Well, to be fair those parties have more or less decided to renounce electoral politics and repeatedly call for armed overthrow of the elected government as the best means of taking power. I'm not sure that
any government would take too kindly to that sort of thing. If they're not even running but want to remove the guy from power, then they would be tacitly calling for armed overthrow even if they didn't publicly call for that, which they have actually done continuously.
There are right-wing gangs connected to those parties who go around lynching leftists:
http://www.coha.org/right-wing-terrorism-in-venezuela/I mean, if there were Neo-Nazi gangs going around burning Democrats to death in America, and the government said the party they represent were legitimate political parties who's rights had to be respected, how would you actually feel about that?
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/jun/02/venezuela-judge-nelson-moncada-murder-political-motivation^ here is one incident from earlier this year where a judge was going home, and got murdered at an opposition street barricade. It's the
typical type of "protest" death that is counted in the total
Maduro is held accountable for. Except because he was a public figure, it became newsworthy. Basically the opposition randomly murder people then they highlight the "death toll" as Maduro's fault. The security forces have basically been operating in a purely
defensive mode throughout all of this. They've shown
much more restraint than most countries would.
Can you imagine if a
judge in America was
murdered at an Antifa roadblock? How do you think the American police would react? Would it just be water-hoses and tear gas? Most of the deaths in the protests were
random murders by the right-wing designed to try and provoke a deadly reaction from the state forces. A reaction which was not really forthcoming the way it would be anywhere else. I mean, these guys aren't like Occupy Wall Street. OWS didn't just randomly kill anyone in a business suit, which is how the protestors in Venezuela act.
Man, a
political slap on the wrist from the government after these party's supporters went around murdering people at random, and those parties
refused to condemn the violence, only to escalate things now, is
much less than most countries would have done.