Morning Star.png

 

 

Talks Between Maduro and the Mud Begin

 

 

James Tweedie, The Morning Star, London, 1 November 2016

 

Vatican-mediated talks between Venezuela's socialist government and
US-backed opposition got under way on Sunday night.

 

But 15 affiliate parties of the Democratic Unity Roundtable (Mud) coalition
shunned the negotiating table.

 

Instead they penned a joint letter to Mud secretary-general Jesus Torrealba,
demanding that he only negotiate United Socialist Party (PSUV) President
Nicolas Maduro's overthrow and the release of several political activists.

 

"It has to be very clear from the outset that the aim is agreeing on the
terms of a democratic transition in the remainder of 2016," they wrote.

 

The dissident parties repeated their demand for a presidential recall
referendum before the end of the year and the release of prisoners including
far-right Popular Will party leader Leopoldo Lopez.

 

Mr Lopez was jailed last year for almost 14 years for inciting a 2014 street
protest movement that left 43 dead.

 

Vatican envoy Archbishop Claudio Maria Celli opened the meeting at the
Alejandro Otero art museum in the capital Caracas, calling for "concrete
outcomes" to "show the goodwill of both sides."

 

Former Spanish prime minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero and ex-presidents
Leonel Fernandez of the Dominican Republic and Martin Torrijos of Panama,
who mediated earlier indirect talks, were also present.

 

Mr Maduro said he was ready to "take on the challenge" and "find common
ground in the interests of the great majorities.

 

"We're giving a chance to disarm the hatred, the intolerance, and open the
door to love among the Venezuelans," he said.

 

Mud MP Stalin Gonzalez told Globovision TV: "The government must give a sign
it wants to resolve the crisis with dialogue and not win a few more days in
power."

Foreign Minister Delcy Rodriguez, speaking from the Iberoamerican summit in
Cartagena, Colombia, hoped the talks would head off an "unconstitutional and
undemocratic overthrow" of the elected government.

 

A Mud march on the Miraflores presidential palace has been called for
Thursday.

But last Friday's 12-hour "general strike" called by the Mud was a failure,
according to Mr Maduro, with most businesses and services staying open.

 

Public transport was only slightly quieter than usual and expensive private
universities were some of only a few institutions to close.

 

However, an anti-government march last Wednesday was reported to have
attracted thousands of supporters in Caracas and other Venezuelan cities.

 

 

From:
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-ef79-Venezuela-Talks-between-Maduro-and
-the-Mud-begin#.WBgQMS19600

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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