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Members of U.S. Congress say Chavez should stay
Rueters AlertNet ^ | Jan. 09.2003 | Newsdesk

Posted on 01/11/2003 4:38:16 PM PST by madfly

WASHINGTON, Jan 9 (Reuters) - Nineteen members of the U.S. House of Representatives told Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on Thursday they strongly opposed attempts to remove him from office and condemned Bush administration officials who appeared to support a short-lived coup against him in April.

In unusually blunt criticism, the 18 Democrats and one independent added: "The people within the present American administration who supported your illegal ouster in April 2002 were wrong to do so and we strongly condemn that decision. We have been actively working to ensure against that mistake being repeated."

"Should an illegal coup take place again, we believe the world community should condemn such an action and make clear that Venezuela is served best only when governed by legally elected leaders," they added.

The members of Congress included Reps. John Conyers of Michigan, Jesse Jackson Jnr. of Illinois, Sheila Jackson Lee of Texas and independent Rep. Bernie Sanders of Vermont.

They sent the letter on the same day that President George W. Bush named controversial diplomat Otto Reich, a Cuban-American hawk, as a special envoy to Latin America.

As assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere Affairs in April, Reich helped give the impression that the United States welcomed the coup against Chavez, a populist who faces a long and bitter campaign to remove him from office.

The conflict in Venezuela has shut down most of the country's oil-exporting facilities, squeezing world oil supplies at a time when the United States is making military preparations for a possible attack on Iraq.

The Bush administration says it supports mediation by the Organization of American States (OAS), which has so far proved fruitless, and a solution based on elections -- one of the main demands of Chavez's opponents.

But the 19 members of Congress said: "We believe it is against the best interests of Venezuela and its people to abrogate the constitution and force elections prior to the normally appointed time."

State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said, "Our view is that the parties need to sit down and need to work out a peaceful resolution of these fundamental issues using the good offices of (OAS) Secretary-General (Cesar) Gaviria."




TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: chavez; congress; fifthcolumn; latinamericalist; venezuela
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To: madfly
"Should an illegal coup take place again, we believe the world community should condemn such an action and make clear that Venezuela is served best only when governed by legally elected leaders," they added.

Unalieanable rights trump legal rights. I support the "illegal coup". I support unalienable rights.

41 posted on 01/11/2003 8:08:55 PM PST by FreeReign (Thank you very much James Carville....)
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To: Cacique; madfly; Cincinatus' Wife
One of my ex-coworkers' father (a former general and Ambassadpr) cannot return to Venezuela because that walking piece of Mierda has put in effect a death sentence on much of his rivals that are connected to the military. If any of these izquierdistas had any balls, they would go down to Weston, Florida or my old nabe, the Doral section of Miami and openly state their case there. They wouldn't last more than a few seconds.
42 posted on 01/11/2003 8:13:02 PM PST by Clemenza
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To: Clemenza
Yeah, they'd get hung in Weston.

SF bump!
43 posted on 01/11/2003 9:20:43 PM PST by MonroeDNA (Horn broke. Watch for finger!)
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To: byteback
No just the axis of marxists.
44 posted on 01/11/2003 11:14:59 PM PST by victim soul
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To: madfly
Venezuela's embattled Chavez warns foes against taunting "giant" - troops are on his side *** Venezuela's embattled President Hugo Chavez issued a stern warning to his foes, insisting the armed forces were on his side and would not hesitate to intervene in defense of his revolution. "This is the time when there is an army to battle for Venezuela," he told thousands of cheering supporters gathered in a Caracas arena. His latest warning came as the opposition called for a march Sunday to a military complex in Caracas, even though a similar protest on January 3 ended in clashes with Chavez supporters that left two people dead and over a dozen wounded. It also came on the heels of his threat to deploy military troops to seize any food processing plant idled by a six-week-old strike aimed at forcing him from office.

Flanked by soldiers in camouflage gear, the leftist-populist president warned that his opponents were taunting "a giant." "The revolution will not be defeated, it will be strenghthened," the former paratrooper said of his program of social reforms his opponents claim ruined the economy and failed to improve the lot of the millions of impoverished Venezuelans. Chavez also said that if public schools closed in support of the strike did not reopen, their directors would suffer the same fate as about 1,000 striking employees of Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) fired in past weeks.***

45 posted on 01/12/2003 3:24:18 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
bttt
46 posted on 01/12/2003 5:17:49 AM PST by madfly
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To: madfly
It would be interesting to see how many of these die hard communists flew to Cuba last year to sing Happy Birthday to Tio Fidel Castro. While there, they got on their knees to suckle and kiss his clymer at his birthday party.

Some of these POS's make Osama Mamma Murray look like a reasonable person.
47 posted on 01/12/2003 6:40:26 AM PST by Grampa Dave (Support Free Republic. Become a monthly donor ! Taxcuts are for Taxpayers!)
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To: madfly
Disgusting. Not that I am surprised, of course, looking at the names.

But isn't such an action illegal under our Constitution? I didn't think that members of Congress were permitted to intervene, on their own initiative, in foreign policy matters.
48 posted on 01/12/2003 6:44:43 AM PST by livius
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To: Grampa Dave
19 clear traitors have identified themselves. Tyranny, injustice, corruption, and evil are their only goals.
49 posted on 01/12/2003 4:06:30 PM PST by friendly
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To: livius
They are certainly intervening. The just released Reuters story that mentions Chavez weekly Sunday TV broadcast to the nation here...

http://reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=2030925

...says, quote: "Chavez on Sunday read out what he said was a Jan 9 letter of support sent by 19 U.S. Congress members recognizing him as the legitimately elected president of Venezuela."

-Shane
50 posted on 01/12/2003 4:09:21 PM PST by shanec
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To: shanec
Thanks for the link, shanec. Chavez read the letter from OUR Congressmen on the air and said that both Lincoln and George Washington would be on his side (insert theme music from Twilight Zone here):

Venezuelan Troops Halt Marchers, Chavez Plays Tough
Sun January 12, 2003 06:28 PM ET
By Pascal Fletcher

CARACAS, Venezuela (Reuters) - Venezuelan troops fired tear gas on Sunday to drive back tens of thousands of anti-government protesters as President Hugo Chavez ordered a crackdown against a six-week-old opposition strike that is bleeding the economy.

As the demonstrators in Caracas fled the clouds of gas, the leftist leader sternly warned opponents he would not let them disrupt schools, banks or food supplies in a strike which has already crippled shipments by the world's No. 5 oil exporter.

"They want to break us economically. They are not going to do it. I swear it by God and my mother," Chavez said during his weekly "Hello President" television and radio show.

Waving national flags, the opposition protesters marched toward Fuerte Tiuna military headquarters in Caracas as part of their determined campaign to try to force the populist president to resign and call early elections.

They found their path blocked by barbed wire barricades, armored vehicles and several hundred National Guard troops and military police, who fired a volley of tear gas canisters.

Several people were carried away, apparently overcome by the choking gas.

During his broadcast, Chavez signed a decree creating a special government commission to combat a tax rebellion announced by opposition leaders. By urging Venezuelans not to pay taxes of any kind, the strikers hope to cut government revenues already drained by the crippling oil strike.

The president, elected in 1998, said the strike was costing the country tens of millions of dollars a day. "We should prepare for difficult times," he said, adding that another government commission was drawing up budget cuts.

He condemned his opponents as "fascists and coup mongers" and described them as desperate. "They don't know what to do next," said Chavez, who survived a brief coup in April. He himself attempted a botched coup bid in 1992.

Chavez, who has already sacked 2,000 striking state oil employees, repeated threats to send troops to take over private factories and warehouses if they hoarded food supplies.

He also threatened to revoke the broadcasting licenses of private TV stations that criticize his rule, describing their hostile programming as "worse than an atomic bomb."

'DECLARATION OF WAR'

On Saturday, he warned the government would intervene in banks and schools shut by the strike.

"This was a declaration of war. Chavez is not interested in dialogue or reconciliation," glass artist Luz Marina Urrecheaga said on Sunday as she and other protesters harangued troops.

The strike has rocked Venezuela's oil-reliant economy and sent its bolivar currency tumbling. It has also jolted oil markets and the oil exporters' cartel OPEC agreed on Sunday to raise production by 1.5 million barrels per day to stave off a spike in prices threatened by the Venezuelan strike.

The marchers had headed toward Fuerte Tiuna in a repeat of a Jan. 3 protest that broke up in violence, leaving two Chavez supporters dead and dozens of other people injured.

The anti-Chavez demonstrators on Sunday mocked the troops, hanging women's underwear on the barbed wire to insult them. Angry Chavez supporters who turned out to confront the anti-government marchers were kept back by a cordon of troops.

As a result of the strike, Venezuelans have experienced unprecedented shortages of gasoline, cooking gas and some food items. Bank workers staged a 48-hour stoppage last week, but will reopen on Monday under restricted service hours.

Chavez, who survived a brief coup in April, says he is a champion of the poor and that wealthy and corrupt minority elites are trying to topple him. His foes accuse him of dragging Venezuela toward Cuban-style communism.

Chavez on Sunday read out what he said was a Jan 9 letter of support sent by 19 U.S. Congress members recognizing him as the legitimately elected president of Venezuela.

"If Abraham Lincoln or George Washington were alive and here today, they would be on our side," he said.

Government and opposition remain deadlocked over the timing of elections and the United States, the biggest buyer of Venezuelan oil, is backing efforts to reach a negotiated deal in talks brokered by the Organization of American States.

The opposition plans to hold a nonbinding referendum on Chavez's rule on Feb 2. His current terms ends in early 2007.

He says a binding referendum on his rule cannot be legally held until August. If he loses, "I'll go," he said on Sunday.


51 posted on 01/12/2003 8:04:41 PM PST by Ragtime Cowgirl
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To: Ragtime Cowgirl
Thanks for this. Unbelievable.
52 posted on 01/14/2003 4:09:07 AM PST by madfly
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