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Venezuela Detains 17 Over Attack on Opposition Candidate's Campaign

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Teodoro Campos, opposition lawmaker and security chief of Venezuelan presidential candidate Henri Falcon, receives help after sustaining an injury during a rally with Falcon, in Caracas, Venezuela, April 2, 2018.
Teodoro Campos, opposition lawmaker and security chief of Venezuelan presidential candidate Henri Falcon, receives help after sustaining an injury during a rally with Falcon, in Caracas, Venezuela, April 2, 2018.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro said on Tuesday that 17 people had been detained for an attack on a rival presidential candidate's campaign, but the leftist leader rejected accusations that pro-government thugs were to blame for the unrest ahead of the May vote.

The security boss of opposition candidate Henri Falcon sustained a "severe" injury to the head during an outing in the rough Caracas neighborhood of Catia on Monday. Falcon accused government supporters of attacking Teodoro Campos, who is also a lawmaker, with a brass knuckle. After being whisked to hospital, Campos was in stable condition, according to Falcon.

Maduro, whom Falcon has accused of turning to violence to compensate for his deep unpopularity in the midst of a brutal economic crisis, condemned the attack.

"I can say that there are 17 people arrested and that all who dare attack presidential candidate Henri Falcon's campaign verbally or physically will be punished with jail," Maduro said during a speech on state television. He did not provide any details on the arrests.

Maduro rebuffed claims that militant grassroot groups known as "colectivos" were behind the attack.

"If someone says they are 'chavista' or a member of a 'colectivo' and does what that group did yesterday in Catia, in Caracas, then they're not 'chavista.' It could be an infiltrator on the right-wing's payroll," said Maduro, who frequently accuses his opponents of seeking to sabotage his presidency by allegedly hoarding goods, tampering with the electricity generation and fueling violence.

Critics say Maduro has wrecked the oil-rich nation's economy with inefficient and corrupt state meddling but refuses to take responsibility for Venezuela's meltdown.

Venezuelan presidential candidate Henri Falcon walks during a campaign event at the slum of Catia in Caracas, April 2, 2018.
Venezuelan presidential candidate Henri Falcon walks during a campaign event at the slum of Catia in Caracas, April 2, 2018.

Falcon is hoping to beat Maduro, a former bus driver and union leader, in a May 20 election that the rest of the opposition is boycotting because it says the electoral process is stacked against it.

Many opposition members distrust Falcon, once a member of the ruling socialists, and say he is a government puppet designed to legitimize an unfair election. Falcon, however, says Maduro's opponents must unite to try to defeat Maduro at the ballot box and bring about peaceful change in Venezuela.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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