Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada, G7 leaders, denounce Venezuela's suppression of political opposition

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jan, 2025 04:48 PM
  • Canada, G7 leaders, denounce Venezuela's suppression of political opposition

Canada is joining its closest allies in denouncing Venezuela's crackdown on democracy — the first G7 foreign policy statement since Canada began chairing the group this year.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro was inaugurated Friday for a third six-year term, after a July election widely seen as illegitimate.

Opposition leader Maria Corina Machado appeared at a Thursday rally and was briefly detained by security forces who coerced her into recording videos, according to her staff.

In a statement issued Friday, foreign ministers from the Group of Seven denounced the "lack of democratic legitimacy" in Maduro's inauguration, calling it a "continued and repressive grasp at power" after the government refused to release polling station tallies.

The statement calls out "arbitrary arrests and other abuses of civilians, including children, youths and activists" at peaceful protests.

The statement says the Maduro regime has caused a humanitarian crisis and an exodus of refugees fleeing hunger and repression, accusations the Venezuelan government rejects as propaganda.

This year, Canada is chairing the G7, a group of wealthy democracies that includes France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, the U.S. and the European Union.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre commended Machado and other activists Thursday, saying other countries must help restore democracy in Venezuela.

"Democracy is a sacred right that must be respected," he wrote on the social media platform X. "The Venezuelan people are calling for the world to stand with them as they exercise their right to protest — free from violence and persecution."

Last month, Venezuela accused Ottawa of being "a slave to the imperial interests of the United States" after another round of sanctions against Venezuelan officials.

The country's foreign ministry said Canada is trying to blackmail Venezuela, "demonstrating the humiliation and international discredit of the Canadian government, which is reduced to acting as a diminished and subordinate pawn to the U.S. government."

MORE National ARTICLES

Eby introduces new-look B.C. NDP cabinet in slim, one-seat majority government

Eby introduces new-look B.C. NDP cabinet in slim, one-seat majority government
Premier David Eby will introduce his new cabinet in British Columbia today after last month's tight election win that gave his New Democrats a slim, one-seat majority. Eby's NDP government holds 47 seats in the 93-seat legislature.

Eby introduces new-look B.C. NDP cabinet in slim, one-seat majority government

Claims open in $12.5M class-action settlement over WestJet baggage fees

Claims open in $12.5M class-action settlement over WestJet baggage fees
Some travellers who checked baggage on certain WestJet flights between 2014 and 2019 may now claim their share of a class-action settlement approved by the British Columbia Supreme Court last month and valued at $12.5 million. The law firm based in Burnaby says the settlement will be distributed to class members in the form of WestJet travel credits, not cash.

Claims open in $12.5M class-action settlement over WestJet baggage fees

Avian flu detected at Chilliwack farm

Avian flu detected at Chilliwack farm
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says avian flu has been detected at another commercial poultry farm in Chilliwack.  It joins two other outbreaks discovered yesterday at poultry farms in Abbotsford, bringing the total number of infected premises in the province to 31. 

Avian flu detected at Chilliwack farm

B.C. Human Rights Tribunal to expedite complaint from Jewish teachers' group

B.C. Human Rights Tribunal to expedite complaint from Jewish teachers' group
A group of teachers says British Columbia's Human Rights Tribunal has agreed to expedite a complaint of antisemitism against their union as more allegations surface. The group claims the union has "ostracized" the teachers either because they're Jewish or they hold "currently unpopular views" about Jews, Israel or the Oct. 7 attacks by Hamas. 

B.C. Human Rights Tribunal to expedite complaint from Jewish teachers' group

Ottawa rules out early intervention to end Canada Post strike

Ottawa rules out early intervention to end Canada Post strike
The Liberal government in Ottawa is signalling it's not currently planning to intervene to end the Canada Post strike, even though the two sides appear to be far apart and the strike is hitting at the busiest time of year for the postal service. Some 55,000 workers hit the picket lines across Canada on Friday, after contract negotiations with their employer blew past the 72-hour strike deadline set by the Canadian Union of Postal Workers.

Ottawa rules out early intervention to end Canada Post strike

Inmate assaulted at Agassiz prison

Inmate assaulted at Agassiz prison
The Correctional Service Canada says an inmate was brought to an outside hospital after being assaulted at a maximum-security prison in Agassiz. It says in a news release that the attack happened last Friday.

Inmate assaulted at Agassiz prison