- Pope Francis
“The Holy See expresses again her profound concern for the radicalization and aggravation of the crisis in the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, with the increase in the number of deaths, wounded and those who have been detained,” CNA
The Pope has issued an appeal to Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro after he installed a constituent assembly in a move that his critics say marks the beginning of a dictatorship in the country.
Pope Francis made a last-minute call for the assembly to be suspended on Friday.
A statement issued by the Vatican urged Maduro to suspend initiatives such as the new constituent assembly, which, rather than fostering “reconciliation and peace”, encourages a climate of “tension and confrontation”, as well as putting the future of the country at stake.
Venezuela’s ruling party have installed a new super assembly that supporters promise will bring peace to the country and critics fear will be a tool for imposing absolute rule.
The installation of the all-powerful constitutional assembly is likely to intensify a political crisis that has brought four months of protests that left at least 120 people dead and hundreds jailed.
Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela
Maduro vows the assembly will strip opposition politicians of their constitutional immunity from prosecution, while members of congress say they will only be removed by force.
But the opposition is struggling to regain its footing in the face of the government’s strong-armed tactics and the re-emergence of old, internal divisions.
The Vatican statement expressed profound concern for the radicalisation and worsening of the crisis, including the increase in deaths, injuries and arrests of protesters.
It called on all the country’s government, to guarantee full respect for human rights and basic freedoms, as well as for the existing Constitution.
The statement also called for a negotiated solution that takes into account “the grave sufferings of the population due to the difficulty of obtaining food and medicine, and the lack of security”.
Pope Francis asked for all people in Venezuela, in particular the security forces, to avoid violence or an excessive use of force and added that he will constantly pray for the country at its moment of crisis and hoped others will too.
- President Donald Trump
Venezuela crisis: Trump warns Maduro over jailed opponents
The US holds Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro “personally responsible” for the safety of two seized opposition leaders, President Donald Trump has warned.
In a statement, Mr Trump also called for the immediate and unconditional release of all political prisoners.
Leopoldo López and Antonio Ledezma, who had been under house arrest, were taken to a military prison on Tuesday.
This came after Sunday’s controversial vote for a constitutional assembly.
At least 10 people were killed, as the opposition boycotted the election.
President Maduro said the poll was a “vote for the revolution”, arguing that the move would create peace and foster dialogue by bringing together different sectors of Venezuela’s polarised society.
The opposition said late on Tuesday that it had decided to hold a demonstration against the new assembly on Thursday.
Opposition lawmaker Freddy Guevara tweeted (in Spanish) the rally would be held on “the day the dictatorship plans to install the fraudulent assembly”.
It had originally been thought that the government would open the constituent assembly on Wednesday, thereby evicting the opposition-controlled National Assembly.
- Convicted Felon George Soros
Organization Funded Directly by George Soros and his Open Society Foundations:
- Center for Economic and Policy Research: This group opposed welfare reform, supports “living wage” laws, rejects tax cuts, and consistently lauds the professed achievements of socialist regimes, most notably Venezuela.
- Soros – Republic Enemy #1 ~ Illegal Market Manipulation, Felony Insider Trading, Villain, Currency collapses

In other developments on Tuesday:
- UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said an escalation of political tensions would make it difficult to find a peaceful solution to the crisis
- Venezuelan Defence Minister Vladimir Padrino López said the army “reiterates its unconditional support to the president”
- The UK became the latest country to change its travel advice to Venezuela, saying that all but essential travel to the country should cease and that all dependents of British embassy staff in Venezuela had been withdrawn as of 1 August
In his statement, President Trump said the US condemned the actions of the “Maduro dictatorship”.
The two opposition leaders were “political prisoners being held illegally by the regime”, he added.
“The United States holds Maduro – who publicly announced just hours earlier that he would move against his political opposition – personally responsible for the health and safety of Mr López, Mr Ledezma and any others seized.”
Earlier, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson described the re-arrest of the two opposition leaders as “very alarming”.
“The situation from a humanitarian standpoint is already becoming dire,” he said.
“We are evaluating all of our policy options as to what can we do to create a change of conditions, where either Maduro decides he doesn’t have a future and wants to leave of his own accord, or we can return the government processes back to their constitution.”
US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin announced on Monday that the US had imposed sanctions on President Maduro.
Mr López was taken from his home at 12:27 local time (04:27GMT) on Tuesday, his wife, Lilian Tintori, wrote on Twitter.
A video posted showed him being taken away by members of the Venezuelan intelligence service, Sebin.
The daughter of Mr Ledezma, Vanessa Ledezma, also posted a video of her father, wearing pyjamas, being taken away by the Sebin.
A woman can be heard shouting “They’re taking Ledezma, they’re taking Ledezma, dictatorship!”
The two opposition leaders were taken to Ramo Verde military prison.
The Supreme Court, which critics say is dominated by government loyalists, said it had received intelligence reports alleging the two were trying to flee.
The court also said that it had revoked Mr Ledezma’s and Mr López’s house arrest because they had made political statements.
Both Mr Ledezma and Mr López were key figures in the wave of protests which swept through Venezuela in 2014 in which 43 people from both sides of the political divide were killed.
They have played a less prominent role in the most recent protests because they have been under house arrest but their video messages still get reported and shared widely on opposition websites.
Leopoldo López
- 46-year-old leader and founder of the Venezuelan opposition People’s Will (Voluntad Popular) party
- Sentenced to 13 years and nine months in jail in September 2015 for incitement to violence
- Has always denied any wrongdoing, his wife heads an international campaign for his release
- Released from military prison and put under house arrest on 8 July 2017 for “health reasons”
- Published a video on YouTube on 25 July urging Venezuelans to protest against the constituent assembly and the military
Antonio Ledezma
- 62-year-old mayor of Caracas
- Arrested February 2015 on charges of supporting an attempted coup, which he denies
- Put under house arrest in April 2015
- Long-standing opponent of President Hugo Chávez and his successor President Nicolás Maduro
- Published a video on YouTube on 31 July calling the election for a constituent assembly a “fraud”

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