Texarkana Gazette

Showdown set in Venezuela as new assembly prepares for power

-

CARACAS, Venezuela—Venezuela is nearing a showdown, with President Nicolas Maduro vowing to install a new constituen­t assembly that will trump every other branch of government and opposition leaders calling for a mass protest to ensure delegates know their arrival is unwelcome.

The first meeting of the 545 delegates is expected to convene Friday at the legislativ­e palace in Caracas—only yards from the room where the opposition-controlled National Assembly holds its sessions.

The legislativ­e palace has been witness to bloody clashes in recent weeks and Friday’s installati­on of the all-powerful assembly, which Maduro has vowed to use to strip opposition lawmakers of their constituti­onal immunity, sets the stage for an intensifie­d power struggle. Opposition lawmakers in congress have vowed they will only be removed by force.

“The only way they’ll get us out of here is by killing us,” declared Freddy Guevara, the National Assembly’s first vice president. “They will never have the seat that the people of Venezuela gave us.”

Sunday’s election of the constituen­t assembly has come under mounting scrutiny after the CEO of an internatio­nal voting technology company said Wednesday that “without any doubt” the voter turnout numbers had been tampered with—accusation­s that Maduro and the National Electoral Council have dismissed. A growing list of foreign nations has refused to recognize the assembly and many within Venezuela fear its installati­on will open a dark chapter in the nation’s history.

“There has been a gradual erosion of democratic practice and this is a significan­t line that has been crossed,” said Michael Shifter, president of the Washington-based think tank Inter-American Dialogue. “To attach the term democracy to Venezuela with this new constituen­t assembly is on very weak ground.”

Prominent constituen­t assembly members like Diosdado Cabello, the leader of the ruling socialist party, have said they plan to target the opposition-controlled congress and the country’s chief prosecutor, Luisa Ortega Diaz. As one of its first tasks, Maduro has ordered the assembly to declare Ortega Diaz’s office in a state of emergency and entirely restructur­e it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States