Venezuela Opposition Continues  Protest - Is Coup in the Works

 
 
 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/apr/16/nicolas-maduro-accuses-oppositio
n-coup-protest


 

Virginia Lopez  
The Guardian  (UK)


 
 
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
 


 


 




















 
 
    *   _Nicolás  Maduro accuses opposition of coup plot as poll protests 
turn  deadly_ 
(http://portside.org/print/2013-04-17/venezuela-opposition-continues-protest-coup-works#1)
  
    *   Venezuela's opposition make noise against Nicolás Maduro's  victory
 
Nicolás Maduro accuses  opposition of coup plot as poll protests turn deadly
 
Venezuela's president-elect likens demonstrations to 2002 attempt against  
Chávez as seven die in post-election violence
 
Virginia Lopez in Caracas
 
April 16, 2013
_The  Guardian (UK)_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/apr/16/nicolas-maduro-accuses-opposition-coup-protest)
  [1]
 
Venezuela's president-elect, Nicolás Maduro, has announced that five people 
 had been killed during violent protests across the country following the 
dispute  election that gave him a 1.6-percentage point victory.
 
Claiming electoral fraud, the opposition candidate, Henrique Capriles, has  
asked for a recount, a request Maduro had originally accepted during a 
televised  speech on Sunday but then dismissed on Tuesday along with 
high-ranking officials  and the head of the electoral commission (CNE), Tibisay 
Lucena.
 
Lucena, whose house has been allegedly attacked by protesters, said 54% of  
the electronic vote had been audited and that the automated system was  
bullet-proof. Throughout Tuesday, Capriles supporters flocked to the streets to 
 contest the result.
 
The general attorney, Luisa Ortega Díaz, said seven people had been killed  
during the clashes and another 61 injured, but gave no further details.
 
Maduro described the opposition's protest as part of a well-orchestrated  
coup attempt, likening the street protests to similar events that took place 
11  years ago during a short-lived coup that ousted Hugo Chávez for two 
days. "This  is the a foretold chronicle of another coup attempt by the extreme 
right,"  Maduro said.
 
Throughout the day the state-run channel VTV broadcast archival footage of  
the 2002 coup, while warning viewers that the country could be facing 
similar  destabilising efforts led by the opposition.
 
On Tuesday, during Maduro's first press conference as president-elect,  
Venezuelans across the country gathered on balconies and rooftops to bang pots  
and pans, a common form of protest referred to as "cacerolazo".
 
While the deafening protest took place, Maduro reported from Miraflores,  
the presidential palace, that the homes of several government officials had 
been  attacked. He also showed pictures of what appeared to be burning tyres 
in front  of several headquarters of the government party, PSUV, in smaller 
cities.
 
Images broadcast on Globovision, an opposition channel, showed tens of  
thousands of people gathered outside the CNE offices in Merida, while tanks  
guarded the fringes. Similar images were coming from other cities around the  
country.
 
Capriles has asked Venezuelans to peacefully gather at the local  
headquarters of the CNE to demand a total vote recount.
 
He has also called for a massive march for Wednesday.
 
Maduro is scheduled to be sworn in this Friday.
 
 
Venezuela's opposition  make noise against Nicolás Maduro's victory
 
Election loser Henrique Capriles calls off march in favour of pots-and-pans 
 protest as both sides trade accusations
 
by Virginia Lopez in Caracas
 
April 16, 2013
_The  Guardian (UK)_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/apr/17/venezuela-opposition-protest-maduro-victory)
  [2]
 
Venezuela's opposition leader, Henrique Capriles, has called off the march  
he planned to lead to the headquarters of the National Electorate Council 
to  demand a total recount of Sunday's electoral vote which gave Nicolás 
Maduro,  Hugo Chávez's hand-picked successor, a razor-thin margin.
 
The announcement came after President Maduro banned the opposition march  
from entering Caracas. He denounced the two-day anti-government street 
protests  as part of a US-led coup attempt reminiscent of the April 2002 coup 
that 
saw  Chávez ousted from power for two days.
 
"That march will not enter Caracas. It is my responsibility as president  
not to allow this march - I am defending them from themselves," Maduro said 
from  the headquarters of the state-run oil company PDVSA. "While we 
conducted a  campaign within the principles established by our constitution, 
they 
[the  opposition] waged an electric warfare, an economic warfare."
 
He added: "We have proofs of a US-led plot."
 
The march was called by Capriles after Maduro was proclaimed president on  
Monday without the manual recount previously agreed by both candidates. It 
is to  be replaced with nightly cacerolazos, a popular form of protest where 
pots and  pans are banged for hours on end.
 
Capriles, who accused the government of planning to infiltrate tomorrow's  
march to generate street violence, had made frequent complaints about unfair 
 conditions during the campaign. His objections included Maduro's use of 
state  resources for campaigning purposes and his unlimited air time in the  
state-controlled media.
 

 
Opposition presidential candidate Henrique Capriles has called off the  
planned opposition march in Caracas. 
credit - The Guardian / Ramon  Espinosa/AP

 
"[The government] are trying to hide the undeniable - people's discontent  
at all the abuse that's happened," Capriles said. "Our request has not been 
to  change the results. Our petition is to have a vote-by-vote count." He 
said he  would honour the results of a total recount.
 
Both camps made references to the April 2002 coup where Chávez returned to  
power after being ousted for two days following a deadly clash between  
protesters and government forces.
 
"A group of Venezuela's fascists is trying to subvert the order just like  
they did on 11 April [2002]," said Diosdado Cabello, the president of the  
National Assembly, adding that the street marches and nationwide protests 
were a  replay of the "carmonazo", the attempt to establish a transitional 
government  following the coup.
 
In one of a series of nationwide televised broadcasts, Maduro claimed the  
opposition had set in motion a US-backed coup against his government which 
had  included boycotting the country's electric system during the 10-day 
campaign and  more recently failing to recognize the elections' results.
 
Maduro, who was endorsed by Chávez before the former president died of  
cancer last month, had a 14-point lead at the beginning of the campaign but by  
the time he won two weeks later this had fallen to a 1.6 margin.
 
The sharp drop in what many had predicted would be a comfortable victory  
was seen by analysts as a result of the disillusionment of Chávez supporters  
dissatisfied with the country's frequent power outages, looming economic 
crisis,  chronic food shortages and soaring crime rate.
 
As the country seemed set for a major political crisis, Néstor Reverol, the 
 minister of defence, said 12 people armed with mortars seeking to 
destabilise  the country had been detained. Reverol warned that no acts of 
vandalism 
would be  tolerated.
 
"We are obliged to exercise the legitimate authority that our laws confer  
upon us," Reverol said. "We will not allow one millimetre of destabilising  
efforts."
 
Capriles reiterated that he had called for peace to be maintained and  
emphasised that all he wanted was a recount of the votes.
 
"The country needs calm, and that we know that we can exercise our rights  
without violence," Capriles said from his party's headquarters. "We are 
asking  that votes be counted one by one. That an audit of this process exists."
 
The post-election crisis has left seven dead and more than 50 people  
wounded across the nation as pro and anti-government protestors clashed outside 
 
CNE headquarters in different states.
 
The close margin prompted a call for reflection from leaders on Maduro's  
side, but Capriles insisted the government "was not reading the results". 
"They  don't have the majority, we have two halves. And this isn't about one 
half  running over the other one, This is about the two halves seeking out a 
solution  so the country can move forward."
 
But as Maduro addressed the nation, Venezuelans across the nation took to  
their balconies and rooftops to show their discontent with a clatter of pots 
and  pans.
 
"The town I live in is tiny and the opposition doesn't have any force. Yet  
the pots can heard loud and clear," said Marisa Bello from Elorza, a town 
of  24,000 people in the flatlands of Venezuela.
 
 
Articles in Action LA Link: 
http://www.actionla.org:8080/actionla/front/detailed3.jsp?newsId=978&title=4/16:%20Venezuela%20Opposition%20Continues%20Prot
est%20-%20Is%20Coup%20in%20the%20Works&filename=1366274507021&ext=jpg



 
============================================================================
==
Peace NO War Network_ http://www.PeaceNOWar.net_ 
(http://www.peacenowar.net/)  
War  is not the answer, for only love can conquer hate
Not in our Name! And  another world is possible!

Information for antiwar movements, news  across the World, please visit:_  
http://www.PeaceNoWar.net_ (http://www.peacenowar.net/) 
e-mail: _Info@PeaceNoWar.net_ (mailto:pe...@actionla.org) 
Tel:  (213)403-0131

Please Join PeaceNoWar Listserv, send e-mail to: 
_peacenowar-subscribe@lists.riseup.net_ 
(mailto:peacenowar-subscr...@lists.riseup.net) 

Please Donate to Peace No War Network!
Send check  pay to:
ActionLA/AFGJ
ActionLA
P.O. Box 751
South  Pasadena, CA 91031-0751
(All donations are tax  deductible)


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:laamn-unsubscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:laamn-subscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:laamn-dig...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:laamn-ow...@egroups.com?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:la...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/laamn@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    laamn-dig...@yahoogroups.com 
    laamn-fullfeatu...@yahoogroups.com

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    laamn-unsubscr...@yahoogroups.com

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to