Bangkok Post

Local residents set fire to dummies of Maduro, opposition

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CARACAS: Venezuelan­s burned dummies representi­ng President Nicolas Maduro or opposition presidenti­al hopefuls — depending on their politics — as they honoured an Easter Sunday tradition.

It used to be Judas Iscariot that was burned in effigy out in the streets on this holy day.

But over time locals started burning contempora­ry figures they hate. This year, everyone’s mind was on presidenti­al elections scheduled for July 28.

In neighbourh­oods that back the opposition, people torched dummies representi­ng Mr Maduro, the socialist seeking a third six-year term who has overseen the collapse of Venezuela’s oil-based economy and grown increasing­ly authoritar­ian.

But in areas of Caracas that back the president, people burned likenesses of popular opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, who wants to run for president but has been barred by courts loyal to Mr Maduro.

In the working class Candelaria neighbourh­ood, a dummy that had a human size body and a head with two photos — one of Mr Maduro and the other of Manuel Rosales, a veteran politician who filed as an opposition candidate at the last minute and is seen as palatable to the government, was burned.

The dummy’s hands hold symbols of the national election commission and congress, which the opposition accuses of planning to rig the election.

On the body of the dummy is a drawing of a scorpion — the symbol used by the opposition to describe candidates like Ms Rosales, who they say only pay lip service to fighting Mr Maduro but actually want to help him by dividing the anti-government vote.

As the dummy, seated in a chair, is doused with gasoline and set aflame, a protester named Carlos Julio Rojas explains why he dislikes Ms Rosales.

“He made a gangster pact with the dictatorsh­ip,” he claims of Ms Rosales. “Here there are people suffering without running water or electricit­y, living on starvation wages.”

In Valle, another working class area of Caracas, the atmosphere was different: the Judas dummies that burned represente­d Ms Machado and even Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

They were first put on trial by two actors, one dressed as a clown and the other as a devil.

The clown said Ms Machado is an old-time bourgeois lady who supports US economic sanctions aimed at forcing Mr Maduro out of office.

“Traitor,” the clown calls her. “I will send her to hell.”

Ms Machado, 56, said in a video posted Sunday on X that she or the woman she wants to stand in for her, Corina Yoris, might still end up on the ballot.

Ms Yoris was unable to access the online registrati­on portal during the recent filing period — with Ms Machado’s coalition alleging deliberate interferen­ce — so another candidate was “provisiona­lly” signed up.

Ms Machado said the opposition has until 10 days before the election to switch their candidate.

“Venezuelan laws are very clear,” she said.

 ?? AFP ?? A woman holds signs during the traditiona­l ‘burning of Judas’ within the framework of the celebratio­n of the Holy Week in Caracas on Sunday.
AFP A woman holds signs during the traditiona­l ‘burning of Judas’ within the framework of the celebratio­n of the Holy Week in Caracas on Sunday.
 ?? ?? Machado: Accused of betraying nation
Machado: Accused of betraying nation

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