“不宽恕”:马杜罗逮捕2000名委内瑞拉抗议者,誓言“最严厉惩罚”
"No Forgiveness": Maduro Arrests 2,000 Venezuelan Protesters, Vows 'Maximum Punishment'

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/no-forgiveness-maduro-arrests-2000-venezuelan-protesters-vows-maximum-punishment

随着有争议的总统尼古拉斯·马杜罗面临的压力越来越大,委内瑞拉选举后的骚乱仍在继续。 他拒绝透露 7 月 28 日起的选举细节。 据人权观察报道,马杜罗反对者领导的抗议活动导致与安全部队发生暴力冲突,造成 20 多人死亡。 8 月 3 日,马杜罗宣布逮捕了 2000 人,并威胁要采取更严厉的措施。 尽管采取了这些行动,示威活动仍在继续; 抗议者声称有证据证明反对党领袖埃德蒙多·冈萨雷斯赢得了选举。 另一位反对派人士玛丽亚·科里纳·马查多因质疑选举结果和煽动抗议而面临逮捕指控。 尽管发生了一周的暴力事件,示威者仍然决心确保选举结果的透明度。 马查多和冈萨雷斯都通过社交媒体平台公开表示支持和平抗议和透明度。 此次升级是在马杜罗领导下的“查韦斯主义”意识形态遭到广泛反对之后发生的。 自 2013 年以来的严重经济衰退(2013 年至 2021 年 GDP 萎缩 75%),以及自 2014 年以来超过 700 万公民的大规模移民,加剧了异议。 参议员马可·卢比奥、迪克·德宾、里克·斯科特等美国政界人士敦促马杜罗公布计票结果,承认冈萨雷斯为当选总统。 美国国务卿安东尼·布林肯也承认冈萨雷斯的胜利并亲自与他联系。

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原文

Authored by Autumn Spredemann via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Post-election demonstrations in Venezuela continue as pressure mounts against disputed President Nicolás Maduro, who has firmly stood his ground amid ongoing calls to release voting details from the July 28 general election. In the streets, clashes between Venezuelan security forces and protesters have resulted in at least 20 deaths, according to Human Rights Watch.

Opponents of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's government protest in the Petare neighborhood of Caracas on July 29, 2024. (Raul Arboleda/AFP via Getty Images)

On Aug. 3, Maduro announced that 2,000 civilian arrests have been made and denounced those who contest his administration.

This time, there will be no forgiveness,” Maduro said during a Saturday rally of his supporters in Caracas. “We have 2,000 prisoners captured and from there, they will go to Tocorón and Tocuyito [prisons], maximum punishment, justice.”

During what Maduro supporters called a “grand national march for the defense of peace,” allies of the disputed head of state gathered outside the presidential palace of Miraflores while Maduro delivered a fiery address that condemned the opposition-led protests.

Maduro called for the arrest of opposition leader Maria Corina Machado and presidential candidate Edmundo Gonzalez for “electoral fraud,” and demanded a criminal sentence of 15 to 30 years in prison. Court authorities in Caracas reportedly issued an arrest warrant for Machado on July 31 for challenging the accuracy of the election results and encouraging protesters.

Regardless, demonstrators are standing their ground after a week of protests, saying they believe there is evidence showing Gonzalez won the July 28 general election.

Standing on a truck surrounded by other members of the nation’s largest anti-Chavez coalition, the Democratic Unitary Platform, Machado appeared before a crowd of opposition supporters on Saturday to encourage Venezuelans to fight for election integrity in the country.

“After 6 days of brutal repression, they thought they were going to silence us, stop us, or intimidate us ... look at the response,” Machado posted alongside a video of the opposition rally on the social media platform X.

“Today, the presence of each citizen on the streets of Venezuela demonstrates the magnitude of the civic strength we have and the determination to go to the end,” Machado said.

Presidential candidate Gonzalez also took to social media to show his support for the protesters and the calls for transparent election results.

“Today, united Venezuela came out, without fear, in peace and with family, to demand respect for its decision at the polls. We will ensure that your decision is respected and we will begin the re-institutionalization of Venezuela,” Gonzalez stated on his X account.

Venezuela’s post election demonstrations come at a time when “Chavismo” advocacy, named after former socialist President Hugo Chavez, has hit an all time low. In the months leading up to the presidential election, Maduro lost key support among voters that have historically been loyal to the country’s entrenched socialist party.

Much of this is due to the unprecedented economic crisis that has come to a head since Maduro became president in 2013. Venezuela’s GDP contracted by more than 75 percent between 2013 and 2021, according to the International Monetary Fund. It represents the single largest economic collapse for a nation not at war in nearly five decades.

This, in turn, has ignited an exodus of more than 7 million Venezuelans since 2014, according to the United Nations Refugee Agency.

The United States is among the growing pool of international voices, which includes Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the United Kingdom, that are pressuring Maduro to release election vote details.

On Aug. 1, U.S. Sens. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Rick Scott (R-Fla.), Tim Kaine (D-Va.), Bill Cassidy (R-La.), and Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) introduced a resolution for the United States to recognize Gonzalez as the president-elect of Venezuela.

The Venezuelan people’s desire for freedom and democracy is admirable. The recent electoral process, which narco-dictator Maduro fraudulently claims he won, has been a testament to the tenacity of the Venezuelan spirit,” Rubio stated in a press release.

The following day, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken called Gonzalez and Machado to congratulate the opposition candidate for “receiving the most votes in Venezuela’s July 28 presidential election as documented by the democratic opposition’s extensive efforts to ensure a transparent accounting of the votes.”

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