Venezuela’s Machado blocked from parliament

Anti-government demonstrators pretend to hit gas canisters to police during riots in Caracas. Picture: Christian Veron

Anti-government demonstrators pretend to hit gas canisters to police during riots in Caracas. Picture: Christian Veron

Published Apr 2, 2014

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Caracas - Venezuelan troops dispersed opposition demonstrators with teargas on Tuesday and blocked anti-government activist Maria Corina Machado, recently stripped of her seat in the National Assembly, from reaching the legislature.

National Guard soldiers surrounded a rally of opposition sympathisers who had planned to march into downtown Caracas to protest at Machado's expulsion from Congress, preventing them from leaving and clearing the square with tear gas.

Parliament stripped Machado of her post last week on charges she violated the constitution by accepting an invitation from Panama to speak against the government of President Nicolas Maduro at a meeting of the Organisation of American States.

The opposition leader dismissed that process as an illegal move by a dictatorial government and vowed to attend a session of the legislature on Tuesday. She was stopped from doing so by a line of troops several blocks from the parliament.

“I want to thank every citizen for their support and strength!” she said on Twitter as her supporters gathered.

“Today I am more a deputy than ever, and I will continue to be one until the people decide otherwise.”

Anti-government protests began in the South American Opec nation of 29 million in mid-February over shortages of basic items and high crime levels. The protests have decreased in intensity in the last few weeks as opposition demonstrators grow weary.

The director of local pollster Datanalisis said this month that Maduro's approval rating dropped to 41.5 percent in March from around 47 percent in February, according to local media.

That decline may be less the result of the protests, however, and more a reflection of economic problems including inflation of 57 percent and shortages of staples ranging from flour to toilet paper. - Reuters

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