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Peru Says Chavez Backs Domestic Revolt
AP ^ | 03/22/2008 | ANDREW WHALEN

Posted on 03/22/2008 8:25:43 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe

LIMA, Peru (AP) — Hugo Chavez has been accused of using Venezuela's oil riches to meddle in Colombia, Argentina, Bolivia and Nicaragua. Now, Peru's president says the Venezuelan leader may be doing it here by funding militants and anti-poverty centers that preach populist revolution.

In recent weeks, Peruvian police have arrested nine people the government alleges are militants bankrolled by Venezuela. And the head of a Congressional investigatory committee accused Venezuela of supplying funds to outreach centers he says agitate against the government.

President Alan Garcia supports the ongoing investigation into the centers.

Venezuela and allies Bolivia and Ecuador "want to destabilize Peru so that our country adheres to their type of thinking, so that Peru fails," said the government's lead anti-terrorism prosecutor, Julio Galindo.

Venezuela vehemently denies the allegations, and denies funding Peruvian militants or the anti-poverty centers. Venezuela's ambassador in Peru, Armando Laguna, said the government should "ask me to leave Peru" if it finds proof.

The accusations come in the context of a regional showdown over alleged Venezuelan and Ecuadorean attempts to destabilize Colombia's U.S.-backed government. Colombian authorities claim a seized rebel laptop indicates that Venezuela planned to give $300 million to rebels fighting to topple it.

The opposition in Nicaragua, Argentina and Bolivia have accused Chavez of funneling funds to political pals. Among the alleged recipients is Ollanta Humala, the fiery populist Garcia narrowly defeated in 2006. Venezuela has denied the charges, which have never been proven.

The arrested Peruvian militants allegedly are from the Coordinadora Continental Bolivariana, a Venezuela-based leftist movement. Authorities say its Peruvian members are mostly former militants of the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement, which was all but decimated in 1997 after it took hostages at the Japanese ambassador's residence in Lima.

Peruvian officials say they arrested seven members on Feb. 29, including the group's alleged leader, Roque Gonzalez, who spent eight years in prison for kidnapping a Bolivian politician. Two more alleged members were arrested on March 17 trying to carry in $65,000 from Ecuador — money Peruvian authorities suspect is Venezuelan.

But Coordinadora founder Fernando Rivero told The Associated Press in Venezuela that the group is entirely autonomous. While it supports the "revolutionary struggle" of Colombian rebels to more equitably distribute wealth, it receives no support from Venezuela, he said.

Garcia calls the anti-poverty centers, which have sprung up in poor Peruvian neighborhoods over the past three years, "a rallying point for everyone who is against the democratic system and national institutions," according to the Andina state news agency.

Congressman Rolando Sousa says there are 150 centers, and accuses Venezuela of funding them. He persuaded Congress this month to formally extend his investigation into the centers, granting it the power to scour phone and bank records to track their sources of support.

"Where does the money come from?" he asked.

The head of one of the centers says their goals are humanitarian, and that they have helped thousands of poor Peruvians get medical care they could not otherwise afford. They deny any Venezuelan funding.

"We only give information to our people" about medical and educational programs, said Marcial Maydana, who runs a center in the highland city of Puno.

Many of the medical procedures are performed in Venezuela and Bolivia, often by Cuban doctors, he said, but insisted the trips are paid for by Peruvian mayors and transportation companies when the patients cannot afford them.

A former Peruvian interior minister, Fernando Rospigliosi, said he believes the Garcia government is exaggerating the influence of the missions and the Coordinadora.

It wants "to make the public believe that social movements arising for other reasons can be attributed to external influence," he told The Associated Press.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: bolivariancircles; bolivia; humala; tupacamaru
La Paz buzzes over alleged Venezuelan 'mega-embassy' - March 22, 2008 - LA PAZ, Bolivia: It's a new concept in Latin American diplomatic real estate: the mega-embassy. Credit Peru's president, Alan Garcia, for the inspiration. Garcia — who is no fan of his Venezuelan counterpart, Hugo Chavez — suggested in a newspaper interview that Chavez is building a "general headquarters" in this Andean capital that would serve to coordinate Venezuela's joint operations in the region with its leftist allies Cuba and Nicaragua. A minor media frenzy ensued, with television crews racing to the seven-story office tower in La Paz's middle-class Obrajes neighborhood. Corralled by a television reporter, top Venezuelan diplomat Douglas Perez said the construction was simply an embassy, to replace the current rented office in a downtown high-rise. The US$500,000 (€325,000) building, he said, will also house an auditorium, offices of Venezuela's state energy company PDVSA and perhaps a branch of the country's development bank Bandes. The reporter pressed on: What about the mural showing the flags of Venezuela, Cuba, Nicaragua and Bolivia? Decoration, Perez answered with a shrug.
1 posted on 03/22/2008 8:25:47 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Tailgunner Joe

Hugito causing problems in South America? Nah, that goofy commie buggar wouldn’t that...


2 posted on 03/22/2008 8:38:49 PM PDT by Army Air Corps (Four fried chickens and a coke)
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To: Army Air Corps
El Puerco Hugo....barbacoa siempre por tu .....
3 posted on 03/22/2008 8:44:37 PM PDT by tflabo (Truth or tyranny)
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To: tflabo

My personal pet name for him is El Pendejo Loco. :-)


4 posted on 03/22/2008 8:49:41 PM PDT by Army Air Corps (Four fried chickens and a coke)
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To: Tailgunner Joe

Soon, one of those agitated South American “citizens” is going to kill Chavez...

I’m more than impatient...


5 posted on 03/22/2008 8:51:17 PM PDT by river rat (Semper Fi - You may turn the other cheek, but I prefer to look into my enemy's vacant dead eyes.)
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To: Tailgunner Joe

Chavez is implicated in funding Senora Fernandez in the recent Argentine election (through a Miami connection, which I understand is now under federal prosecution). He has supported FARC in Colombia, both financially and militarily.

Since he lost the “president for life” referendum, I suspect he is using the declining oil wealth of his nation to fund his dream of recreating a greater bolivarian state including Peru, Colombia, Venezueala, etc.

One could dismiss his ambitions as “mad” if he didn’t have the oil revenues.

And for an embassy in a country not to have a flag of the country in which it is located (but the flags of other, Marxist/leftist countries) says a lot.

Peru was, last I looked, progressing well economically, having Cindero Luminoso pretty much dispatched.

Colombia was much less violent and the FARC faltering, until the Pelosi Congress putzed things up recently.

Another reason to vote for McCain, even with a twinge.


6 posted on 03/22/2008 8:57:33 PM PDT by bajabaja
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To: Tailgunner Joe

...


7 posted on 03/22/2008 9:11:25 PM PDT by GodGunsGuts
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To: bajabaja

When you measure up experience with rebels...Peru is 4-star all the way. They endured years of Shining Path...acting like it was a regional thing and never gearing toward a real fight against them. When they had finally had enough...they reorganized their military and intelligence enough...to whip around and take down Shining Path. I think Chavez is thinking another Shining Path group can stand up there....and thats not very likely.

If you read the vast amount of history on Shining Path...its one of the best stories of the last century. It still amazes me that no one has done a movie on Abimael Guzman. This would fascinate folks and probably win someone an oscar...although the old dude is rotting away at a Navy base prison in Lima currently...and will never be allowed out.


8 posted on 03/22/2008 10:41:41 PM PDT by pepsionice
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To: Tailgunner Joe

9 posted on 03/22/2008 11:18:24 PM PDT by OeOeO
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To: Tailgunner Joe
may be doing it here by funding militants and anti-poverty centers that preach populist revolution

I wonder if Chavez is donating to a certain United Church of Christ in Chicago

10 posted on 03/23/2008 4:18:57 AM PDT by gusopol3
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To: river rat

The day Chavez’s corpse is drug through the streets will be a wonderful day!!!!!


11 posted on 03/23/2008 6:34:46 AM PDT by catfish1957 (Hey McLame, you can fool some of the people some of the time, but you a'int fooling any FReepers)
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To: catfish1957
I much prefer the Italian method....


12 posted on 03/23/2008 10:30:34 AM PDT by river rat (Semper Fi - You may turn the other cheek, but I prefer to look into my enemy's vacant dead eyes.)
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