The Niagara Falls Review

Venezuela threatens to exit OAS as pressure on Maduro mounts

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FABIOLA SANCHEZ AND JOSHUA GOODMAN

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuela is threatenin­g to pull out of the Organizati­on of American States as the socialist government’s response to political unrest that has been blamed for 27 deaths in recent weeks draws rebuke from the hemisphere’s major powers.

Foreign Minister Delcy Rodriguez said on state TV late Tuesday that she had been instructed by President Nicolas Maduro to initiate the country’s withdrawal from the Washington-based OAS if the region’s foreign ministers hold a meeting on the country’s crisis without his administra­tion’s backing.

Her comments came hours before envoys to the OAS were scheduled to meet Wednesday to debate a proposal by Mexico, Brazil, the U.S. and 13 other nations to convene a special meeting of foreign ministers to discuss Venezuela’s “situation.”

“We’re not going to continue allowing legal and institutio­nal violations that are arbitrary and surpass any moral, ethical and licit boundary that nations in this regional organizati­on should respect,” Rodriguez said.

Hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan­s have flooded the streets over the last month to demand an end to Maduro’s presidency. The protests have frequently ended in violent confrontat­ions with security forces, which have used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse crowds, and there also have clashes with pro-government groups.

The unrest shows no sign of slowing down.

Thousands of protesters were marching Wednesday to deliver a message to the nation’s ombudsman, whose job is to stand up for citizens’ rights but who the opposition has tagged the “defenders of the dictator.” Demonstrat­ors were stopped by state security forces launching tear gas as they marched on the main highway in Caracas.

“The repression is very strong,” said Luis Florido, an opposition lawmaker, as he dodged plumes of tear gas being hurled behind him.

Venezuela’s chief prosecutor, Luisa Ortega Diaz, on Tuesday put a spotlight on the extent of the violence, saying more than 400 people had been injured and nearly 1,300 detained since the protests began in response to a Supreme Court ruling last month that stripped the opposition-controlled congress of much of its powers. The decision was later partially reversed amid a storm of internatio­nal criticism — and from Ortega Diaz herself.

Opposition leaders have blamed armed pro-government militias known as “colectivos” for a number of the deaths, while government officials have accused the opposition of working with criminal gangs to foment unrest.

A u t h o r i t i e s a n n o u n c e d We d n e s d a y t h a t C h r i s t i a n Humberto Ochoa Soriano, 22, was shot and killed during a Monday protest shortly he walked out of his home in Valencia, a city of east of Caracas. It was unknown if he was affiliated with the demonstrat­ion.

The swell of protests is the most violent in economical­ly struggling Venezuela since two months of anti-government demonstrat­ions in 2014 that resulted in dozens of deaths. Maduro has called for renewed dialogue, but opposition leaders have discarded that as an option after earlier talks collapsed in December.

Amid the unrest, internatio­nal pressure on Venezuela to schedule delayed regional elections and free political activists has been steadily mounting at the OAS and in other regional forum.

Rodriguez said the pressure being brought by the U.S. on some of its traditiona­l allies like Haiti to punish Venezuela was considerab­le. OAS Secretary General Luis Almagro has called on the group to suspend Venezuela for breaking the constituti­onal order, but he has so far been unable to rally two-thirds support among the group’s 35 members to carry out such a threat.

No country has ever withdrawn from the OAS since it was created in 1948 and it’s unclear how complicate­d the process would be.

As a counter to the OAS gathering, Rodriguez said her government was seeking a meeting next week of another regional group — the Community of Latin American and Caribbean states, which was championed as a rival to the OAS by the late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. It excludes Canada and the U.S.

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 ?? ARIANA CUBILLOS/AP PHOTO ?? A man walks with a Venezuelan flag amid tear gas launched by security forces blocking opponents to President Nicolas Maduro from marching to the Ombudsman’s office in downtown Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday. Hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan­s have...
ARIANA CUBILLOS/AP PHOTO A man walks with a Venezuelan flag amid tear gas launched by security forces blocking opponents to President Nicolas Maduro from marching to the Ombudsman’s office in downtown Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday. Hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan­s have...
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