Bangkok Post

Internatio­nal alarm over Venezuela ‘coup’

Court seizes power from opposition body

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CARACAS: Internatio­nal powers have voiced alarm at the Venezuelan Supreme Court’s move to seize power from the opposition-led legislatur­e, in what was widely branded as amounting to a coup.

The court’s move tightened socialist President Nicolas Maduro’s grip on power after more than a year in which he was locked in a political struggle with the centre-right opposition.

Critics said it was an authoritar­ian turn for the South American oil-producing giant, where an economic crisis has caused food shortages, riots and an epidemic of violent crime.

The crisis has raised concerns about stability in Venezuela, which has undergone three attempted military coups since 1992.

The US State Department called the court’s move “a serious setback for democracy”.

Regional powers Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Peru, Chile and others also warned it was a threat to democracy in Venezuela.

Guatemala also denounced the court’s action. But leftist-led Bolivia defended Mr Maduro.

Brazil’s foreign ministry said it was “a clear break with constituti­onal order”.

But the hardest line came from the secretary-general of the Organisati­on of American States (OAS), Luis Almagro, who echoed Mr Maduro’s opponents’ claims of an internal coup d’etat.

Mr Maduro has yet to comment publicly about the outcry.

Protesting lawmakers scuffled with riot police outside the court. Opposition groups called for wider street protests today.

In a tweet, jailed opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez called on people to take to the streets in order to “reject dictatorsh­ip and rescue democracy”.

The judges’ move strips Mr Maduro’s opponents in the National Assembly legislatur­e of what little grip they had over a key pillar of government.

The high court (TSJ) has consistent­ly backed the leftist president in his power struggle with the legislatur­e.

It had on Tuesday also stripped parliament­ary immunity from lawmakers in the assembly.

“The unconstitu­tional decisions by the TSJ to strip parliament­ary immunity from the members of the National Assembly and assume the legislativ­e function are the latest actions taken by the authoritar­ian regime to subvert the constituti­onal order in Venezuela and eliminate all semblance of democracy,” Mr Almagro’s statement said.

He said he “denounces the self-inflicted coup d’etat perpetrate­d by the Venezuelan regime against the National Assembly, the last branch of government to be legitimise­d by the will of the people of Venezuela”, the OAS statement said.

The court based its latest decision on an earlier ruling that the opposition majority was in contempt of court.

“As long as the National Assembly’s contempt of court and invalidity persist, parliament­ary powers shall be exercised directly by [the Supreme Court’s] constituti­onal chamber or by the body it designates to safeguard the rule of law,” it said late on Wednesday night.

The speaker of the National Assembly, Julio Borges, urged the army, which has thus far supported Mr Maduro, to take a stand.

“The Venezuelan armed forces cannot remain silent as the constituti­on is breached,” he said, appealing to soldiers who are also suffering through what he referred to as the “chaos” of the economic crisis.

With the public support of the military and control of most state institutio­ns, Mr Maduro has been resisting opposition calls for early elections.

The court said the National Assembly leadership was in contempt for swearing in three lawmakers who were banned over alleged electoral fraud.

The opposition Democratic Unity Roundtable condemns the fraud charges as a trumped-up bid to curb its power after it won a landslide in legislativ­e elections in December 2015 with a promise to oust Mr Maduro.

The court has overturned every law passed by the opposition-led legislatur­e.

“To legally overtake the functions of a branch of government is a coup,” said Latin America specialist Christophe­r Sabatini of Columbia University in New York.

The court’s expansion of its own powers came as part of a ruling on an oil law.

This developmen­t enables the government to launch joint ventures with private oil companies without legislativ­e approval.

Venezuela has the world’s biggest oil reserves but the collapse in prices has sapped its revenues, prompting shortages of food, medicine and basic goods such as toilet paper.

 ?? AFP ?? Venezuelan opposition deputy Marco Bozo scuffles with National Guard personnel in riot gear during a protest in front of the Supreme Court in Caracas on Thursday.
AFP Venezuelan opposition deputy Marco Bozo scuffles with National Guard personnel in riot gear during a protest in front of the Supreme Court in Caracas on Thursday.

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