#TheHindu #Editorial On the brink

June 13, 2016    

As a deepening economic crisis aggravates Venezuela’s severe social and political unrest, it has exposed the fragility of its institutions to deal with the situation. Plagued by long years of populism kept afloat on a sea of oil, the plunging prices of crude have resulted in a lethal mix of goods shortages and hyperinflation, threatening to push the country into a state of chaos. Already, there are snaky queues for food and medicines and a crippling shortage of electricity that has forced a two-day week for government employees and blackouts across the country. The oft-repeated grievance of President Nicolás Maduro, the charismatic Hugo Chávez’s hand-picked successor, that Venezuela is the victim of an ‘economic war’ is beginning to have an increasingly hollow ring as his government struggles to repay the massive external debt it accumulated during the oil boom even as it is forced to cut down on imports of basic necessities to avoid a default.

As a rash of criminal activity and a surge of angry protests break out on the streets, the opposition, buoyed by a victory in the congressional elections last December, is looking to oust Mr. Maduro. The focus now is on the fate of the recall referendum, with the opposition claiming it has the required 1.85 million signatures to force one and the government dismissing this as fraudulent, something that a pliant National Electoral Council has endorsed by declaring about a third of the signatures on the petition as invalid. The opposition, led by Henrique Capriles, a former presidential candidate, wants the referendum to be held by January next year as a victory would mean a fresh presidential election. Were the referendum to take place later, then a Maduro loss would merely mean that his Vice-President runs the country until 2019. The big question is whether the country can afford to wait for the political process to play itself out. Time and patience are wearing thin. It is becomingly apparent that Mr. Maduro, who has become isolated within the region — he was described as a “traitor to ethics” by the Secretary General of the Organisation of American States — will be unable to carry the country for much longer with rhetoric of jingoism and victimhood. The President has the backing of the armed forces and a government-stacked Supreme Court and is now armed with emergency powers to “confront all…international and national threats”. It is imperative that he allows some sort of international mediation with the immediate aim of calming political tempers and dealing with the shortage in food and medicines. The risks otherwise are a slip into dictatorship or, even worse, anarchy.

Please Wait while comments are loading...


1.  Comments will be moderated by The Hindu editorial team.

2.  Comments that are abusive, personal, incendiary or irrelevant cannot be published.
3.  Please write complete sentences. Do not type comments in all capital letters,
      or in all lower case letters, or using abbreviated text.
      (example: u cannot substitute for you, d is not 'the', n is not 'and').
4.  We may remove hyperlinks within comments.
5.  Please use a genuine email ID and provide your name, to avoid rejection.

Let's block ads! (Why?)

#TheHindu #Editorial On the brink 4.5 5 Yateendra sahu June 13, 2016 As a deepening economic crisis aggravates Venezuela’s severe social and political unrest, it has exposed the fragility of its institutions...


Related Post:

  • #TheHindu #Editorial Justice that is rehabilitative
    A mature society will not give in to popular clamour and overturn sound legal principles and social norms that underpin its justice system. The popular outrage over the release of a juvenile convict in the December 2012 Delhi gang rape case after a t… Read More
  • #TheHindu #Editorial Not quite Congress’s 1977 moment
    The new turn in a long-pending case involving allegations of misuse of funds of the Indian National Congress to buy Associated Journals Ltd (AJL), a firm that published the National Herald, a now defunct publication linked to the party, has put the s… Read More
  • #TheHindu #Editorial Right moves on the Soccer League
    For all the flutter that the Indian Super League (ISL) has managed to create so far, a thrilling finish of the kind witnessed on Sunday, when Chennaiyin FC defeated FC Goa 3-2 in the final, seemed just apt. That the match was turned on its head with … Read More
  • #TheHindu #Editorial The challenge from France’s far-right
    The failure of Marine Le Pen’s Front National to win even a single region in this month’s elections in France demonstrates that the majority of French voters are not yet ready to let the far-right party join governance. Had Ms. Le Pen’s anti-migrant,… Read More
  • #TheHindu #Editorial Unseemly turn in Arunachal Pradesh
    The saddest aspect of the political turmoil in Arunachal Pradesh is that its key actors have revived unedifying practices that one would have thought the Indian polity had left behind some years ago: dissident ruling party legislators joining hands w… Read More
Load comments

No comments:

Post a Comment