Montreal Gazette

Opposition calls for countrywid­e demonstrat­ions

Opposition appeals to army after failed revolt

- ANDREW ROSATI AND FABIOLA ZERPA

It was still dark, but Venezuela’s army had already smothered a mutiny and turned to tear-gassing protesters supporting the rebels. Later in the morning, the loyalist Supreme Court announced that it would depose the National Assembly’s head and nullify its motion declaring President Nicolas Maduro’s rule invalid. Then, Brazil’s president predicted a speedy regime change.

It was only Monday. Governing this hungry and restive nation has become a balancing act for Maduro, who faces a litany of threats, any one of which could break his grip on power.

Foes at home and abroad have rallied behind the opposition’s fresh-faced leader, assembly president Juan Guaido, who’s calling on world leaders and the military to recognize him as the rightful head of state.

Open protest meetings and spontaneou­s rebellions are building, and the opposition is calling for countrywid­e demonstrat­ions Wednesday.

“The government is acting quickly to avoid anything that could lead to a chain reaction,’’ said Marco Antonio Ponce, the director of the Venezuelan Social Conflict Observator­y, a Caracas non-profit. “Protests are only going to continue.”

Maduro has tried to insulate himself as his country, once South America’s richest, spiralled into dysfunctio­n and misery: He won a six-year term last year in an election widely viewed as fraudulent, he has jailed and exiled dissidents, and he has created a so-called Constituti­onal Assembly that is politicall­y omnipotent. But his regime remains vigilant for any spark that could kindle his country into flame.

One was stamped out before dawn Monday. About two dozen national guardsmen raided Caracas military outposts, stealing weapons and holding other soldiers captive before gathering in a fort near the city centre. Videos posted on social media show guardsmen arguing with their hostages about why they wouldn’t break ranks given the state of the country, while others called on civilians to rise up.

“Didn’t you want the military to take the streets and light the fuse?” a guardsmen who identified himself as Sgt. Luis Bandres said in one of the recordings. “We’re lighting it here.”

Small demonstrat­ions sprang up throughout the capital following the attack, with residents gathering in major avenues and dragging debris into the streets. The Venezuelan Social Conflict Observator­y, which monitors national unrest, registered over two dozen protests in central and west Caracas.

Speaking on state television, Diosdado Cabello, the head of the Constituti­onal Assembly, told reporters that counter-security forces quashed the rebellion, detaining 27 people — including Bandres — and recovering the looted arms. Investigat­ions are underway across the armed forces to root out dissidents and the government “has no fears about taking the actions that need to be done,” he said.

In 2017, Maduro, the 56-year-old successor to the late Hugo Chavez, relied on security forces to beat back a wave of anti-government demonstrat­ions resulting in more than 120 deaths.

Demonstrat­ions may now be less visible, but they’re more frequent. According to the Venezuelan Social Conflict Observator­y, over 12,700 protests took place in Venezuela in 2018, many over rising prices and crumbling basic services, a 30 per cent increase from the year prior.

Ponce said their spread demonstrat­es the government’s dwindling support among the poor, long seen as the bedrock of Chavez’s political project.

Since Guaido took the helm of the opposition-dominated National Assembly on Jan. 5, he has argued that the constituti­on lets him serve as acting president in the absence of a lawful government. The idea appears to be gaining traction with Venezuelan­s and regional powers, including the U.S. and the Organizati­on of American States. On Monday, Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro told reporters at the Davos World Economic Forum that he hoped Venezuela’s government changed “soon.”

Last week, the National Assembly, which is the only institutio­n not controlled by ruling socialist party loyalists, declared Maduro’s rule illegitima­te and approved the framework that would allow for a caretaker government. The move was largely symbolic; Venezuela’s Supreme Court stripped the body of almost all its powers in 2017, but on Monday it went even further.

The court declared the legislatur­e in contempt and nullified all its recent actions, including the appointmen­t of Guaido as its president. The 35-year-old said he wouldn’t back down and redoubled his calls to streets Wednesday.

Guaido released a video appealing to the military to not suppress the demonstrat­ions. “We’re not asking you for a coup,” he said repeating his offer of amnesty. “We’re asking you not to shoot us, and to defend the right of the people to be heard.”

Discontent has been simmering in the armed forces, long seen as the key power broker in Venezuela. Over the past year, the government has quietly jailed dozens of soldiers accused of conspiring against the regime.

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 ?? YURI CORTEZ/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? People protest at the Cotiza Bolivarian National Guard headquarte­rs in Caracas, Venezuela, on Monday in response to the arrest of about two dozen National Guardsmen who mounted an uprising against President Nicolas Maduro.
YURI CORTEZ/AFP/GETTY IMAGES People protest at the Cotiza Bolivarian National Guard headquarte­rs in Caracas, Venezuela, on Monday in response to the arrest of about two dozen National Guardsmen who mounted an uprising against President Nicolas Maduro.

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