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Death toll rises as Venezuela strike enters 2nd day

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Caracas: Venezuela’s opposition kicked off a second day of a general strike on Thursday after a day of street protests left three people dead, in an intensifying showdown over President Nicolas Maduro’s plan to rewrite the nation’s constitution.


Prosecutors said a 30-year-old man was killed on Wednesday in the western province of Merida, and a 14-year-old boy was killed in Caracas’ Petare neighbourhood, a sprawling slum in the eastern end of the city.


On Thursday they confirmed a 23-year-old man had died the previous day in Merida.


With the approach of controversial elections on Sunday to pick a 545-seat Constituent Assembly to rewrite the constitution, the opposition and the Maduro government skirmished in the streets.


Protesters and government forces faced off late into the night Wednesday, with rounds of tear gas, rubber bullets and homemade bombs arcing through the air.


Barricades made from debris littered eastern Caracas, dotted with signs that read “No more dictatorships!”


Maduro says a new constitution is the only way to bring peace, but the opposition calls the move a power grab by the embattled leftist government.


“What happens if they impose the Constituent Assembly — The crisis will worsen. Where does Maduro want to take the country — To a social explosion,” said Henrique Capriles, an opposition leader.


The latest deaths raised to 106 the number of people killed since April 1.


In Washington, the US Treasury unveiled a list of 13 current and former officials, including the interior minister, senior military brass, the president of the electoral council, and the finance chief of state oil company PDVSA, whose US assets would be frozen. But with crippling shortages of basic goods and soaring inflation, protest organisers claimed 92 per cent of businesses and workers support the walkout. Maduro accuses Washington of fomenting unrest against him, aided by the conservative opposition.


The Venezuelan military has declared its loyalty to him.


But some 70 per cent of Venezuelans oppose the Constituent Assembly, according to polling firm Datanalisis.


The hardening political struggle has deepened fears that months of street violence could worsen.


The opposition has planned another major demonstration in Caracas on Friday. Thousands of Venezuelans have fled into neighbouring Colombia this week, while many of those who stayed behind believe ousting Maduro is their only hope.


Prominent opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez made a direct appeal to the military on Wednesday to withdraw its support from Maduro’s plan, which he called a “constitutional fraud” aimed at eliminating democratic rule.


In announcing the US sanctions, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said America was “standing by the Venezuelan people in their quest to restore their country to a full and prosperous democracy.”


He warned that anybody elected to the Constituent Assembly could also face US sanctions. — AFP


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