At least 31 people have died in Venezuela and 461 have been injured in violent clashes between opposition demonstrators and government forces that began last month, an official said Thursday.
Another 1,854 people have been detained during the unrest, according to Interior Minister Miguel Rodriguez Torres.
The weeks of protests
across Venezuela mark the biggest threat President Nicolas Maduro has
faced since his election last year. Demonstrators say they have taken to
the streets to protest shortages of goods, high inflation and high
crime.
Protesters and government officials trade blame for the violence.
Venezuela blames one woman for protests
"Nicolas threw gas on the
fire. He and he alone will be responsible for how the situation
develops," opposition leader Henrique Capriles Radonski said in a
Twitter post Thursday.
"It's clear you want more confrontation and to promote violence," he tweeted earlier.
In an exclusive interview
with CNN's Christiane Amanpour this month week, Maduro was unapologetic
about his government's response to opposition protesters.
Think about what the U.S.
government would do if a political group laid out a road map for
overthrowing President Barack Obama, Maduro said.
"What would happen in the
United States if a group said they were going to start something in the
United States so that President Obama leaves, resigns, to change the
constitutional government of the United States?" Maduro said. "Surely,
the state would react, would use all the force that the law gives it to
re-establish order and to put those who are against the Constitution
where they belong."
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