Caracas, June 28: A police helicopter dropped grenades on the Venezuelan Supreme Court in a daring attack escalating the months-long crisis engulfing the regime of President Nicolas Maduro.
The helicopter was reportedly stolen and piloted by an officer in the country’s investigative police force, Oscar Perez. As it strafed the court building and the Interior Ministry in Caracas on Tuesday, the attackers fired shots and lobbed grenades on the court, officials said.
Maduro condemned the incident as an “attempted coup”, saying “terrorists” were behind the offensive and that an operation was underway to track down the perpetrators, CNN reported.
No one was injured in the attack and one of the grenades failed to explode, government officials said. According to the reports, it was unclear how a rogue police helicopter circled high-profile buildings in the Venezuelan capital without being shot down. Eyewitnesses said the assault went on for about two hours. The attack came after months of protests against the political and economic crisis under Maduro’s regime and ahead of a vote July 30 to elect members of a controversial new body that could make changes to the country’s Constitution. Before the attack began, a man who identified himself as Perez appeared in a video online saying an operation was underway to seize democracy back from Venezuela’s “criminal government”.
Flanked by a group of armed men, Perez claimed to be speaking on behalf of a coalition of military, police officers and civil officials, said the report. In his video message, Perez said he was a pilot in the special response unit of Venezuela’s Criminal Investigative Police and demanded that Maduro step down.
Photographs posted online showed a helicopter with the initials of the investigative police unit on its side, flying above capital Caracas. Through an open door an occupant was seen holding a banner saying “Article 350 libertad” — referring to an article in the Venezuelan Constitution that allows citizens to oppose the government should it subvert democratic principles. IANS