The Philippine Star

Maduro promises referendum to calm crisis

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CARACAS (AFP) — Venezuela President Nicolas Maduro has offered to hold a referendum on contested constituti­onal reforms in an apparent bid to calm critics in his own camp as he resists opposition efforts to remove him from office.

The surprise announceme­nt late Thursday followed two months of deadly unrest during anti-government protests and signs of division in the socialist leader’s side.

On Friday, student protesters entered the headquarte­rs of official television channel VTV, where they lobbed accusation­s against Communicat­ions Minister Ernesto Villegas.

The opposition says his constituti­onal reform plan is a bid to cling to power and key allies such as Attorney General Luisa Ortega have broken ranks with him, arguing it is undemocrat­ic.

“In light of what is happening in this country, I would like to push back this Constituen­t Assembly, ask the National Electoral Council to advance regional elections and continue to press for dialogue,” Ortega told Union Radio.

Maduro’s announceme­nt, at a Cabinet meeting, came just hours after Ortega filed a legal challenge against the plan. The president called opponents of the move “traitors.”

Maduro aims to set up an elected constituti­onal reform body called a constituen­t assembly. His opponents say he will fill it with his allies.

Analysts were skeptical about Maduro’s referendum announceme­nt, saying that constituti­onally he was not authorized to call such a vote.

“It is a political ploy,” said analyst Luis Vicente Leon, president of polling firm Datanalisi­s.

“It breaks the main criticism” leveled at Maduro by Ortega and other critics, “to lower the tension and calm the internal demons” in the government camp, Leon said.

Ortega has been a traditiona­l ally of the socialist leadership since the time of Maduro’s late predecesso­r Hugo Chavez.

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