Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Venezuela ousts lawmaker over visit

Venezuela opposition congresswoman's mandate revoked

Venezuela opposition politician Maria Corina Machado Maria Corina Machado is in Peru for a seminar at writer Mario Vargas Llosa's foundation

Venezuela has stripped a leading opposition congresswoman of her mandate after she spoke before the Organisation of American States (OAS) last week.

Maria Corina Machado had been invited by Panama to give her account of the recent wave of unrest in Venezuela.

But Venezuela's authorities say she "acted as a Panamanian official" by accepting the invitation.

The decision means Ms Machado will lose her parliamentary immunity and could be prosecuted for "inciting violence".

More than 30 people have died since mid-February in demonstrations against high inflation, food shortages and violence levels.

Venezuela's National Assembly's president, Diosdado Cabello, said the congresswoman had contravened the constitution.

He said she was introduced at the OAS meeting in Washington DC as an "alternate ambassador" to Panama.

"Maybe the Panamanian government will now name her permanent ambassador," he added.

'Former congresswoman'

Arriving in Peru's capital, Lima, for a seminar at an institution presided by the 2010 Nobel Prize winning author Mario Vargas Llosa, Ms Machado accused Mr Cabello of running a "dictatorship in the National Assembly".

She wrote later on Twitter: "Mr Cabello: I am a Congresswoman at the National Assembly so long as the people of Venezuela wants it."

She also said she was prepared to deal with the consequences of her actions.

"If the price that I must pay for having gone to the OAS so that the voice of the Venezuelan people could be heard is that I'm being persecuted today, in what they're doing to me now, I will pay for it one and a million times."

On Saturday, President Nicolas Maduro had already referred to the opposition politician as "former congresswoman".

Ms Machado has been openly demanding the resignation of Mr Maduro since the start of the recent protests.

The government accuses "right-wing fascists" of inciting the unrest as part of a plot to overthrow the government.

President Maduro says the United States is behind the demonstrations, but the US says it is being used as a scapegoat for Venezuela's internal problems.

More than 460 people have been injured in the protests.

The authorities say they are investigating at least 60 cases of human rights abuses.

The street protests were started by disgruntled students, but quickly became a near-daily feature in opposition strongholds around Caracas and in other cities of Venezuela.


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