The Catholic Church leadership in Caracas, Venezuela, said the ruling
government's failure to recognize the opposition-controlled National
Assembly represents "a real situation of dictatorship."
In a joint statement with other church officials, Archbishop of Caracas Cardinal Jorge Urosa Savino said that President Nicolas Maduro
and Venezuelan institutions' continued policy of declaring void the
National Assembly disrespects elections carried out in December 2015 in
which the opposition gained a majority of the unicameral legislature.
"Failure to respect the Assembly constitutes a real situation of
dictatorship for ignoring the popular will expressed in December of 2015
... [when] the people indicated mostly not to agree with the current
government," Savino and other church officials said in the statement
that will be read aloud during mass on Jan. 1, the Catholic Church's
World Day of Peace.
The National Assembly was effectively stripped of power after the
opposition gained control.
The Supreme Tribunal of Justice, or TSJ, --
Venezuela's highest court -- late last year ruled the parliament void
until three suspended opposition members were removed from parliament
amid an investigation into electoral fraud.
The removal of the three members would remove the opposition's
two-thirds qualified majority, also known as supermajority.
Despite the
opposition yielding by allowing the suspended members to resign from
their posts in November, the National Assembly is still not recognized
by the TSJ, which alleges the parliament is in contempt because it
oversteps its authority.
Earlier this month, in a constitutional sidestep, the TSJ swore in
new National Electoral Council, or CNE, which is supposed to be the
responsibility of parliament.
Throughout the year, the TSJ ruled unconstitutional or ruled void
numerous bills that passed in the parliament, including one granting
amnesty to political prisoners.
Church leadership said the topic of political prisoners is one of the most urgent issues needed to be resolved in 2017.
"We call for the release of prisoners for acts connected with
political activities," the church leaders said. "Both the judiciary and
the government have legal and constitutional instruments to immediately
release the majority of those citizens, more than 100, who suffer unjust
imprisonment."