Maduro govt backers beat lawmakers
Militants storm into Venezuela assembly
CARACAS: Venezuelan pro-government militants wielding sticks and pipes stormed into the opposition-held National Assembly on Wednesday and beat lawmakers, leaving seven hurt, including three with blood streaming from their heads.
Later, a hundred or so government supporters at the gates of the legislature blocked 350 lawmakers, staffers and other people from leaving as a special independence day session of congress turned into a violent, nine-hour siege in which police avoided intervening.
In the end police and soldiers with shields formed a cordon to keep the government militants at bay as the lawmakers eventually were allowed to leave.
The armed group broke through the gates of the only state institution still nominally controlled by the opposition, in another episode of political violence following three months of chaos in the oil-rich but now povertystricken country.
The US State Department condemned the attack as “an assault on the democratic principles cherished by the men and women who struggled for Venezuela’s independence 206 years ago today”. It also criticised what it called the increasing authoritarianism of President Nicolas Maduro’s government.
The attackers were supporting Mr Maduro, who faces opposition demands for elections to remove him from office — though he denounced the violence.
“I absolutely condemn these deeds. I will never be complicit in any act of violence,” Mr Maduro said in a speech at a military parade in Caracas. He did not acknowledge that those who stormed congress were supporters of his side.
“I have ordered an investigation, and may justice be done.”
Military police guarding the site stood by as about 100 intruders brandishing sticks and pipes, and one of them a gun, broke through the front gate of the National Assembly and into the interior gardens and then the building itself.
The mob reached the corridors of the congressional building, striking and injuring lawmakers and ordering journalists to leave the premises.
The intruders, some wearing masks, set off percussion bombs, triggering scenes of panic and chaos as police stood by and watched. Lawmakers barricaded themselves inside rooms with furniture and rugs. When it was all over, there were bloodstains on walls.
The opposition said seven lawmakers were injured and five of them were taken to hospital.
Deputies also said that two employees of the assembly were hurt.
“This does not hurt as much as seeing every day how we are losing our country,” lawmaker Armando Armas told reporters as he got into an ambulance with his head wrapped in bloodied bandages.
During the later siege, government backers gathered at the gates screamed “killers” and “terrorists” at the opposition lawmakers inside. At one point, lawmaker Williams Davila of the foreign affairs commission told reporters: “We have been kidnapped.”
Police with shields protected them as they finally filed out of the legislature building.
Three months of anti-government protests have seen 91 people killed in clashes with police.
Protesters blame Mr Maduro for a desperate economic crisis that has caused shortages of food, medicine and other basics. He says the chaos is the result of a US-backed capitalist conspiracy by the opposition.
The opposition-controlled legislature was holding a special session to mark independence day when the government supporters burst in.
“We will not be intimidated by these acts of violence. No one here will surrender to this dictatorship,” said senior opposition lawmaker Freddy Guevara.
Earlier Maduro’s vice-president Tareck El Aissami had made an impromptu appearance in the congress along with the head of the armed forces, Vladimir Padrino Lopez, and ministers.
Mr Aissami made an address in which he called on Maduro supporters to come to the legislature to show support for the president.
Maduro retains the public backing of the military high command — a key factor in keeping him in power, according to analysts — but the president last month said he was replacing four senior commanders of the armed forces.