According to a report
published by Voice of America Journal, Venezuela
has issued an arrest warrant for opposition
presidential candidate Edmundo Gonzalez, a
move that was condemned by several
countries, including Brazil, the United
States and the European Union.
The warrant comes as the South American
country is embroiled in an election dispute.
Gonzalez says he is the rightful winner of
the July 28 presidential vote, while
incumbent President Nicolas Maduro says he
was the victor and remains in power.
"There is no denying that there is an
authoritarian escalation in Venezuela,"
Celso Amorim, Brazil's top foreign policy
adviser, told Reuters on Tuesday. The arrest
of Gonzalez "would be a political arrest,
and we do not accept [that there should be]
political prisoners."
"This is just another example of Mr.
Maduro's efforts to maintain power by force
and to refuse to recognize that Mr. Gonzalez
won the most votes on the 28th of July,"
according to White House national security
spokesperson John Kirby, who said Gonzalez's
warrant was "unjustified."
Josep Borrell, the European Union's foreign
affairs chief, posted on X, "Enough of the
repression and harassment of the opposition
and civil society. The will of the
Venezuelan people must be respected."
Gonzalez has been in hiding since the
election dispute, but "he has not requested
asylum, he has not requested to be treated
as a guest in any embassy," Gonzalez's
lawyer, Jose Vicente Haro, said outside of
his client's house in Caracas.
"He's not at his residence in order to
preserve his freedom, his security, his life
and to preserve the will of the Venezuelan
people," Haro added.
Venezuela's Supreme Court has backed
Maduro's claims that he beat Gonzalez in the
disputed election.
The court, which includes Maduro loyalists,
said that after reviewing materials supplied
by the electoral authority, it agreed that
Maduro had won a third six-year term.
Gonzalez has ignored several summonses from
the Supreme Court.
Venezuela's electoral authority, which
declared Maduro the winner of the vote
within hours of the polls closing, reported
that the president won more than half the
votes, but it has not published any results.
The opposition claims that Gonzalez won the
election in a landslide. It backed its
claims with voting tallies that it said were
gathered from 80% of the country's 30,000
voting booths showing that Gonzalez won by a
ratio of more than 2-to-1.
On Monday, the U.S., which has urged
Venezuelan authorities to release the
election results, seized Maduro's airplane
a Dassault Falcon 900EX in the Dominican
Republic. The U.S. says the plane was
illegally exported from the U.S., violating
U.S. export control and sanctions laws.
"The Justice Department seized an aircraft
we allege was illegally purchased for $13
million through a shell company and smuggled
out of the United States for use by Nicolás
Maduro and his cronies," U.S. Attorney
General Merrick B. Garland said.
The U.S. will continue to take moves against
Maduro for his actions that "long predate
his most recent anti-democratic action,"
State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller
said.
"There are a number of things that we have
called on him to do to stop cracking down
on dissent, to release the actual tally
sheets, which he still has not done, and to
get Venezuela back on its democratic path,"
Miller said. "We are considering a range of
options to demonstrate to Maduro and his
representatives that their illegitimate and
repressive actions in Venezuela have
consequences."
Voice of America
Journal, VOA, is a U.S. government
news agency funded by the U.S.
Congress.