Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and opposition coalition representatives agreed Tuesday to hold talks aimed at ending two months of anti-government protests that have left 39 people dead in their oil-rich nation.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and opposition coalition representatives agreed Tuesday to hold talks aimed at ending two months of anti-government protests that have left 39 people dead in their oil-rich nation.
The talks, tentatively scheduled to begin Thursday, will be overseen by UNASUR, a regional South American grouping, and the Vatican.
Since early February, 39 people have died in clashes between security forces and protesters.
Maduro held preliminary talks Tuesday with the opposition coalition Democratic Unity Roundtable, or MUD by its initials in Spanish.
But even as he agreed to talks and said he wanted peace, the populist leftist successor to Hugo Chavez warned there would be no change to his socialist model of government.
"I would be a traitor if I embarked on negotiating the revolution," Maduro said.
The dialogue agreed to would be unprecedented under Maduro, elected last year after Chavez died of cancer.
For the MUD coalition, key issues on the talks' agenda include amnesty for more than 100 people arrested during the protests, and a truth commission to probe the violence that marred them.
MUD is also demanding the dissolution of armed civilian groups known as "colectivos" which it says are close to the government.
For his part Maduro said he wants to crack down on street crime and push investment and economic development in the country, which has the world's largest proven oil reserves but also myriad economic woes.