Venezuela's authorities deployed hundreds of security forces into an opposition stronghold early Monday to stamp out protests in Caracas against the leftist government of President Nicolas Maduro.
The show of force came as the death toll from a month and a half of protests rose to 29 Monday, after a National Guard captain shot one day earlier during a protest in the city of Maracay died.
Government forces moved quickly established control after moving into the area around the Plaza Altamira, a focal point of nightly clashes in eastern Caracas between masked protesters and security forces.
The government described the operation as a "liberation" of the neighborhood, an area of middle and upper income residences and small businesses called Chacao.
At a hastily arranged meeting, Venezuela's Interior Minister Miguel Rodriguez Torres told the opposition mayor of Chacao he was "turning over the plaza as a territory of peace."
Rodriguez told reporters the aim was "to develop intensive patrolling that will return this municipality to normalcy."
"We are establishing the rights of thousands of citizens of Chacao who have been shut up in their homes because of the violent actions of groups taking place here," he said.
Several hundred National Guard troops in combat gear and armed with rifles patrolled the area in groups of four to eight, making spot checks of passing vehicles.
About 150 civilian "Guards of the People" were seen patrolling the neighborhood on motorcycles.
Columns of police vehicles lined the streets, while workers cleared away barricades built by protesters with garbage, rubble and castoff material.
Chacao Mayor Ramon Muchacho said more than 1,000 security force members took part in the operation.
"The government has informed us that there will be no restrictions on constitutional guarantees, nor on freedom of movement or on the right to protest," he said.
On Saturday, Maduro warned he would not tolerate any more incidents, and intended to take control of the Altamira Plaza area.
His government has been the target of daily protests in cities around the country since February 4, fueled by public anger over violent crime, inflation, shortages and further stoked by often heavy-handed police tactics.
Maduro contends the protests are part of a "fascist" right-wing, U.S.-backed plot to destabilize his year-old government.
The latest victim of the unrest was identified as National Guard Captain Jose Guillen, who died of a gunshot wound to the head while dispersing protesters in Maracay Sunday.
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