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Tug-of-war in Venezuela over rebels' bodies

Troops block access to a Caracas morque where the bodies of seven killed in a bloody police operation were taken

Dozens of Venezuelan soldiers ringed a Caracas morgue Wednesday where the body of dissident former police officer Oscar Perez and six others were taken after being gunned down in a bloody police operation. Perez, Venezuela's most wanted man, had gone on social media while the operation was under way Tuesday to say he and his group wanted to surrender but were under unrelenting sniper fire. That has raised questions about the government's account that the seven were killed after opening fire on police who had come to arrest them. "There was an extrajudicial execution and we want to prove it," said Winston Flores, an opposition lawmaker who heads a congressional committee formed to investigate the deaths. Flores, a physician by training, told reporters outside the Bello Monte morgue that authorities refuse to release the bodies or provide autopsy reports. "The response we received was that they are not going to hand over the bodies because they are (being held) at the order of a military court," said Flores. The morgue itself was cordoned off by five rings of armed soldiers carrying anti-riot shields. The blonde and telegenic Perez, 36, was known to Venezuelans as a movie actor and member of an elite police unit. But he gained national notoriety in June at the height of anti-government protests against President Nicolas Maduro. As street protests raged, Perez and accomplices flew a stolen police helicopter over Caracas, dropping grenades on the Supreme Court and opening fire on the Interior Ministry in what Maduro denounced as a coup. Since then Perez has taunted the government from hiding, popping up on social media and at opposition rallies. In his final video post during the assault, a bloodied Perez called on Venezuelans "not to lose heart. Fight, take to the streets, it is time we are free." On Tuesday, his wife Dana Vivas demanded on Twitter that the government allow his family to identify his body, and insisted it not be cremated. And his mother echoed her, firmly. "I demand that you allow me, with all the pain I am feeling in my soul, to confirm that the body is my son's -- if he really is in the morgue," Aminta Perez said in a video posted on Vivas' Twitter account. His mother, who is living in Mexico with Vivas and the couple's children, demanded: "Let me pick up his body to give him a Christian burial. If you do not allow me that, as far as I am concerned, he is still alive." Flores said his committee had been informed that the bodies were being kept in refrigerated cases. In a statement, the non-governmental rights organization Foro Penal stressed that the state has a duty "to guarantee the life including of those who have been identified as authors or participants of criminal acts." It noted that extrajudicial executions are "expressly forbidden in Venezuela."