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The U.S. Owes Us An Explanation, Says Chavez
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| "Some
people believe I am a threat to the United States, to
democracy. I've told them time and time again that this is not
true," Chavez told CBS TV.
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WASHINGTON,
May 13 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The U.S. government should
explain why it failed to condemn the brief coup in Venezuela last
month that ousted a democratically elected government, Venezuelan
President Hugo Chavez said in an interview broadcast late Sunday, May
12.
"Some
people believe I am a threat to the United States, to democracy. I've
told them time and time again that this is not true," Chavez told
CBS television, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"I
believe that they really owe an explanation ... to the people of the
United States and also to us," he added.
Chavez,
speaking in Spanish through a translator, said he does not believe
Washington was involved in the coup, but his government was
investigating reports of U.S. complicity.
"It
really needs to be extremely strong evidence" before he would
believe Washington was involved, Chavez said.
He
told BBC television Saturday, May 11, that he had proof U.S. military
officers contacted the coup plotters, but said it was unclear whether
they aided or opposed the coup.
"I
have proof and I have it in writing. I have the hour they entered and
the hour in which two military officers of the United States left the
seat of the coup participants," Chavez told the BBC, referring to
military attaches assigned to the U.S. embassy in Caracas.
Chavez
did not identify the officers, but said he knew who they were and whom
they spoke with, while admitting it was unclear whether they aided the
coup or opposed it.
Sources
close to an investigation of the coup previously identified the
officers as army Colonel Ronald MacCammon and Lieutenant Colonel James
Rodgers.
Washington
has consistently denied any involvement in the April 12 coup, in which
Chavez was ousted following a three-day general strike that included
street marches and protesters killed by unknown rooftop sharpshooters.
Chavez
rejected the coup leaders' claim he had resigned, which U.S. officials
quickly accepted. "No, absolutely not. Never. Never. Never,"
he told CBS.
The
State Department refused comment on Chavez's remarks, AFP said.
Business
leader Pedro Carmona took over as interim president with military
backing. But after further unrest, and a switch in allegiance in the
military -- apparently angered at the interim government's dissolving
of the country's congress and supreme court -- Chavez was back in
power a mere 48 hours later. Two government commissions are
investigating events surrounding the coup.
Chavez
has repeatedly irked Washington since being first elected as
Venezuela's president in 1998 after a campaign in which he cultivated
an anti-American image while at the same time keeping the United
States as his nation's main client.
Relations
further deteriorated when Chavez visited Washington's arch enemies,
Libya and Iraq.
He
told CBS he "honestly didn't know" the visits would anger
the United States but would do it again if it was in Venezuela's best
interest.
In
October, he incurred U.S. President George W. Bush's wrath when he
accused the United States of killing children and innocent people in
its so-called war on terrorism in Afghanistan, in the wake of the
September 11 attacks on U.S. soil.
Chavez
also has forged a friendship with Cuban leader Fidel Castro,
Washington's arch-enemy in the Americas.
And
normally delicate relations with Colombia took a turn for the worse on
reports that Chavez allegedly had secret dealings with Bogota's most
dangerous guerrilla group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.
Chavez
told CBS he likes the United States. "I enjoy Whitman's
poems, and 'New York, New York,' the song. I love baseball, Yankee
Stadium, Shea Stadium, hot dogs ... freedom," he said.
Meanwhile,
nearly 100, 000 Venezuelans marched through the capital Caracas to
protest against President Chavez, BBC’s online news service
reported.
The
rally was in memory of 17 people killed in a big anti-government march
before the unsuccessful coup.
The
authorities have promised an impartial investigation into the deaths,
but critics of Chavez claim it is being led by a state prosecutor
loyal to him.
In
a different part of the city, pro-Chavez groups marched on the
prosecutor's office to demand a quick investigation into who started
the violence.
The
anti-Chavez demonstrators wore black to mark their disappointment at
his return to power and chanted slogans such as "We are here and
we're not afraid".
Banners
carried messages saying "Chavez murderer" and
"Forgetting is forbidden".
The
marchers included students, labor activists and intellectuals
convinced that the Chavez government is leading the country to
disaster, according to AFP.
"We
urgently need a new president," said 35-year-old engineer Jesus
Rivero, who carried a placard declaring: "This is a peaceful
demonstration. Please don't shoot!"
University
student Marianella Villegas, 21, said she joined the march to make
sure that those who had opened fire on anti-Chavez protesters April 11
would not escape punishment. "The president has to go,"
she said.
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