Tag Archives: President Nicolas Maduro

Scattered protests in Venezuela over election

Thousands of students protesting Venezuela‘s disputed election are facing off with National Troops on a highway in the capital.

The university students are chanting anti-government slogans and yelling for others to join their protest.

Soldiers in riot gear are preventing the students from continuing their march down the highway toward the west of Caracas, where most of the government is headquartered.

There is heightened security across the capital. The National Guard has parked armored vehicles in a central plaza and police in riot gear are standing guard at other points.

Opposition candidate Henrique Capriles has challenged his narrow loss to acting President Nicolas Maduro in Sunday’s election to replace the deceased Hugo Chavez.

The newspaper Ultimas Noticias, meanwhile, is reporting clashes in western Barinas state between police and protesters.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/cpzEFm7e8tY/

Tensions up in Venezuela after polls close

Voters chose Sunday between the hand-picked successor who campaigned to carry on Hugo Chavez‘s self-styled socialist revolution and an emboldened second-time challenger who warned that the late president’s regime has Venezuela on the road to ruin. Tensions rose soon after polls closed as both sides hinted at victory and suggested the other was plotting fraud.

Jorge Rodriguez, the head of the campaign for acting President Nicolas Maduro, said he couldn’t reveal the results before electoral authorities did but strongly suggested Maduro had won by smiling and summoning supporters to the presidential palace, where Chavez’s supporters gathered to celebrate the late president’s past victories. And he warned that Maduro’s camp would not allow the will of the people to be subverted.

Opposition challenger Henrique Capriles and his campaign aides immediately lashed out at Rodriguez’s comments.

Ramon Guillermo Aveledo, a Capriles campaign coordinator, suggested the government was trying to steal the election.

“They know perfectly well what happened and so do we,” he said at a hastily called news conference. “They are misleading their people and are trying to mislead the people of this country.”

Capriles also suggested fraud was in the works in a Twitter message: “We alert the country and the world of the intent to change the will of the people!”

In an earlier tweet, Capriles urged his supporters not to be “desperate and defeated.”

Bill Richardson, the former New Mexico governor and longtime U.S. ambassador-at-large who came to witness the election, told The Associated Press that both candidates had assured him they would respect the outcome of the vote.

“I’m not here as an election observer, but I met with both candidates — Maduro, yesterday, and Capriles today. And I’m hopeful because both told me they would respect the rule of law and the will of the people,” Richardson said.

Maduro, the 50-year-old longtime foreign minister to Chavez, pinned his hopes on the immense loyalty for his boss among millions of poor beneficiaries of government largesse and the powerful state apparatus that Chavez skillfully consolidated.

Maduro’s campaign was mostly a near-religious homage to the man he called “the redeemer of the Americas,” who succumbed to cancer March 5. He blamed Venezuela‘s myriad woes on vague plots by

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/dG2iEFsTrqQ/

Conspiracy theories abound ahead of Venezuela vote

Salvadoran mercenaries are plotting with Venezuela‘s opposition candidate to assassinate interim President Nicolas Maduro. But wait, the plot thickens. Central American agents, along with former U.S. diplomats, are also plotting to kill the opposition candidate, Henrique Capriles.

Those are just two of the conspiracy theories that Maduro has put forth ahead of Sunday’s election to replace Hugo Chavez. Maduro, who is running as Chavez’s hand-picked successor, also says the government has launched an investigation to determine if someone — U.S. agents, he has hinted — inoculated Chavez with the cancer that killed him March 5.

Opposition leaders called the allegation laughable, but government officials insist it’s no joke. Such conspiracy theories don’t seem all that wild to some Latin Americans who resent decades of U.S. meddling in their affairs. In Venezuela, relations with the U.S. deteriorated after Washington briefly endorsed a coup that toppled Chavez for two days in 2002.

Maduro claims his political opponents have hired mercenaries from El Salvador to assassinate him. He has offered no proof, but during a rally Sunday he accused a former aide to Capriles of being the plot’s mastermind.

Capriles called the claim “contradictory and ridiculous.” He recalled that less than two weeks ago, Maduro claimed that former U.S. diplomats Otto Reich and Roger Noriega were plotting to kill Capriles with the aide of Central American mercenaries. The U.S. State Department has dismissed the allegations too.

Maria Isabel Puerta, a political science professor at the University of Carabobo, said Maduro is spinning conspiracy theories to distract from pressing domestic problems, especially food shortages and chronic electrical blackouts, and shift the blame to government foes. Along with the plots to assassinate both presidential candidates, Maduro says the Salvadoran mercenaries are plotting to infiltrate the state-run power company and sabotage the country’s power grid.

“It insinuates the transfer of responsibilities to the enemy, even though it seems strange,” Puerta said.

Maduro’s political opponents say the interim president is simply following Chavez’s playbook. Throughout his 14-year-old rule, Chavez and his allies frequently warned that government foes were plotting to kill him, topple his government or destabilize the country.

Miguel Perez Pirela, the host of a program on state television, claimed last year that a newspaper crossword puzzle had a hidden call to kill Chavez’s older brother, Adan. Intelligent agents went so far as to question the author of the …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News