Venezuela arrests 32 in alleged plot to kill Maduro

Following a months-long investigation into their suspected involvement in a US-backed plot to assassinate President Nicolas Maduro, 32 citizens and troops were taken into custody by Venezuelan authorities, the prosecutor’s office announced on Monday.

Attorney General Tarek William Saab told reporters in Caracas that all suspects had “confessed and revealed information about the plans.”

He added that they had been found guilty of their crimes and charged with treason.

Maduro loyalist Saab said arrest warrants have been issued for 11 other people, including rights activists, journalists and soldiers in exile, for the alleged plot that also targeted Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino.

Maduro urged maximum punishment for the people arrested and said he has ordered the defense ministry to cashier and expel the military personnel involved in the plot.

“The maximum sentence must be applied against them… for terrorism, conspiracy and treason,” Maduro said on his television program.

Maduro had already denounced on January 15 what he said was a plot against him.

Padrino told the same press conference that an operation that started last year to uncover details of the alleged conspiracy was kept secret as it coincided with “talks” between Maduro and the United States that resulted in a prisoner swap.

He blamed the plot on the “far right,” as the Maduro government usually refers to the opposition, with “support” of the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).

Officials released a video that purportedly implicates opposition leader Maria Corina Machado in the plot, and Saab vowed that “more arrests will follow,” without naming names.

Maduro was elected in 2018 for a second, successive term not recognized by dozens of countries and met with a barrage of sanctions.

Since his government promised to hold free and fair elections in 2024 with monitors present, these have become less severe.

However, despite garnering resounding support in a primary election held in October of last year, Machado is still ineligible to hold public office.

The authorities disqualified her for supporting sanctions against Caracas and for allegedly being corrupt.

In a report last year, the United Nations Human Rights Committee expressed concern about the “persecution of dissidents” in Venezuela as well as the “intimidation, persecution, arbitrary arrest and imprisonment of journalists, human rights defenders and political activists.”

Maduro, who has not confirmed whether he will seek another term, frequently denounces plans to overthrow him, usually with the same co-conspirators: the United States, the opposition and Colombian drug traffickers.

This article has been posted by a News Hour Correspondent. For queries, please contact through [email protected]
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