Bangkok Post

Court backs charter rewrite

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CARACAS: Venezuela’s Supreme Court on Monday rejected the chief prosecutor’s motion to stop President Nicolas Maduro’s push to rewrite the constituti­on as the restive nation continued to be rocked by protests and a transit strike.

The Supreme Court’s electoral branch declared Luisa Ortega Diaz’s request inadmissib­le on the same day anti-government demonstrat­ors were marching toward the high court to protest its refusal to stop Mr Maduro’s special assembly.

Opposition leaders said pro-government armed groups known as “colectivos” clashed with protesters and journalist­s near the Supreme Court and witnesses’ videos showed fistfights and people being shoved to the ground at the demonstrat­ion site. National guardsmen in black helmets and bulletproo­f vests stretched across a street with plastic shields, blocking protesters from reaching the court.

The decision came four days after Ortega Diaz made an impassione­d plea on the Supreme Court steps, grasping Venezuela’s small blue constituti­on book in her hands and declaring the future of the nation’s democracy was at stake.

Two months of anti-government protests have left at least 68 people dead as demonstrat­ors demand new presidenti­al elections in the face of triple-digit inflation that keeps rising, soaring crime and crippling food and medical shortages.

Venezuelan­s in Caracas awoke on Monday to find their city paralysed by a public transporta­tion strike that union leaders said stretched through 90% of the capital. Transit workers said they were protesting against unsafe work conditions and demanding the release of a colleague detained nearly two weeks ago. Bus driver Santos Quevedo was charged with terrorism after allegedly transporti­ng a group of opposition protesters, but local reports say the government opponents forced him to give them a ride.

As during previous protests, the government closed several metro stations.

Speaking outside the Supreme Court, union leaders said transit workers are the first to wake up in the morning and often exposed to dangerous conditions in a country with one of the highest homicide rates in the world.

“Every time we leave our homes we don’t know if we’ll return alive,” said Pedro Jimenez, president of a local union called the Southwest Transporte­rs Bloc. He demanded that the government take action to ensure drivers’ safety.

Three kilometers away, the Venezuelan Red Cross draped a giant white flag with a red cross above its entrance, an act usually reserved for extraordin­ary events such as natural disasters, to identify it as a neutral safe haven.

The last time the flag is believed to have been raised was in April 2013 during the presidenti­al election to replace the late president Hugo Chavez, which Mr Maduro won by a narrow vote.

The Red Cross raised the flag again as a protective measure in light of recent protests in which authoritie­s have used tear gas near the institutio­n’s hospital, said Jose Ramon Gonzalez, the group’s national relief director. Though the institutio­n itself has not been attacked, Mr Gonzalez said the flag is meant to help protect both medical aid workers and patients arriving at the hospital.

Mr Gonzalez said the agency has treated 235 patients in Caracas during the recent wave of protests. He earlier said it had treated more than 500 people nationwide.

More than 1,000 people have been injured nationwide in a wave of unrest unleashed after the Supreme Court in late March stripped the opposition-controlled National Assembly of its last powers, a decision later reserved amid a storm of internatio­nal criticism.

 ?? AFP ?? Anti-government demonstrat­ors participat­e in an attack on the administra­tion headquarte­rs of the Supreme Court of Justice as part of protests against President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas on Monday.
AFP Anti-government demonstrat­ors participat­e in an attack on the administra­tion headquarte­rs of the Supreme Court of Justice as part of protests against President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas on Monday.

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