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Venezuelan Opposition Assails 'Desperate' Maduro Declaration


Opposition supporters hold placards during a rally to demand a referendum to remove President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas, Venezuela, May 14, 2016. From left, the placards read "Deaf," "Blind" and "Dumb." "CNE" on the placards refers to the National Electoral Council.
Opposition supporters hold placards during a rally to demand a referendum to remove President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas, Venezuela, May 14, 2016. From left, the placards read "Deaf," "Blind" and "Dumb." "CNE" on the placards refers to the National Electoral Council.

Venezuela's opposition on Saturday slammed a state of emergency decreed by President Nicolas Maduro and vowed to press efforts to remove the leftist leader this year amid an economic crisis.

Maduro on Friday night declared a 60-day state of emergency because of what he called plots from Venezuela and the United States to subvert him. He did not provide specifics.

The measure shows Maduro is panicking as a push for a recall referendum against him gains traction with tired, frustrated Venezuelans, opposition leaders said during a protest in Caracas.

"We're talking about a desperate president who is putting himself on the margin of legality and constitutionality," said Democratic Unity coalition leader Jesus Torrealba, adding that Maduro was losing support within his own bloc.

"If this state of emergency is issued without consulting the National Assembly, we would technically be talking about a self-coup," he told hundreds of supporters who waved Venezuelan flags and chanted "He's going to fall."

The opposition won control of the National Assembly in a December election, propelled by voter anger over product shortages, raging inflation and rampant violent crime, but the legislature has been routinely undercut by the Supreme Court.

Protests are on the rise, and a key poll shows nearly 70 percent of Venezuelans now say Maduro must go this year.

President is resolute

Maduro has vowed to see his term through, however, blasting opposition politicians as coup-mongering elitists seeking to emulate the impeachment of fellow leftist Dilma Rousseff in Brazil.

Saying troublemakers were fomenting violence to justify a foreign invasion, Maduro on Saturday ordered military exercises for next weekend.

"We're going to tell imperialism and the international right that the people are present, with their farm instruments in one hand and a gun in the other ... to defend this sacred land," he boomed at a rally.

He added the government would take over idled factories, without providing details.

Critics of Maduro, a former union leader and bus driver, say he should instead focus on people's urgent needs.

"There will be a social explosion if Maduro doesn't let the recall referendum happen," said protester Marisol Dos Santos, 34, an office worker at a supermarket, where she says some 800 people queue up daily.

But the opposition fears authorities are trying to delay a referendum until 2017, when the presidency would fall to the vice president, a post currently held by Socialist Party loyalist Aristobulo Isturiz.

"If you block this democratic path, we don't know what might happen in this country," two-time presidential candidate Henrique Capriles said at the demonstration.

"Venezuela is a time bomb that can explode at any given moment."

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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