Berliner Boersenzeitung - Venezuela opposition decry crackdown before Maduro swearing-in

EUR -
AED 3.784814
AFN 73.201101
ALL 97.530871
AMD 411.300593
ANG 1.8541
AOA 941.299591
ARS 1067.256966
AUD 1.663758
AWG 1.854791
AZN 1.754946
BAM 1.953903
BBD 2.077183
BDT 124.998616
BGN 1.957702
BHD 0.388407
BIF 3042.945049
BMD 1.030439
BND 1.408532
BOB 7.109096
BRL 6.313293
BSD 1.028901
BTN 88.333221
BWP 14.418998
BYN 3.366731
BYR 20196.611423
BZD 2.066493
CAD 1.482276
CDF 2957.360939
CHF 0.939663
CLF 0.037394
CLP 1031.820107
CNY 7.555385
CNH 7.580267
COP 4457.680664
CRC 521.59349
CUC 1.030439
CUP 27.306643
CVE 110.158027
CZK 25.132942
DJF 183.202096
DKK 7.461215
DOP 62.958862
DZD 139.898599
EGP 52.160942
ERN 15.45659
ETB 129.631014
FJD 2.402569
FKP 0.816089
GBP 0.839102
GEL 2.859483
GGP 0.816089
GHS 15.143295
GIP 0.816089
GMD 73.161206
GNF 8892.41546
GTQ 7.93929
GYD 215.161061
HKD 8.016571
HNL 26.224711
HRK 7.391245
HTG 134.219662
HUF 413.834895
IDR 16712.438342
ILS 3.781959
IMP 0.816089
INR 88.544107
IQD 1349.875559
IRR 43381.496953
ISK 145.096343
JEP 0.816089
JMD 161.113545
JOD 0.73089
JPY 162.931528
KES 133.440084
KGS 89.648671
KHR 4157.962275
KMF 492.033985
KPW 927.394846
KRW 1507.038062
KWD 0.317687
KYD 0.857367
KZT 541.873796
LAK 22476.460112
LBP 92327.366786
LKR 304.514291
LRD 192.949425
LSL 19.413448
LTL 3.04262
LVL 0.623302
LYD 5.074891
MAD 10.35231
MDL 18.980568
MGA 4843.064856
MKD 61.55483
MMK 3346.826841
MNT 3501.432805
MOP 8.243295
MRU 41.037215
MUR 48.276025
MVR 15.879181
MWK 1785.238367
MXN 21.052806
MYR 4.642645
MZN 65.855265
NAD 19.413448
NGN 1590.658193
NIO 37.827625
NOK 11.765294
NPR 141.332754
NZD 1.843739
OMR 0.396688
PAB 1.028901
PEN 3.889949
PGK 4.133613
PHP 60.287884
PKR 287.184146
PLN 4.281104
PYG 8142.093355
QAR 3.751317
RON 4.974036
RSD 117.067209
RUB 104.846735
RWF 1427.158511
SAR 3.867947
SBD 8.688977
SCR 14.590159
SDG 619.294
SEK 11.49299
SGD 1.411192
SHP 0.816089
SLE 23.493646
SLL 21607.801245
SOS 588.901798
SRD 36.168934
STD 21328.014268
SVC 9.002258
SYP 2589.010052
SZL 19.40116
THB 35.716098
TJS 11.254771
TMT 3.606538
TND 3.314409
TOP 2.413389
TRY 36.433551
TTD 6.977225
TWD 33.923129
TZS 2540.032707
UAH 43.512046
UGX 3810.299884
USD 1.030439
UYU 45.246062
UZS 13385.407565
VES 54.834128
VND 26157.703111
VUV 122.335824
WST 2.846885
XAF 655.32063
XAG 0.03406
XAU 0.000387
XCD 2.784814
XDR 0.792231
XOF 653.298639
XPF 119.331742
YER 256.784094
ZAR 19.505496
ZMK 9275.187266
ZMW 28.780052
ZWL 331.801053
  • RYCEF

    7.2200

    7.22

    +100%

  • SCS

    0.1000

    11.3

    +0.88%

  • RBGPF

    59.3100

    59.31

    +100%

  • GSK

    -0.3400

    33.75

    -1.01%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    36.74

    -0.11%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    58.63

    +0.75%

  • VOD

    -0.2000

    8.21

    -2.44%

  • NGG

    -0.6200

    57.98

    -1.07%

  • BCC

    -0.8200

    117.4

    -0.7%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.4

    -0.26%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.1

    -0.56%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    23.63

    -0.97%

  • RELX

    0.7900

    46.77

    +1.69%

  • AZN

    -0.0600

    66.58

    -0.09%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.22

    0%

  • BP

    -0.7100

    31.12

    -2.28%

Venezuela opposition decry crackdown before Maduro swearing-in
Venezuela opposition decry crackdown before Maduro swearing-in / Photo: Pedro MATTEY - AFP

Venezuela opposition decry crackdown before Maduro swearing-in

Opponents of Venezuelan strongman Nicolas Maduro on Wednesday decried a worsening crackdown 48 hours before he is to be sworn in on the back of elections he is widely accused of having stolen.

Text size:

An opposition presidential rival and a press freedom activist were among the latest to be detained, their teams said, amid reports of critics being rounded up and spirited away by hooded men.

Meanwhile Maduro, who frequently claims to be the target of US destabilization plots, said senior FBI and American military officials were among seven so-called "mercenaries" arrested on Tuesday.

Opposition parties reported on social media a wave of fresh arrests ahead of mass anti-Maduro protests called for Thursday -- the eve of Maduro's inauguration to a third six-year term rejected by much of the international community as illegitimate.

The Popular Democratic Front, a coalition of opposition parties, said Enrique Marquez -- who had run against Maduro in last year's July 28 elections -- was "arbitrarily detained" Tuesday.

Marquez supported the victory claim of the main opposition candidate, Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia, whom the United States, European Union and many of Venezuela's democratic neighbors recognize as the legitimate president-elect.

Marquez's wife Sonia Lugo said Wednesday the regime was trying to "silence and intimidate those who want a better country."

For its part, the Espacio Publico press freedom NGO said it lost contact with its director Carlos Correa on Tuesday afternoon, when witnesses reported he was "intercepted in the center of Caracas by hooded men presumed to be officials" of the regime.

Authorities have not confirmed either arrest.

Exiled Gonzalez Urrutia reported Tuesday that his son-in-law had been "kidnapped," also by hooded men dressed in black.

And opposition figurehead Maria Corina Machado said agents had surrounded her 84-year-old mother's house.

Masses of security forces have been deployed on the capital's streets, and the country is on tenterhooks with pro-Maduro rallies called for Thursday to counter the opposition demonstrations.

Machado has said she would come out of hiding to participate.

- 'Terrorists' -

On Tuesday, Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello warned prospective opposition protesters, who he called "fascists" and "terrorists," they would regret turning out "for the rest of your lives."

More than 2,400 people were arrested, 28 killed and about 200 injured in a crackdown on protests that broke out after Maduro claimed election victory.

The opposition says its own tally of polling station results show Gonzalez Urrutia had won by a wide margin.

But the loyalist CNE electoral council announced victory for Maduro within hours of polls closing. It did not provide a vote breakdown.

On a tour to drum up pressure on Maduro to relinquish power, Gonzalez Urrutia was hosted Wednesday by the president of Panama, where he was also to meet a group of former and current Latin American officials before heading to the Dominican Republic.

Previous stops took him to Argentina, Uruguay and Washington -- where he received resounding backing from President Joe Biden and met a senior member of Donald Trump's incoming administration.

The target of an arrest warrant and a $100,000 bounty in Venezuela, Gonzalez Urrutia has vowed to return home to take power without detailing his plan.

A group of nine Latin American ex-presidents who support Gonzalez Urrutia had planned to accompany Gonzalez Urrutia to Venezuela at the end of his foreign tour, but were declared persona non-grata Tuesday by the Venezuelan parliament.

- 'Tyrant' -

Colombia's President Gustavo Petro, historically a leftist ally of Maduro, on Wednesday criticized the reported detentions of Marquez and Correa and said he would not attend Maduro's swearing-in.

Panama's Foreign Minister Javier Martinez-Acha, for his part, described Maduro as a "tyrant," as he accepted the unofficial July 28 voting tally from Gonzalez Urrutia.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was "deeply concerned" by the reported arrests and called for "the respect of international human rights rules and standards in Venezuela," his spokesperson said.

On Tuesday, Maduro activated an "integral defense" plan for the deployment of police and soldiers countrywide, as he alleged a plot to prevent him taking the oath.

The strongman said authorities had arrested seven "mercenaries" Tuesday with "terrorist" intentions.

Apart from the two Americans, they included two Colombian "hitmen" and three Ukrainians.

The arrests add to another 125 foreigners from 25 nationalities Maduro said are being held over "a foreign mercenary aggression financed by the outgoing US government."

Maduro came to power in 2013 following the death of his political mentor Hugo Chavez, and his re-election in 2018 was also widely rejected as fraudulent.

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)