Venezuela’s putschist opposition has pulled out of today’s talks with the government — even as President Nicolas Maduro said they were going ahead.
Hardline affiliates to the Democratic Unity Roundtable (Mud) coalition apparently won out as a spokesman said its delegation would not return to the internationally-mediated negotiations in the Dominican Republic.
The Mud claimed the United Socialist party (PSUV) government failed to meet human rights and electoral guarantees, and that Mr Maduro had not name a promised third observer nation for full negotiations.
The two sides returned to dialogue, brokered by the caribbean nation’s President Danilo Medina and former Spanish PM Jose Luis Zapatero, on September 13 — six weeks after the end of opposition riots that left 124 dead.
On Monday masked militants made a brief return to the streets of Caracas, mounting an ineffective roadblock in the Chacao district.
On Tuesday US President Donald Trump expressed “hope” that the EU would join his country, Canada and some Washington-friendly Latin American governments in placing sanctions on the “Maduro regime.”
He made his comments at White House press conference with Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who agreed: "The international community should be forceful with regards to Venezuela."
Meanwhile the Venezuelan army took delivery of 10 Russian-made Mi-35 helicopter gunships — an update of the Mi-24 used by the Nicaraguan army against US-funded Contra death squads in the 1980s.
On a visit to the Libertador air base outside Maracay city west of Caracas, Mr Maduro urged troops to show “maximum loyalty” in defence of the revolutionary ideas of late president Hugo Chavez and 19th-century liberator Simon Bolivar.