The Vatican has called on the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro to suspend its newly formed Constituent Assembly, urging it to respect the will of the people and the nation’s constitution.
A statement from the Secretariat of State said that the assembly, “rather than fostering reconciliation and peace, encourages a climate of tension and confrontation and mortgages the future”.
A day later Maduro called the Vatican statement “regrettable”.
He told Argentine radio that Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican Secretary of State, had succumbed to the “violence against the Bolivarian Revolution”. He said the “bureaucracy” of the Vatican was separate from Pope Francis.
Elections for seats on the assembly were held amid widespread protests and international outcry. Maduro’s push for the assembly, comprised mainly of his supporters and designed to rewrite the nation’s constitution, has led to violent demonstrations in which more than 100 people have died.
The Vatican’s statement echoed a declaration made by members of the presiding council of the Venezuelan bishops’ conference, who condemned the elections as “unconstitutional as well as unnecessary, inconvenient and damaging to the Venezuelan people”.
“It will be a biased and skewed instrument that will not resolve but rather aggravate the acute problems of the high cost of living and the lack of food and medicine that the people suffer and will worsen the political crisis we currently suffer,” the bishops said.
Maduro declared victory following the election, claiming high voter turnout. While the government said that eight million citizens voted in favour of establishing the Constituent Assembly, the company that provided voting machines said that the turnout numbers had been tampered with.
Expressing concern over the “radicalisation and worsening” of the crisis and “the increased number of dead, wounded and detained”, the Vatican said Pope Francis was “closely following the situation”.
Iraqi Christian elected as mayor
A Catholic woman has been elected as the new mayor of Alqosh, a small town on the Nineveh Plain in Iraq.
Lara Yussif Zara was the unanimous choice of the municipal council. She is the first Christian woman to be elected mayor in Iraq, and the second woman to achieve such as position after Zekra Alwach, a Muslim, became mayor of Baghdad. She replaces another Chaldean Christian, Abdul Micha, who was dismissed after charges of corruption.
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