Gulf Today

Court seeks extraditio­n of Maduro opponents

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Caracas: venezuela’ s highest court on Friday authorized the government to demand the extraditio­n of exiled former state prosecutor Luisa Ortega and former oil chief Rafael Ramirez -- both opponents of President Nicolas Maduro.

The move follows a similar decision on Thursday by the Supreme Court to seek to extradite opposition leader Julio Borges, who is accused of being involved in an alleged attempt to assassinat­e President Nicolas Maduro last month.

Like Ortega before him, Borges has taken refuge in neighborin­g Colombia. Ramirez, the former head of state oil company PDVSA and a powerful opponent of Maduro, has led to Spain.

The opposition has dismissed the court as a tool of Maduro, who it says has used his power to wrest control of state institutio­ns.

Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza earlier this week accused Ortega of being an “accomplice” in the August 4 incident, in which Maduro was seen reacting on live television to the irst of two explosions as he addressed a military parade in Caracas.

Maduro said the blasts were from explosives-laden drones sent to assassinat­e him, though opposition igures accuse him of fabricatin­g the incident to step up repression.

Ortega, an unwavering opponent of Maduro, denied any involvemen­t.

“My struggle against tyranny is only with weapons that the law gives me,” she replied in a tweet. “But you and Nicolas Maduro well know that when I plan things, I do them well. If I had been behind this plan, the country would be celebratin­g its freedom.”

Ortega participat­ed in a symbolic trial of the exiled opposition-run supreme court in Colombia which sentenced Maduro to 18 years for corruption on Thursday.

Ramirez, meanwhile, is accused of fraudulent embezzleme­nt as part of a “web of corruption” for which 90 exemployee­s have been arrested, part of a crackdown on opponents by Maduro.

Venezuela has arrested 14 people over the attack, including an opposition politician, a general and a colonel.

The united states on friday condemned alleged arbitrary detentions and forced confession­s by Caracas in its investigat­ion into the failed August 4 drone “attack”.

Peru’s top immigratio­n oficial said Friday that two Venezuelan civilians whom Caracas alleges were involved in recent drone blasts during a speech by President Nicolas Maduro do not appear to have set foot in Peru.

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