Alfredo Romero, an attorney with the NGO Foro Penal (Criminal Justice Forum), told AFP yesterday that military hearings involving civilian suspects were known to have been taking place for several days.
"So far, 75 people have been brought before Venezuelan military courts. Fifty of those remain in custody," said Romero, who is representing the detained civilians.
Another forty or so people were expected before judges later yesterday, said the lawyer, who denounced what he called an "illegal" bid by a military court to try civilians.
The 50 people being held are in Guarico state, according to legal expert Luis Betancourt with Foro Penal.
Riot cops fired tear gas yesterday as thousands pressed ahead with a weeks-long campaign of protest against Maduro's efforts to reform the constitution.
Clashes at protests have left 36 people dead and hundreds injured since the unrest erupted on April 1, according to authorities.
Demonstrators blame Maduro for an economic crisis that has caused food shortages in the oil-rich state and say his constitutional move is a ploy to resist calls for early elections.
His own chief prosecutor has spoken out against the detention of protestors.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
