Yahoo – AFP,
April 30, 2017
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| Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro welcomes Pope Francis' offer for Vatican mediation (AFP Photo/Juan BARRETO) |
Caracas
(AFP) - President Nicolas Maduro on Sunday welcomed an offer by Pope Francis
for Vatican mediation in crisis-torn Venezuela but opposition leaders rebuffed
the overture.
The pope's
call for a "negotiated solution" came in response to waves of
protests by Venezuelans demanding new elections to pull the country out of a
downward spiral.
At least 28
people have died in protests since they began April, and hundreds have been
arrested.
"Dramatic
news on the worsening of the situation in Venezuela keeps coming in with
numerous deaths, injuries and prisoners," the pontiff said before a crowd
of 70,000 attending weekly prayers in Saint Peter's Square.
"United
in sorrow with the families of the victims... I issue a sincere appeal to the
government and all sectors of Venezuelan society to avoid all forms of violence
henceforward," said the pontiff.
Urging
respect for human rights, Francis said the Vatican was willing to act as a
mediator under "clear conditions."
Maduro
responded on his weekly program on state VTV television, pointing a finger of
blame at the opposition.
"If I
say dialogue, they flee in horror. They don't want dialogue. Yesterday they
lashed out at Pope Francis. I respect what Pope Francis is saying," Maduro
said.
He charged
that the protests were an attempt to plunge the country into chaos, take over
power and "impose a counter-revolution on Venezuela."
"There
are no words for what they have done since April," he said.
The
opposition walked away from talks in December, accusing the government of
failing to fulfill promises to set up a timetable for elections and free
political prisoners.
Julio
Borges, president of the opposition controlled National Assembly, said Sunday
he would send a document to Pope Francis reaffirming the opposition's demands
centered on general elections.
"The
pope says some very interesting things. In the first place that, if there are
no guarantees, there is no possibility of moving forward here," he said.
Saturday,
former presidential candidate Henrique Capriles said dialogue might be nice but
not involving Spanish ex prime minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero. The
former PM, who took part in an earlier mediating team, was not neutral,
according to Capriles.
Sunday, a
day before Workers' Day, Maduro increased the minimum monthly wage by 60
percent to the equivalent of 90 dollars at the official exchange rate; or 15 at
the black market rate.
Venezuela
suffers from one of the world's highest rates of inflation -- forecast by the
IMF to come in at 720 percent this year.

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