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Venezuela opposition rejects Maduro plan to rework

President Nicolas Maduro's plan for an elected assembly to draw up a new Venezuelan constitution faced headwinds, when opposition parties refused to join the process amid continuing violent anti-Maduro protests.

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President Nicolas Maduro's plan for an elected assembly to draw up a new Venezuelan constitution faced headwinds, when opposition parties refused to join the process amid continuing violent anti-Maduro protests.

Although several opposition leaders had separately rejected Maduro's plan for a "people's" assembly, the center- right Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD) formally announced yesterday that it would not participate.

"We cannot take part in a fraudulent process," former presidential candidate Henrique Capriles said, appearing at a news conference with other MUD leaders. "We have a constitution, and the government cannot repeal it by act of force."

But some analysts said they fear the opposition is leaving the way open for Maduro to change the constitution at will, possibly cementing his grip on power.

Capriles effectively ruled out any opposition presence at a meeting on constitutional revision to be held today at the presidential palace.

Opponents plan to march to the headquarters of the education ministry in central Caracas instead to explain their position.

MUD rejects Maduro's proposal to elect half the members of the constituent assembly by voting in sectors it says are government-controlled, while the rest would be chosen in municipal elections.

Capriles maintains that Maduro -- whose leadership is rejected by seven of 10 Venezuelans, according to polls -- is trying to avoid a general election, the main demand of the opposition protests since April 1.

There is no provision in the current constitution for the sector-by-sector elections, Maduro says.

Opposition leaders said yesterday that they plan an intense day of protests to demand elections and an end to the "repression" of demonstrations, which have left 36 people dead and hundreds injured or jailed.

Citizen assemblies would be held Tuesday to explain the "flaws" in the constituent assembly, deputy Stalin Gonzalez said.

He said there would be a march Wednesday on the Supreme Court and other judicial offices around the country, and other protests Thursday and Friday.

None of the demonstrations has managed to reach the center of the capital, considered a bastion of Chavismo, the left-wing ideology created by Maduro's predecessor, Hugo Chavez.

Yesterday, the presidential panel guiding the constituent assembly process, led by Elias Jaua, met with youth group leaders. Jaua, a former vice president and foreign minister, told them the assembly would provide a path to peace and co- existence between the opposing sides.

 

(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)

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