Oman Daily Observer

UN urges Venezuelan President Maduro to uphold rule of law

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GENEVA: The United Nations called on Venezuela on Friday to uphold the rule of law and freedom of assembly, and criticised President Nicolas Maduro’s government for moves against the chief state prosecutor

Critics of Maduro have taken to the streets almost daily for three months to protest against what they call the creation of a dictatorsh­ip. The protests, which have left nearly 80 dead, frequently culminate in violent clashes with security forces.

Ruling Socialist Party officials have launched a series of attacks against chief state prosecutor Luisa Ortega, from accusation­s of insanity to promoting violence, after her highprofil­e break with the government.

The Supreme Court’s decision last Wednesday to “begin removal proceeding­s against the Attorney General, freeze her assets and ban her from leaving the country is deeply worrying, as is the ongoing violence,” UN human rights spokesman Rupert Colville told a Geneva briefing.

The Supreme Court’s Constituti­onal Chamber has nullified Ortega’s appointmen­t of a deputy attorney general, naming someone else in violation of the law, he said. It also transferre­d some of her functions to the ombudspers­on.

“Since March, the Attorney General has taken important steps to defend human rights, documentin­g deaths during the wave of demonstrat­ions, insisting on the need for due process and the importance of the separation of powers, and calling for people who have been arbitraril­y detained to be immediatel­y released,” Colville said.

The court’s decision “appears to seek to strip her office of its mandate and responsibi­lities as enshrined in the Venezuelan Constituti­on, and undermine the office’s independen­ce”.

“We urge all powers of the Venezuelan state to respect the constituti­on and the rule of law, and call on the government to ensure the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and freedom of opinion and expression are guaranteed,” Colville said.

In a separate statement, the UN special rapporteur on the independen­ce of judges rejected what it called the latest step against democratic institutio­ns in Venezuela.

The independen­t expert, Diego García-Sayán, said that a hearing was scheduled on Tuesday “during which a decision will be taken on whether to prosecute” Ortega following accusation­s by a government MP of “serious misconduct”.

“Any investigat­ion of judicial actions must be carried out in a transparen­t manner and with strict respect for due process and the legal system,” he said. “It is essential to avoid any kind of intimidati­on against the Attorney General.”

 ?? — AFP ?? Riot police officers try to prevent anti-government demonstrat­ors from gathering to protest in Caracas.
— AFP Riot police officers try to prevent anti-government demonstrat­ors from gathering to protest in Caracas.

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