Stabroek News Sunday

Venezuela ‘congress in resistance’ rejects new super-assembly

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CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuela’s opposition-controlled congress yesterday rejected the self-proclaimed lawmaking authority of a new legislativ­e body elected last month at the behest of President Nicolas Maduro, widening the political divide in the crisis-hit country.

Congress’s declaratio­n of resistance followed statements from a group of 12 regional nations plus the United States on Friday, saying they would continue to regard congress, not the new constituen­t assembly, as the Venezuela’s only legitimate lawmaking body.

“This is a congress in resistance of an armed military dictatorsh­ip that took over its authority and gained militarily what it could not gain at the ballot box,” congress Vice President Freddy Guevara said in a special session.

The opposition won control of congress in 2015. But Maduro’s loyalist Supreme Court has tossed out every law it has passed as the oil-rich country slips deeper into a recession exacerbate­d by triple-digit inflation and acute shortages of food and medicines.

The constituen­t assembly was elected in late July to rewrite the constituti­on, which the unpopular Maduro billed as the only solution to bring about peace after more than four months of deadly opposition protests. The opposition boycotted the election, calling it an affront to democracy.

Maduro critics have called for an early presidenti­al election, which they are sure he would lose as his popularity shrinks along with the economy. On Friday the 545member assembly granted itself authority to pass laws on its own.

A bloc of countries calling itself the Lima Group, including Peru, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Colombia and seven other nations in the hemisphere late on Friday joined the United States in criticizin­g the assembly for “usurping” the powers of congress.

Maduro’s government issued a statement rejecting Washington’s “meddling” in its affairs. Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza told reporters he “regretted” that “some countries have expressed automatic solidarity” with congress rather than the assembly.

The new legislativ­e body has blamed the opposition for unrest that has killed more than 125 people since April as security forces met rock-throwing protesters with rubber bullets and water cannon. The United Nations said government troops used excessive force in many cases.

The assembly’s new truth commission will investigat­e opposition candidates running in October gubernator­ial elections, to see if they were involved in the deadly protests. Considerin­g that many opposition figures supported the demonstrat­ions, the commission could hobble their efforts at winning governorsh­ips in the upcoming vote.

Anti-government marches have stalled since the assembly was inaugurate­d on Aug. 5, and the opposition was stunned by a threat of US military action in Venezuela issued by President Donald Trump on Aug. 11.

The threat played into Maduro’s hands by supporting his oft-repeated assertion that the US “empire” wants to invade Venezuela to steal its oil. It was an idea that had been easily dismissed as absurd by opposition and US officials before Trump’s surprise statement that “a military option” was on the table for dealing with the worsening situation in Venezuela.

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