Monday 7 August 2017

Venezuela: Two killed, eight captured in 'terrorist' attack on army base; hunt for assailants underway

Valencia: Venezuela's military said on Sunday it repelled a "terrorist" attack on a base in the city of Valencia and was hunting some of the assailants who made off with pillaged weapons.
A group of around 20 "mercenaries" led by an army officer who had deserted battled troops in the base for three hours, ending with two of the attackers being killed and eight captured, President Nicolas Maduro said on state television.
File image of Nicolas Maduro. AP
File image of Nicolas Maduro. AP
The other 10 escaped with an arsenal taken from the base, according to officials who said an "intense search" was underway.
Maduro claimed the group had ties to Colombia and the United States.
The incident heightened fears that Venezuela's deepening political and economic crisis could explode into greater violence.
Officials insisted afterward that all was normal across the country.
Military helicopters flew overhead and tactical armored vehicles patrolled the streets in Valencia, a major northwestern city, in a climate of tension after the attack.
Locals said a nighttime curfew had been imposed. Police dispersed protesters who set up flaming barricades across roads.
The armed forces said in a statement "a group of civilian criminals wearing military uniforms and a first lieutenant who had deserted" carried out the attack.
Maduro said the lieutenant, among those captured, was "actively giving information and we have testimony from seven of the civilians."
Loyal military chiefs
Maduro congratulated the army for its "immediate reaction" in putting down the attack, saying they earned his "admiration."
Venezuela's opposition has repeatedly urged the military to abandon Maduro.
But Defence Minister Vladimir Padrino, the head of the armed forces, has said the military's loyalty was unshakable.
After Sunday's attack in Valencia, Padrino tweeted that the assailants "couldn't do anything against" the army.
In a video posted online just before the attack, a man presenting himself as an army captain named Juan Caguaripano declared a "legitimate rebellion... to reject the murderous tyranny of Nicolas Maduro."
Speaking with 15 men in camouflage standing by him, some of them armed, he demanded a transitional government and "free elections."
It was not known if he was the lieutenant referred to in the military statement.
That statement said the officer had deserted three years ago and taken refuge in Miami, in the United States' Florida.

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