Calgary Herald

Venezuela Opposition slams ‘coup’ by Maduro

- MAYELA ARMAS BRIAN ELLSWORTH AND

CARACAS• Venezuela’ s government on Sunday used troops to block lawmakers from re-electing opposition leader Juan Guaido as congress chief, allowing the ruling Socialist Party to hand the post to a lawmaker recently expelled from the opposition.

The gambit was dismissed as a sham by opposition leaders and an official in Washington, who accused President Nicolas Maduro of snatching control of congress — the only major state institutio­n not controlled by his allies.

Installing legislator Luis Parra as new congress chief may help Maduro to sideline Guaido, who led a 2019 opposition groundswel­l by assuming an interim presidency that has been recognized by more than 50 countries.

“We alert the world that the Maduro regime is seeking to carry out a parliament­ary coup with (the Socialist Party) and swear in National Assembly leadership against the will of the parliament­ary majority,” tweeted opposition legislator Carlos Valero.

Legislator­s attempting to approach congress on Sunday told Reuters they had to pass through five sequential checkpoint­s of police and National Guard troops, where officials would slowly review credential­s and at each stage refuse to allow some of them through.

Socialist Party legislator­s in the early afternoon took control of the session and nominated Parra as the new Congress chief, according to a Reuters witness.

They later said this was justified by the absence of lawmakers including Guaido, who in one video is shown unsuccessf­ully attempting to climb over a fence into the palace before being pushed back by troops.

Opposition leaders said legislator­s would re-elect Guaido in a separate legislativ­e session at the headquarte­rs of a local newspaper, paving the way for two separate Venezuelan parliament­s with competing claims for legitimacy.

Following a confused melee on the floor of parliament, an impromptu vote was held through a show of hands but without counting each individual vote, as required by parliament­ary regulation­s, according to the Reuters witness. Venezuela’s state television did not broadcast the vote.

It resumed live coverage amid an improvised swearing-in ceremony for Parra, who was expelled last year from opposition party First Justice for allegedly helping burnish the reputation of a businessma­n associated with Maduro’s government.

Parra denies the accusation­s. Since his expulsion from First Justice, he has been harshly critical of Guaido’s leadership. He and other legislator­s also ensnared in the corruption scandal have described themselves as being in “rebellion.”

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