As Venezuela unrest spreads, Maduro
presses on with plans to rewrite charter
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[May 24, 2017]
By Alexandra Ulmer and Corina Pons
CARACAS (Reuters) - Faced with mounting
unrest, Venezuela's unpopular leftist President Nicolas Maduro vowed on
Tuesday to push ahead in July with the formation of a "constituent
assembly" to rewrite the constitution before regional elections in
December.
The South American OPEC member has been racked by strife, with 55 people
killed during unrest in the past two months as public anger boiled over
due to an economic meltdown that has left many Venezuelans scrabbling to
afford three meals a day.
In an apparent bid to show the government was seeking a democratic
solution, the head of the pro-government electoral council said voting
for a controversial "constituent assembly" would be held in late July.
Regional gubernatorial elections, meant to have been held last year,
would take place on Dec. 10, he said.
The opposition reacted with fury, convinced that these moves were
Maduro's way of clinging to power.
Maduro's rivals fear that a new constituent assembly could rewrite rules
or exclude opposition parties, making a sham of future elections that
would likely vanquish the ruling socialists if the polls were free and
fair.
"Today's decision is nothing more than an evil announcement meant to
divide, distract, and confuse Venezuelans further," said Congress
president Julio Borges, the opposition leader whose coalition is pushing
for early elections, humanitarian aid to alleviate food and medicine
shortages, and freedom for jailed activists.
"Today we've entered a new stage and that means more struggle and more
street action," Borges said in a video on Tuesday night.
Riots and looting have raised risks that protests could spin out of
control, given the widespread hunger, anger at Maduro and easy access to
weapons in one of the world's most violent countries.
A Supreme Court magistrate decried the planned assembly, saying it was
"not the solution to the crisis" and called on Maduro to "think
carefully" to avoid more bloodshed.
Maduro was undaunted on Tuesday, presenting the proposed 540-member
"constituent assembly" as a way to defuse anti-government protests,
which he says are part of a U.S.-backed conspiracy to overthrow "21st
Century socialism."
"Votes or bullets, what do the people want?" Maduro asked a crowd of
red-shirted supporters waving Venezuelan flags at the Miraflores
presidential palace.
"Let's go to elections now!" he said, before detailing how the new
assembly will be partially elected by votes at a municipal level and
partially by different groups, including workers, farmers, students, and
indigenous people.
In a telling sign of internal dissent, Venezuela's state prosecutor
warned that Maduro's plan for a grassroots congress risked deepening the
crisis.
"Persistent and increasingly violent unrest will eventually prompt key
stakeholders to abandon Maduro and negotiate a rapid transition that
sets a timetable for new elections; the precise timing is impossible to
predict, however," the Eurasia Group political consultancy said in a
note to clients on Tuesday.
[to top of second column] |
Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro (L) hands Venezuela's National
Electoral Council (CNE) President Tibisay Lucena a document with the
details of the proposal for a "constituent assembly" to reform the
constitution during a meeting in Caracas, Venezuela May 23, 2017.
Miraflores Palace/Handout via REUTERS
"DESPERATE PEOPLE"
Enraged by the economic crisis and perceived lack of democratic
solutions, some Venezuelans have taken out their ire by publicly shaming
government officials or knocking down statues of Hugo Chavez, the late
firebrand leftist leader who governed Venezuela from 1999 to 2013.
In the southeastern city of Puerto Ordaz, the president of a state-run
company was "kidnapped," beaten up, and stripped naked by protesters,
the government said.
In the lower middle-class Caracas neighborhood of El Paraiso, masked men
on Monday night shot up an apartment building and parked cars in what
one resident, who asked not to be named out of fear of reprisals, said
was retaliation for barricades set up nearby by opposition sympathizers.
Hundreds of people have been injured in the violence, around 2,700
arrested, with 1,000 still behind bars, and 335 tried in military
tribunals, according to rights groups.
Looting has become more frequent, with many Venezuelans reduced to
surviving on basics like yucca or corn flour.
In the usually calm peninsula of Paraguana, a food warehouse was looted
on Sunday night. Some 17 people were arrested.
"The rumors started that they were going to sell something, so everyone
came out and started to beat on the warehouse door, there were a lot of
desperate people, kids and pregnant women," said a local resident,
asking to remain anonymous.
"The neighbors knocked the door down, they destroyed everything, and
made off with bags of flour and pasta. Police and National Guard had to
ask for reinforcements, they threw tear gas and we heard shots."
(Additional reporting by Mircely Guanipa, Brian Ellsworth, Cristian
Veron, Eyanir Chinea, Andreina Aponte, Diego Ore, Maria Ramirez, and
Andrew Cawthorne; Writing by Alexandra Ulmer; Editing by Andrew Hay &
Simon Cameron-Moore)
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