Security forces in
Venezuela have clashed with thousands of anti-government demonstrators
rallying against President Nicolas Maduro amid continuing unrest in the
Latin American country.
Riot police fired water cannons
and tear gas canisters to disperse masked crowds of young protesters,
who threw Molotov cocktails and stones at police officers in return, in
the Venezuelan capital, Caracas, on Wednesday.
The clashes mainly
erupted when demonstrators marched into Caracas’ main highway in an
attempt to reach the Foreign Ministry building but National Guard
soldiers blocked their way and pushed them back with volleys of gas and
shots of water.
“It’s always the same. We set off peacefully and
they attack us. We have to respond; we’re human beings,” said a
20-year-old law student.
The fresh wave of unrest came as foreign
ministers from the 34-nation Organization of American States (OAS)
unsuccessfully met in the US capital, Washington D.C., in a third bid to
find a solution to the ongoing crisis in Venezuela.
Opposition demonstrators clash with riot police in Caracas, May 31, 2017. (Photo by AFP)
As
right-leaning nations, like Brazil, mounted pressure on embattled
Maduro, 54, to give his citizens their “fundamental freedoms,”
left-leaning countries like Nicaragua rejected such endeavors as
meddling in the internal affairs of Venezuela and “subverting the
rights” of a sovereign country.
The wave of unrest initially
erupted in early April, when Venezuela’s Supreme Court decided to assume
the powers of the opposition-controlled parliament in violation of the
country’s constitution.
Although the decision was later revoked,
protesters continued to take to the streets across the country against
the president, who is now convening a constituent assembly to write a
new constitution, much to the chagrin of the protesters.
The
Venezuelan opposition, which demands an early presidential election, has
refused to participate in the assembly and called the plan
“fraudulent.”
Opposition demonstrators clash with riot police in Caracas, May 31, 2017. (Photo by AFP)
The
opposition and its supporters blame Maduro for the crisis, demanding
elections, the freedom of jailed activists, and permits for the entry of
foreign aid.
The left-wing government, however, says the protests are incited by the United States to remove the president from power.
An
opposition leader at the march on Tuesday, Miguel Pizarro, said they
would not give up despite the government’s attempts to quell the
movement.
Oil-rich Venezuela is struggling with a soaring inflation and shortages of food and medicine.
Comments
Post a Comment