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Venezuelan opposition leaders under investigation for calling on troops to abandon Maduro

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Venezuela’s top prosecutor on Monday announced a criminal investigation against the opposition’s leader, Maria Corina Machado, and presidential candidate, Edmundo Gonzalez, over their call for the armed forces to abandon their support for President Nicolas Maduro and stop repressing demonstrators.

Attorney General Tarek William Saab’s statement tied the investigation directly to a written appeal the two members of the opposition sent hours earlier about Maduro and the demonstrators, who have come out in force to defend their votes in the July 28 election.

Saab, in a written announcement posted on the social media site X, said the duo “falsely announced a winner of the presidential election other than the one proclaimed by the National Electoral Council, the only body qualified to do so,” and openly incited “police and military officials to disobey the laws.”

Gonzalez’s and Machado’s written appeal shows the alleged commission of various crimes, including usurpation of functions and dissemination of false information to cause fear and conspiracy, Saab said.

The armed forces are traditionally the arbiter of political disputes in Venezuela. But they’ve shown no signs of ditching Maduro, even in the face of credible evidence presented by the opposition that it trounced him at the polls by a more than 2-to-1 margin.

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Gonzalez and Machado called on rank-and-file members of the security forces to rethink their loyalty to Maduro, a self-proclaimed socialist.

“We appeal to the conscience of the military and police to put themselves on the side of the people and their families,” the two wrote in a long message.

“We won this election without any doubt. It was an electoral avalanche,” the two continued. “Now it’s up to all of us to respect the voice of the people.”

Authorities have declared Maduro the victor in last week’s election but have yet to produce voting tallies to prove he won. The opposition claims to have collected records from more than 80 per cent of the country’s 30,000 polling booths, showing it won.

A person gestures by holding up their fists while speaking into a microphone.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro gestures during a news conference at Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas on July 31. (Matias Delacroix/The Associated Press)

Maduro announced Saturday that the government had arrested 2,000 opponents, and at a rally in Caracas, he pledged to detain more people and send them to prison. The post-electoral uprising has also led to at least 11 deaths, according to Foro Penal, a Caracas-based human rights group.

The Venezuela-based human rights organization Provea, in a report issued Monday analyzing the post-election climate, concluded that the government’s response in silencing people’s discontent has caused the deaths, as well as an increase in arbitrary arrests, through “the disproportionate use of force” and “the open, co-ordinated action between security forces and groups of armed civilians in favour of Nicolas Maduro.”

People lay in the back of a pickup truck as armed soldiers guard them.
Members of the national guard transport detained demonstrators in Caracas on July 30. (Leonardo Fernandez Viloria/Reuters)

In their missive, Gonzalez and Machado called on Venezuelans with family members serving in the security forces to urge their loved ones not to attack protesters or obey illegal orders. It said it would offer “guarantees” to soldiers who follow the constitution, while promising there would be no impunity for those behind abuses or following illegal orders.

Both Gonzalez, a former diplomat, and Machado, who was barred by the government from running, have gone into hiding, saying they fear they will be arrested or killed. Maduro and his cadres have threatened to lock them both up.

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As Venezuelans fight Maduro on the streets, pressure is also building internationally for the Venezuelan government to publish the full breakdown of the electoral results.

“Respect for popular sovereignty is what moves us to defend the transparency of the [election] results,” Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said Monday in a news conference, alongside fellow leftist President Gabriel Boric of Chile.

But so far, Maduro has instead asked the country’s supreme court — which, like all institutions in Venezuela, is packed with loyalists — to review any claims of irregularities.

Boric, who cast doubt on Maduro’s victory claim in an unexpectedly strong statement within hours of Venezuela’s July 28 election, told reporters that he and Lula discussed the situation in Venezuela on Monday, without elaborating. The leaders did not take questions and their carefully worded statements signalled how leftist leaders in the region are gingerly trying to show respect for Venezuela’s sovereignty while voicing doubts about the official results.

A few of Maduro’s staunch allies — including Russia, China and Cuba — have applauded his victory. On Monday, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian held a telephone call with Maduro and reiterated his congratulations and “condemned any foreign interference in Venezuela’s internal affairs,” Pezeshkian’s office said.

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