Venezuela's Maduro contests amnesty bill
April 8, 2016On Thursday, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro said he had decided to ask the Supreme Court to "declare the law of criminal amnesty unconstitutional," claiming that it protects "murderers" and "terrorists," according to a statement from the Information Ministry.
Maduro addressed thousands of his supporters, who demonstrated in front of the presidential palace against the amnesty bill, accusing the opposition lawmakers of pardoning "coup plotters."
"I'll say something strong," Maduro said. "If they someday accede to political power of the presidency as a product of economic warfare, the Bolivarian movement and the Venezuelan people would go to the streets in a civil-military insurrection."
"Make no mistake with the people of Venezuela," Maduro said. "We want peace, but we are warriors."
On March 29, the opposition-dominated legislature passed the amnesty bill, effectively paving the way for the release of political prisoners, including opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez.
In 2014, he was sentenced to 13 years in prison for alleged involvement in deadly anti-government protests.
'Arbitrary detention'
Lilian Tintori, Leopoldo's wife, described the bill as a "major step forward in rescuing democracy and liberty" after it passed the National Assembly.
The UN, EU and several human rights groups have criticized the "arbitrary detention" of political opponents.
"The prolonged and arbitrary detention of political opponents and protesters in Venezuela is causing more and more concern internationally," al-Hussein had said in a 2014 statement following Lopez's detention.
In December, Venezuela's opposition coalition Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD) gained control of the National Assembly following a landslide victory at the polls, dealing a major blow to a socialist political project launched by Maduro's mentor, the late Hugo Chavez.
ls/jm (EFE, Reuters)