Venezuela’s top court strikes down opposition-backed amnesty law

CARACAS (Reuters) – Venezuela’s top court yesterday struck down an amnesty law approved last month by the opposition-dominated Congress, scuttling an effort by critics of President Nicolas Maduro to secure the release of jailed opposition activists.

The Supreme Court’s constitutional chamber ruled that the law violated constitutional principles because it promoted impunity and offered amnesty for crimes that were not eligible for such treatment.

“This impunity law cannot pass,” said Maduro, who had vowed to veto it, in a televised broadcast minutes before the court’s decision was released. “If we want peace, that law cannot pass.”

The court has repeatedly backed Maduro in his disputes with the legislature following the opposition’s blowout victory in December polls that gave it a two-thirds majority of seats. Opposition leaders accuse Maduro of using allies in the courts to run roughshod over the assembly, noting that ruling Socialist Party legislators used lame-duck sessions late last year to name party militants to the bench.