For Venezuela opposition, meeting with President Maduro could further expose rifts
For Venezuela opposition, meeting with President Maduro could further expose riftsBy Emilia Diaz-Struck and Nick Miroff, Published: April 9 | Updated: Thursday, April 10, 10:19 PM
CARACAS, Venezuela Venezuelan opposition leaders began a late-night meeting with President Nicolás Maduro and his cabinet Thursday in a possible first step toward ending two months of anti-government protests and street clashes that have left at least 41 dead.
The meeting was broadcast live on Venezuelan television and radio, at the insistence of the opposition, and was attended by mediators from Brazil, Ecuador, Colombia and the Vatican. The representative of the Holy See in Venezuela, Aldo Giordano, opened the meeting by reading a written statement from Pope Francis urging both sides to put aside differences and summon the courage to reach an agreement.
Maduro followed, speaking for more than half an hour, and insisted that the encounter was a dialogue, not a negotiation. Im willing to debate all of the countrys problems, he said. But we need to join together in condemning violence as a way to force political change.
With 11 members of the opposition and 11 members from the government side scheduled to speak, it appeared likely that the meeting would stretch well past midnight. Both sides indicated that future meetings would be required to work out the biggest sticking points between the two sides, especially the fate of jailed protesters. Henrique Capriles, the opposition standard-bearer who narrowly lost to Maduro in last Aprils president election, was the most prominent figure on the anti-government side.
While the encounter allowed opposition leaders an unusually open platform to speak directly to a national audience and the president himself, it was also notable for the absence of the oppositions more hard-line anti-Maduro wing. Thats the branch that has been in the streets battling national guardsmen and blocking traffic with flaming barricades, and it may be unwilling to heed any agreements that emerge from the talks with Maduro.
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