No progress at Venezuela meeting to end protests

Source:AFP Published: 2014-4-12 0:13:01

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and opposition leaders traded barbs for six hours on national TV late Thursday over two months of nationwide anti-government protests but found no common ground.

Opposition leaders demanded among other things amnesty for people arrested in the protests in the oil-rich but troubled country. But Maduro refused these demands in the first such meeting since the unrest erupted.

The protests have left 40 dead and 600 wounded and prompted accusations of human rights violations by police.

Protesters are denouncing rampant street crime, soaring inflation, poor job prospects and shortages of such essential goods as toilet paper.

During the debate he accused radical elements of the opposition of seeking to depose him. He said the opposition must "condemn violence as a way of doing politics, as a form and strategy for changing governments."

Opposition leader Henrique Capriles said "Venezuela is in a deeply critical situation."

He said he does not want to see the government fall but Maduro must respect the constitution and halt what Capriles called repression.

Ramon Aveledo, representative of an opposition umbrella group known as MUD, also demanded the government disarm civilian social-welfare oriented groups known as "colectivos," which are seen as pro-Maduro. Maduro said no.

AFP

Posted in: Americas

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