'Sniper'
attack in Venezuela protest leaves 2 dead
Troops
used tear gas and water cannons to disperse several hundred
demonstrators in the neighborhood of Los Ruices in eastern Caracas on
Thursday.
6
March, 2014
A
Venezuelan soldier and a motorcyclist were killed in a standoff with
opposition demonstrators who had set up a barricade along an avenue
of Caracas, the vice president of the ruling Socialist Party said on
Thursday.
Demonstrators
demanding the resignation of President Nicolas Maduro have for weeks
been staging rallies and setting up barricades, leading to clashes
with security forces and government supporters. At least 20 have been
killed.
Troops
were called in to the neighborhood of Los Ruices in eastern Caracas
on Thursday and used tear gas and water cannons to disperse several
hundred demonstrators who had set up a barrier along a
well-trafficked principal avenue.
"We
have learned that a motorcycle driver was killed by a sniper,"
said Diosdado Cabello in an unrelated press conference at the
National Assembly. "And a member of the National Guard was also
killed in the same place by a sniper."
The
mayor of the Caracas municipality of Sucre, where the events took
place, said via his Twitter account that a member of the National
Guard had died.
Officials
did not respond to requests for information on how the soldier died
and additional details on the incident.
Maduro
on Wednesday called on pro-government organizations known as
"colectivos," which opposition leaders describe as
paramilitary groups, to break apart barricades that protesters have
set up in primarily affluent neighborhoods.
Those
demonstrations have brought Venezuela's worst unrest in a decade.
Street protests helped briefly topple the late socialist leader Hugo
Chavez in botched 2002 coup.
Yet
there seems to be little chance of a Ukraine-style change of
government, given that the protests have remained relatively small
and the military appears to remain behind Maduro.
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