Street challenges power in Venezuela crisis

Supporters of Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro demonstrate in the streets of Caracas on October 25, 2016. The opposition is planning nationwide street protests for Wednesday, the day it was to have begun collecting the four million signatures needed to trigger a recall referendum against Maduro but which electoral authorities blocked last week. / AFP PHOTO / Ronaldo SCHEMIDT

 

Caracas /AFP

Venezuela’s political rivals faced a test of strength on Wednesday, with the opposition vowing mass street protests as President Nicolas Maduro resists efforts to drive him from power.
The socialist president and center-right-dominated opposition accuse each other of mounting a “coup” in a volatile country rich in oil but short of food.
The crisis prompted Pope Francis to intervene on Monday, granting a private audience to Maduro, who said the sides had agreed to launch a “national dialogue” to settle the crisis. Leaders in the broad opposition coalition, the Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD), denied they had reached any agreement with the government on the terms of any talks.
They are furious at the authorities’ decision last week to halt their bid for a referendum on removing Maduro from power. They have called for massive nationwide protests on Wednesday—the first such rallies since hundreds of thousands of MUD supporters filled the streets of Caracas on September 1.
Maduro for his part called a meeting on Wednesday of his so-called National Defense Council, which includes the heads of the various branches of government.
He flexed his muscle on Tuesday with a rally of thousands of supporters.

Risk of unrest
Analysts have warned of a risk of violent unrest in Venezuela. Clashes at anti-government protests in 2014 left 43 people dead. On Monday a students’ group said 27 people were injured in clashes with police at a protest in the western city of San Cristobal.
Venezuelan authorities on Tuesday detained at the airport three Peruvian journalists working for the Mexican network Televisa and an Argentine photographer for the Associated Press.
One of the detained journalists wrote on Facebook that they would be sent home. “Incredible, declared inadmissible by Venezuela, we have been expelled from our neighboring country,” wrote Leonidas Chavez. “(…) Today I felt like a guillotine dropped on my neck.”
Slammed by a fall in global oil prices, Venezuela’s economy has crashed, sparking protests and looting driven by shortages of food, medicine and basic goods.
Maduro calls the economic crisis a capitalist conspiracy. The opposition blames his economic management.
A recent poll found that more than 75 percent of Venezuelans disapprove of Maduro. But he has vowed to resist efforts to sack him before his term ends in 2019.

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