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News > Latin America

Venezuela Accuses European Parliament of Encouraging Violence

  • Right-wing opposition protesters in Venezuela have left over 70 dead.

    Right-wing opposition protesters in Venezuela have left over 70 dead. | Photo: Reuters

Published 29 May 2017
Opinion

“The position of the European Parliament is clearly interventionist,” Venezuela's EU Vice Minister Yvan Gil said.

A Venezuelan diplomat accused the European Parliament Monday of approving resolutions that have a “negative effect on Venezuela because they encourage violence instead of condemning it explicitly.”

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Venezuela Opposition 'Escalates' Anti-Government Protests, Remains Silent on Right-Wing Violence

“The position of the European Parliament is clearly interventionist,” Venezuela's EU Vice Minister Yvan Gil said to reporters in Brussels. “There is an alliance between right-wing factions in the European Parliament and right-wing, violent factions in Venezuela.”

The EU Parliament President Antonio Tajani, who once described Venezuela as “a country where the opposition is in jail,” will meet in a few days with Julio Borges, an opposition leader who has been accused by President Nicolas Maduro and others of fomenting violence against the Venezuelan people. Borges will also participate in a meeting of the European Parliament's Commission of Foreign Affairs.

The EU recently urged the Venezuelan government to set up a clear calendar for elections, even though constitutionally mandated elections are not due until 2018, while the National Electoral Board has already scheduled regional elections for December 2017.

Some right-wing sectors within the opposition have refused to accept the offer for dialogue extended by Maduro's government and called instead on their supporters to continue to take to the streets in protests that often turn violent and deadly.

More than 70 people have been killed in incidents linked to protests since the opposition launched an ongoing wave of anti-government demonstrations at the beginning of April, according to government officials. In the latest violent incident, a former member of the National Guard was beaten to death by an opposition mob Saturday in the state of Lara in what Maduro condemned as a “hate crime … by a group of criminals, murderers, and violent protesters.”

Although dozens of people killed amid protests have died from a range of different causes, right-wing leaders have painted the death toll as the result of a violent crackdown on opposition marches by the government, which they hope topple.

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