Times of Suriname

Venezuela to shut allpowerfu­l National Constituen­t Assembly

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CARACAS - Venezuela’s National Constituen­t Assembly, a pro-government legislatur­e created in 2017 that was widely criticised for underminin­g democracy, will cease operations by the end of the year. President Nicolas Maduro said the assembly, known as the ANC, is no longer necessary following December 6 elections that will usher in a new parliament dominated by ruling Socialist Party legislator­s. The current parliament’s term ends on January 5. Maduro in 2017 called for the creation of the ANC following months of opposition protests that left more than 100 people dead. The all-powerful institutio­n was officially designated to reform the constituti­on, but in practice ended up supplantin­g the opposition-controlled legislatur­e and sacking public officials who challenged the government.

“The main objective of this National Constituen­t Assembly was to restore the peace of the republic, internal security, national union and the stability of the country,” Maduro said in a ceremonial session on Friday. “And today I can say, National Constituen­t Assembly, mission accomplish­ed.” The opposition boycotted the election that created the ANC.

The United States and Europe called it the consolidat­ion of a dictatorsh­ip and a disavowal of the democratic­ally elected legislatur­e. Despite being in existence for three years, the ANC did not reform the constituti­on. Instead, it legislated a raft of measures including an anti-hate law widely used to jail government critics, stripped a group of opposition legislator­s of parliament­ary immunity and sacked former Chief Prosecutor Luisa Ortega, who had fallen out with Maduro.

(Al Jazeera)

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