­al election.

Leopoldo Lopez, a charismati­c former Caracas borough mayor, was disqualifi­ed from running for office for six years starting in 2008 for alleged misuse of public funds. As the ban was running out, he was jailed in February 2014 on incitement of violence charges related to nationwide protests. He denied both charges.

Former assembly member Maria Corina Machado was disqualifi­ed from elections in 2015 on suspicion of planning to violently overthrow the government, a charge she has denied.

Liborio Guarulla, the popular opposition governor of Amazonas state and one-time Chavez follower, was disqualifi­ed on May 7 from running for any office before 2032. The electoral council said the reason was “administra­tive negligence.” Guarulla, a member of an indigenous community, dismissed the charges and leveled a curse against authoritie­s “for trying to do us evil.”

Lopez, who is being held at a military prison near Caracas, is not the only politician arrested on charges that appear suspect. In 2015, authoritie­s arrested Antonio Ledezma , and charged him with attempting to overthrow the government, which his family has described as ludicrous.

Yon Goicoechea, a former student leader who rose to prominence during 2007 demonstrat­ions against the closing of RCTV, was arrested in August of last year and charged with possession of explosives. His wife, who rejected the charges, told reporters that her husband was tortured while in confinemen­t.

Daniel Ceballos, mayor of San Cristobal, the capital of Tachira state, has been jailed since 2014, when authoritie­s accused him of contempt of a court order to restrain protesters during a wave of demonstrat­ions that turned violent. He denied any responsibi­lity.

 ?? LUIS ROBAYO/GETTY-AFP ?? Opposition demonstrat­ors protest the government of President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas this month. The protests, and the actions by the government of Maduro and predecesso­r Hugo Chavez, have been years in the making.
LUIS ROBAYO/GETTY-AFP Opposition demonstrat­ors protest the government of President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas this month. The protests, and the actions by the government of Maduro and predecesso­r Hugo Chavez, have been years in the making.

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