Venezuela arrests opposition leader and Caracas mayor Antonio Ledezma

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Antonio Ledezma
Venezuelan arrested opposition leader and Caracas metropolitan mayor Antonio Ledezma on Thursday in a move the government said was needed to halt a U.S.-backed coup plot but foes decried as tyranny.

Intelligence agents took the 59-year-old veteran politician from his office in the banking district of Caracas after breaking down doors and firing shots in the air, witnesses said.

“I just saw how they took Ledezma out of his office as if he were a dog,” wrote opposition legislator Ismael Garcia via Twitter. “They broke down the doors without an arrest warrant.”

The arrest comes a year after the outbreak of opposition protests calling for President Nicolas Maduro’s resignation that rocked the OPEC nation and sparked violence killing 43 people.

Protesters and security forces have clashed sporadically around that anniversary, while a shrinking economy and chronic product shortages have sent Maduro’s popularity tumbling.

His government in recent days said dissident air force officers had been planning to topple Maduro in league with opposition leaders and the United States. Officials cited an opposition document signed by Ledezma that called for a “national transition” as evidence he was involved.

Ledezma’s wife and aides said late on Thursday they did not know his whereabouts or what he might be charged with.

Opposition leaders including two-time presidential candidate Henrique Capriles gathered at an intelligence detention center, known by some as “The Tomb,” to demand his release.

In a live broadcast, Maduro accused Ledezma of links to an effort to topple the socialist government.

“On the orders of state prosecutors, he was captured and will be processed by the Venezuelan justice system for crimes committed against the peace of the country,” the president said during a meeting with supporters at the presidential palace.

RADICAL OPPOSITION WING

Ledezma joined the radical wing of the opposition in calling for “La Salida” or the “The Exit” of Maduro during the 2014 protests. Twice elected mayor, he was steadily stripped of many of his powers by late socialist leader Hugo Chavez.

Upstaged by younger opposition leaders, Ledezma is not seen as a future leader or even a standard-bearer of the opposition movement. Government supporters dub him “The Vampire” and mock him as an aging dinosaur.

Maduro frequently denounces alleged coup plots by opposition leaders, usually without presenting much evidence. His predecessor, Hugo Chavez, survived a brief coup in 2002 amid protests supported by Ledezma among other opposition leaders.

Following Ledezma’s arrest, Twitter users reported small street demonstrations in an upscale part of Caracas that was a center of protests last year.

Economic conditions have worsened since the 2014 protests, with tempers flaring in long supermarket lines as shoppers struggle to track down staples such as detergent, milk and chicken.

Tumbling oil prices have left the OPEC nation struggling to meet its budget needs amid bulging foreign debt payments. The government launched a currency devaluation of almost 70 percent last week, spurring outrage among opposition critics.

Colombian news station NTN24 showed a video of what it called the detention of Ledezma. The images showed nearly a dozen troops clad in flak jackets and camouflage uniforms ushering him toward an elevator.

Reuters could not independently confirm the video.

Venezuela has jailed a number of opposition leaders during the last year including Leopoldo Lopez, who helped spearhead last year’s opposition protests, and Daniel Ceballos, former mayor of the border city of San Cristobal.


Venezuelan Opposition Alliance Executive Secretary Jesus Torrealba speaks about the violent arrest of Caracas Mayor Antonio Ledezma at a press conference in Caracas, Venezuela, Thursday, Feb. 19, 2015. National police in camouflage uniforms smashed into Ledezma’s office on Thursday and carried the opposition figure away. President Nicolas Maduro announced that the mayor would be punished for all his efforts to disturb the peace.

Washington, which endorsed the 2002 coup against Chavez before backtracking when he returned to power, has repeatedly denied any attempts to destabilize the Maduro government.

“The United States is not promoting unrest in Venezuela nor are we attempting to undermine Venezuela’s economy or its government,” the U.S. State Department said in a statement on Thursday. “We remain Venezuela’s largest trading partner.”

Reuters

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4 responses to “Venezuela arrests opposition leader and Caracas mayor Antonio Ledezma”

  1. Democracy Venezuela style under Chavez’ clone .
    During the fifties and sixties Venezuelan democracy was the political model to be imitated in Latin America and becoming a haven for thousands of Latin American political exiles looking for freedom.

    But look what is happening today!
    It has become a failed state !
    What a shame !

    1. 5thDrawer Avatar

      In the ‘Communist’ mold, it’s not unexpected. The move from trying to care for people with a ‘Socialist Thought’ – which they obviously appreciated AND needed – has been usurped once again by a gang of Communists. The Bureaucracy created by Comminsts has always defeated the economic abilities of a society … ALWAYS. Ideology at it’s finest – whether based on a God-theory or not.
      It cannot work.
      And the ‘Education’ is not there … it’s only propaganda that ‘the people’ are fed.
      The longer it takes to get rid of the ‘system’ they voted for, the longer they will suffer.
      Russia STILL is affected by it.

  2. MekensehParty Avatar
    MekensehParty

    The South American pillar of communism is crumbling
    The Cubans, the main benefactors of Venezuela’s oil riches, saw it coming and made the U turn to save them from collapsing financially. Once the bus driver goes home (peacefully one hopes) South America will be done with the communist plague.

  3. Open your eyes Avatar
    Open your eyes

    What else does one expect from a government that supports Iran, Syria and Hezbollah.

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