Opposition street protests continue in Venezuela, although with lower turnouts and intensity than earlier this week.
There were reports of street protests in some Venezuelan cities last night, including in the capital Caracas. In the city of Valencia protests turned violent, with two vehicles set on fire and eleven arrests made, local authorities confirmed.
The incidents come after four were killed, 66 wounded and over 70 arrests made during violent clashes in Wednesday in Caracas and other parts of the country.
Recent opposition mobilisations have responded to right-wing leader Leopoldo Lopezās call for supporters to force the governmentās āexitā by āgoing out onto the streetsā. Opposition protesters have complained of insecurity and shortages as reasons for their discontent, while radical opposition activists have engaged in violent acts in some cities over the past two weeks.
Government position
Yesterday interior affairs minister Miguel Rodriguez repeated government claims that street violence in Caracas on Wednesday was perpetrated by extremist opposition groups, which he called āa vanguard trained to generate acts of chaos and violenceā.
He argued that the street violence was part of a āconspiracyā from the hard-line opposition within and outside the country, and said the aim of the alleged conspiracy was to ādrive the country to an irrational, unconstitutional and violent ousting [of the government]ā.
Rodriguez called on the ādemocratic oppositionā to ādisassociate itselfā with extremist opposition groups, and said the government was open to dialogue with opposition elected officials and other groups āfor peace, life and securityā.
Last night President Nicolas Maduro commented on the investigations underway into the violent clashes in Caracas on Wednesday. He said the deaths of an opposition protester, Basil Da Costa, and a pro-government activist, Juan Montoya, were both caused āby the same gunā.
Maduro showed videos of the street violence on national television, and said that those engaging in the acts had been identified. āUnder the orders of the federal prosecutor weāre going to find them. For there to be peace there must be justice, thereās not going to be impunity,ā he said in a national broadcast.
The Venezuelan president has also called on supporters to march in Caracas on Saturday. āThe whole people of Caracas will mobilise against fascism, violence and coup plotting to demonstrate on the street that what we want is peace, living-together, democracy and socialism,ā he said.
Authorities are also still searching for Lopez, who has an arrest warrant out against him for his alleged role in instigating and perpetrating violent acts on Wednesday.
Lopez has stated on Twitter he is still in the country, and denies the charges against him. However Diosdado Cabello, the president of the National Assembly, today claimed that Lopez has a flight booked to Bogota, Colombia on Saturday morning.
āYouāre not going to flee, coward,ā Cabello stated.
Opposition stance
The moderate wing of the opposition, now led by state governor Henrique Capriles, has distanced itself from the oppositionās radical wing and Wednesdayās violence.
In a press conference yesterday Capriles criticised hard-line opposition figures who called him a ātraitorā for not joining the campaign to force Maduroās resignation.
āWeāre going to channel discontent, but Iām not going to lie to you, the conditions do not exist for the governmentās exitā¦Venezuela is tired of so much violence,ā said the former presidential candidate.
However today Capriles and the oppositionās Democratic Unity (MUD) coalition turned on the government, accusing it of supporting āparamilitary groupsā and causing Wednesdayās violence.
āThe problem isnāt students who protest peacefully, the chaos that we experience is due to the government and its paramilitary groups,ā Capriles declared.
MUD demands laid out today include the release of students it claims have been āunjustlyā arrested following recent clashes, the disarming of alleged pro-government āparamilitary groupsā, and to cease making what the MUD calls āirresponsibleā comments about a possible opposition coup plot.
The opposition also calls the accusations against Leopoldo Lopez āunfoundedā. Both the MUD and the government call for those responsible for Wednesdayās violence to be identified and brought to justice.
Colombian TV channel pulled from the air
There is also controversy in Venezuela following the governmentās decision on Wednesday to pull Colombian news channel NTN24 from the countryās cable services due to the manner in which it was covering the dayās activities.
Maduro defended the decision yesterday, arguing that the channel ātried to transmit the anxiety of a state coup like April 2002ā. The president said he would, ādefend [social] calm in Venezuelaā, and that āno one from abroadā was going to come and āperturbā the country.
The decision provoked an angry response from NTN24 and some sectors within Venezuela. Claudia Garisatti, NTN24 director-general, said that decision was āopenly, in the censorship of the free press, a violation of the right citizens have to inform themselves, and an attack on freedom of expressionā.
Pro-government legislator Tania DĆaz responded to the criticisms yesterday, stating that CNN and other international channels continue to transmit freely in Venezuela.
āThere isnāt censorship…what wasnāt permitted this time, because we Venezuelans have a painful and lamentable experience of this, is that there was a live channel calling for agitation that was causing deaths in the centre of the city. Thatās a very different situation,ā argued the lawmaker.
International reactions
A range of international organisations have issued statements on Wednesdayās violent clashes. Representatives of the United Nations (UN), Organisation of American States (OAS) and the European Union (EU) have all condemned the violence and called for ādialogueā between the government and opposition.
The U.S. State Department focused on the Venezuelan government, stating its āworryā about an alleged āweakening of democratic institutions in Venezuelaā.
Venezuelaās leftist allies in the region have issued supportive statements, warning against opposition ādestabilisation attemptsā.
Solidarity groups such as the Venezuela Solidarity Campaign (UK) and Australia Venezuela Solidarity Network have also issued statements, arguing āthere is no justification for violent opposition to the elected government in Venezuelaā.
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