Venezuelan National Assembly accuses President of ‘coup’
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Venezuela’s opposition-majority legislature declared Sunday
that President Nicolas Maduro’s government had committed a coup d’etat
by blocking a referendum on removing him from power, vowing mass
protests and international pressure.
Furious over the electoral authorities’ decision to suspend
the process of organizing a recall vote, opposition lawmakers passed a
resolution declaring “the breakdown of constitutional order” and “a coup
d’etat committed by the Nicolas Maduro regime.”
The measure came during an emergency session on the economic
and political crisis gripping the South American oil giant, which
briefly descended into chaos when a group of Maduro supporters forced
its way past security guards and burst into the National Assembly,
causing lawmakers to halt the proceedings for 45 minutes. The legislators then called on Venezuelans to “actively
defend” the constitution, declaring they would ask the international
community to “activate mechanisms” to restore democracy.
“An ongoing coup d’etat has been perpetrated in Venezuela,
culminating in the decision to rob us of a recall referendum. We’re here
to officially declare the regrettable and painful rupture of
constitutional order,” said majority leader Julio Borges of the
center-right opposition coalition, the Democratic Unity Roundtable.
On Tuesday, the assembly will “lay the groundwork for a
session that would include a legal and political trial of the president…
to determine what his role is in the interruption of constitutional
order,” Borges warned.
Pro-Maduro lawmakers accused the opposition itself of seeking to stage a coup.
“Don’t try to take advantage of these hard times to finish off our nation,” deputy Earle Herrera said. Dual national?
Despite its harsh words, the legislature’s resolution is largely symbolic.
The Supreme Court has declared the legislative majority in
contempt of court for defying it by swearing in three lawmakers at the
center of an electoral fraud investigation.
The opposition, which says the accusations are trumped up, condemns the high court as a Maduro lapdog.
The court has slapped down every bill passed by the legislature since the opposition took control in January.
Lawmakers nevertheless said they were going to address the
issue of Maduro’s purported dual nationality — Colombian and Venezuelan —
in the session on Tuesday. If confirmed, it would make him
constitutionally ineligible to be president.
Ruling party bloc leader Hector Rodriguez said that Maduro
sent a message from the Middle East, where he is on an official tour,
“Tell them that I send my greeting, send a hug and that I will see them
at the table to have a dialogue.”
Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro / AFP PHOTO / JUAN CEVALLOS
New low
Venezuela’s crisis hit a new low Thursday when the National
Electoral Council indefinitely suspended the recall referendum process
after criminal courts in five states ruled the opposition had committed
fraud in an initial petition drive.
Holding a recall referendum — a right guaranteed under
Venezuela’s constitution — was the opposition’s main strategy to get rid
of the man they accuse of driving the once-booming country to the brink
of collapse.
The opposition had been gearing up for the last hurdle in
the complex process: a three-day drive starting Wednesday to collect
signatures from four million voters demanding a recall vote.
Now that the authorities have stymied that bid, furious
opposition leaders have promised the start of a new wave of nationwide
protests on Wednesday. Maduro touring Middle East
Political analysts have warned of a risk of violent unrest in this country of 30 million people.
Hit by the fall of global oil prices, the economy has crashed. Food shortages have prompted riots and looting in recent months.
Rioting at anti-government protests in 2014 left 43 people dead.
But the divided opposition has struggled to mobilize sustained, large-scale protests since then.
Maduro, the political heir to late president Hugo Chavez
(1999-2013), derides his opponents as elitists and calls the economic
crisis a capitalist conspiracy.
He accuses the “fascist right” and the United States of plotting to overthrow him.
In recession since the beginning of 2014, Venezuela’s
economy is facing a contraction of 10 percent this year and inflation of
475 per cent, with the International Monetary Fund predicting a rise to
1,660 per cent next year.
The latest twist in the crisis comes as Maduro is on a trip
abroad, touring Middle Eastern countries to push his plan for major oil
producers to slash output.
Venezuela desperately needs oil prices to rise to reverse its economic crash.
Public support for Maduro has crumbled amid the crisis.
A recent poll found more than 75 per cent of Venezuelans disapprove of the socialist leader.
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