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Conflicts

Venezuelan rogue cop surfaces in online video

December 20, 2017

Rogue Venezuelan policeman Oscar Perez, who sensationally attacked the country's Supreme Court last summer, has reappeared. An online video reportedly shows him taking part in a takeover of a military station.

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Venezuela Polizist Oscar Perez bei einem Protest in Caracas
Image: Getty Images/AFP/I. Zugasti

Oscar Perez, a well-known renegade policeman and part-time action film star, claimed late on Tuesday to be behind an apparent takeover of a military station outside the Venezuelan capital of Caracas. Twenty-six Kalashnikov assault rifles and over 3,000 round of munitions were allegedly stolen in the heist.

A video uploaded to Perez's Twitter account appeared to show the former policeman and a group of other armed assailants handcuff a group of troops and round them up in a small room. "You yourselves are dying of hunger. Why have you not done anything, given you have weapons? Why do you keep protecting these drug-trafficking dictators?" the assailants shout at the soldiers.

Read more: Venezuela's opposition rebuffs threats by President Nicolas Maduro

The attackers then go on to smash photos of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and his predecessor, the late Hugo Chavez.

Perez said on his Twitter that he had led "an impeccable tactical operation in which we recovered these weapons of the people, for the people."

The man behind the Supreme Court helicopter attack

After Perez uploaded the video of himself storming the National Guard quarters, Maduro gave a speech on state television in which he labeled the attackers as "terrorists" sent by the United States. However, the president did not mention Perez by name or offer any details as to who may have been behind the attack.

Perez, who presents himself as a Rambo-type figure on social media, gained notoriety in June after he and a group of assailants flung grenades into the Venezuelan Supreme Court from a stolen police helicopter. The men later shot at the interior ministry, without causing casualties.

Read more: Venezuela hunts rogue officer-actor for helicopter attack

Maduro subsequently issued an Interpol alert for Perez' arrest, who went underground. The former policeman had not been seen publicly since, except briefly in July at a vigil for an anti-government protester killed during last summer's protests.   

@dwnews: Who is Oscar Perez, the man behind the attack on Venezuela's Supreme Court?

Discontent among Venezuela's security forces

In a country gripped by economic hardship and a dwindling supply of basic goods, the Maduro government has largely been able to retain power by keeping the top military brass on his side.

Read more: What is going on in Venezuela?

According to critics, juicy government contracts, corruption and contraband are just some of the reasons many top military officials want Maduro to remain in office. Others fear persecution should the political opposition ever take power.

However, Perez's actions are seen by many as a sign of widening of government discontent among Venezuela's security forces, many of whom are paid just a handful of small US dollars each month.

Venezuela: Crushing burden of debt

dm/jil (Reuters, AFP, AP)