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Chavez rejects US ambassador-designate to Venezuela

News4u-News Desk-President Hugo Chavez has rejected Larry Palmer as the US ambassador-designate to Venezuela, and urged US President Barack Obama to “look for another candidate.” “How can you think I’d accept this gentleman coming here? You’d best withdraw him, Obama. Don’t insist, I’m asking you,” said Chavez in his weekly “Alo Presidente” radio and television show.

Palmer recently voiced concern about Cuba’s growing influence in the Venezuelan military, which, he said was “considerably low” in morale and professionalism.In written answers to a US lawmaker’s questions — his nomination as ambassador must be confirmed by the Senate — Palmer also said there were “clear ties” between leftist Colombian guerrillas and Chavez’s government.Venezuela’s foreign ministry on Thursday had protested Palmer’s statements as “interference and interventionism” and asked the United States for an explanation before he was confirmed in his post.Palmer “can’t come here as ambassador,” said Chavez. “He disqualified himself by breaking all the rules of diplomacy. He messed with all of us. He can’t come here.”"The best thing the United States government can do is to look for another candidate,” for ambassador to Venezuela, he added.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

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Chavez: Venezuela has deployed troops amid spat

News4u-News Desk-Caracas (Venezuela), (AP)

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said he has deployed troops and air units in case of a conflict with neighboringColombia.

Chavez did not give details about the deployments, but said he has been saddened to be spending hours “reviewing war plans” due to tensions with Colombia.
The socialist president also said, however, that he wants peace and hopes it will be possible to talk with Colombian President-elect Juan Manuel Santos and ease tensions after he takes office on 7th Aug.
Chavez cut off diplomatic relations with US-allied Colombialast week after outgoing President Alvaro Uribe’s government presented photos, videos and maps of what it said were Colombian rebel camps inside Venezuela.
Chavez called it an attempt to smear his government and said Uribe could be trying to lay the groundwork for an armed conflict.
“We have deployed units to defend our sovereignty in case of an aggression, air defense units, air units, infantry units, special operations,” Chavez said Friday.

He said those deployments were unannounced “because we don’t want to harm anyone, nor do we want to cause alarm.”
Chavez said a Colombian helicopter had violated Venezuelan airspace for five minutes on Thursday, and that his military is on alert because Uribe “is capable of anything.”
“They aren’t going to lead us into a war through blackmail,” Chavez told state television.
The Colombian government denies seeking a military conflict and has said it is simply seeking cooperation from Venezuela in rooting out rebels.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

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Putin, Chavez, Morales broaden energy, military cooperation

News4u-News Desk-President Hugo Chavez welcomed Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to Venezuela Friday as the two worked to deepen military, energy and financial ties.

Putin was received with military honours at Caracas international airport by Chavez, a leftist firebrand who has signed a dozen military agreements with Moscow since 2005 worth some USD 4.4 billion, raising concerns in Washington.

“This is a truly important day for the country and for Latin America. It is a visit of great importance. We are forging, like steel, a new multipolar world,” Chavez said late Thursday in a televised address.

Last week, in announcing Putin’s first visit to Latin America’s biggest oil producer, Chavez thanked Russia for helping Venezuela “bolster its defencive potential” in the face of “threats” from the United States.

Also in Caracas was Bolivian President Evo Morales, who was expected to seek a USD 100-million loan from Russia to purchase military and other hardware, including an Antonov aircraft for the president’s use, officials in La Paz said.

Russian officials, including Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin, arrived in Caracas Wednesday to prepare for Putin’s visit.

Putin and Chavez’s agenda began with a visit to a Russian merchant marine fishing vessel which will be used to train Venezuelan sailors under one of the agreements to be signed later in the day.

From there, they were to place a wreath at the tomb of Venezuelan independence hero Simon Bolivar, followed by a private meeting at the Miraflores presidential palace where they were to sign a series of agreements.

The accords will bring Venezuela “to the next phase of cooperation with Russia, which no longer will be limited to energy and military matters, but now also includes social, cultural and health issues,” said Vice President Elias Jaua on state-run VTV television ahead of the visit.

Topping the list is an agreement to set up a Russian-Venezuelan development bank to finance a joint venture for oil and gas exploration in eastern Venezuela’s oil-rich

Orinoco river basin.

The enterprise — 60 per cent owned by Venezuela, 40 per cent by a consortium of Russian companies — hopes to extract up to 450,000 barrels of oil per day from the Amazon region.

Putin and Chavez will also sign cooperation deals in agriculture, transportation, and the prevention of natural catastrophes, according to the meeting agenda.

President Hugo Chavez welcomed Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin

President Hugo Chavez welcomed Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin

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Venezuela’s Chavez rules out Internet controls

News4u-News Desk-Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez denied that the government plans to impose controls on the Internet, saying that his administration aims to increase Web access rather than limit it.

Earlier this month, Chavez sparked concerns of a possible crackdown on Web sites critical of his government when he called for regulation of the Internet and urged prosecutors to act against Noticiero Digital, a site popular among his opponents.

Chavez has become increasingly critical of social networking sites such as Twitter and Facebook and says adversaries use them to deceive the public.

Yesterday, speaking during his weekly television and radio show, the socialist leader said the government has inaugurated 668 Internet centers in much of the country that offer Venezuelans access to the Web, and his administration plans to spend close to USD 11 million this year to build 200 more.

Still, Chavez also told his audience that government critics often use the Web “to generate panic,” and said such actions “cannot be permitted.”

He announced plans to counter such online criticism by launching his own Web page and becoming a cyber-activist himself, “I’m going to have my Internet trench, my trench for the battle.”

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

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Tensions escalate between Colombia and Venezuela

News4u-News Desk-Colombia said it is preparing to defend against a possible foreign military attack amid growing tensions with neighboring Venezuela, while Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said Colombia would regret any actions that hurt his country.  

Without specifically accusing Venezuela, Colombian Defense Minister Gabriel Silva was quoted as saying that his country was preparing a strategy to ward off any attack.

Colombia, a close ally of the United States, and Venezuela, whose leader Chavez is one of the most strident critics of the United States in Latin America, are locked in a growing political and trade dispute.   

Chavez, an outspoken socialist, accuses the United States of planning to invade Venezuela with the help of Colombia, a charge the United States denies.

  

The two Andean countries almost went to war in 1987 in a dispute over a maritime border in the Caribbean Gulf.

  

Chavez ordered tanks to the Colombian border in 2008 after Colombia raided a rebel base over the frontier inside Ecuador. 

Chavez ally President Rafael Correa condemned the raid as an aggression. Tensions eased after a summit a week later.

  

”In Colombia, we have concentrated on the internal threat. But the risk is growing because what has been clearly and directly presented is an eventual action against Colombia from outside,” Silva told El Tiempo newspaper.

  

Colombia for decades has struggled to subdue Marxist rebels profiting from the cocaine trade inside the country.

  

”Colombia was not used to thinking about this eventuality in its foreign policy and defense strategy. Unfortunately now we have to put this variable on the map. There is a risk of a foreign aggression,” Silva said.

  

Colombia last week activated seven new army battalions, including two along the Venezuelan frontier.  

    ‘YOU’LL REGRET IT’ 

Chavez on 8th Nov. told Venezuelan troops to be ready for a possible war with Colombia and restricted Colombian imports to protest an agreement allowing U.S. troops more access to Colombian bases, an accord he says threatens his OPEC nation.

  

”We are not preparing any aggression against Colombia or against anybody,” Chavez said on his television show.

  

But he said his country would be prepared for any attack. He called Colombia’s government a declared enemy of Venezuela.

  

”Believe me, bourgeoise of Colombia, if you hurt Venezuela you’ll regret it. We are not unarmed. We do not have our arms crossed,” Chavez said.

  

Chavez last week accused the Netherlands of aggressive behavior for allowing the US military access to airfields in the self-governed Dutch Antilles and Aruba.

  

On Sunday, Chavez said the United States was spying on his government with unmanned drones that fly from Colombia as well as the islands off Venezuelan’s Caribbean coast. He called the incursions by the unmanned planes ”acts of war” and ordered his air force to shoot them down if they are seen again.

  

Colombia has received billions of dollars in aid from Washington to fight leftist guerrillas and drug traffickers. President Alvaro Uribe says the recent base deal is merely an extension of existing military cooperation between the countries for operations limited to inside Colombia.

  

But the accord worried Latin American governments concerned over the US presence.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

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Chavez, Castro sign agreements worth 3.2 billion dollars

News4u-News Desk-Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez signed 3.2 billion dollars’ worth of cooperation agreements with Cuba and said former Cuban leader Fidel Castro was in great health, after visiting him at his home.

Chavez arrived Friday in Havana for a meeting on Sunday of the regional ALBA group, and met shortly after landing with President Raul Castro, who took over from his now 83-year-old brother Fidel after the longtime Cuban leader underwent surgery in 2006.

“Fidel is better than all of us… I told Raul that Fidel will bury us all,” Chavez said after his meeting with the Cuban president.

Chavez and Raul Castro, 77, on Saturday signed some 285 cooperation agreements worth 3.2 billion dollars, which will go into effect in 2010.

Close political partners Cuba and Venezuela have expanded their economic ties since 2000, reaching a cumulative exchange of 8.7 billion dollars, said Chavez’ Oil and Energy Minister Rafael Rodriguez, who is also visiting Havana.

The agreements, he said, chiefly cover the health, education, farming and energy sectors.

Chavez and Raul Castro will on Sunday attend in Havana a summit of the ALBA, a leftist bloc Chavez founded in 2004 as a counterweight to the US-sponsored Free Trade Area of the Americas.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

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Chavez, Castro sign agreements worth 3.2 billion dollars

News4u-News Desk-Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez signed 3.2 billion dollars’ worth of cooperation agreements with Cuba and said former Cuban leader Fidel Castro was in great health, after visiting him at his home.

Chavez arrived Friday in Havana for a meeting on Sunday of the regional ALBA group, and met shortly after landing with President Raul Castro, who took over from his now 83-year-old brother Fidel after the longtime Cuban leader underwent surgery in 2006.

“Fidel is better than all of us… I told Raul that Fidel will bury us all,” Chavez said after his meeting with the Cuban president.

Chavez and Raul Castro, 77, on Saturday signed some 285 cooperation agreements worth 3.2 billion dollars, which will go into effect in 2010.

Close political partners Cuba and Venezuela have expanded their economic ties since 2000, reaching a cumulative exchange of 8.7 billion dollars, said Chavez’ Oil and Energy Minister Rafael Rodriguez, who is also visiting Havana.

The agreements, he said, chiefly cover the health, education, farming and energy sectors.

Chavez and Raul Castro will on Sunday attend in Havana a summit of the ALBA, a leftist bloc Chavez founded in 2004 as a counterweight to the US-sponsored Free Trade Area of the Americas.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

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Venezuela’s Chavez aims to tap nuclear energy

News4u-News Desk-Caracas (Venezuela)  (AP) Hugo Chavez wants to join the nuclear energy club and is looking to Russia for help in getting started.

The Venezuelan leader is already dismissing critics’ concerns over his nuclear ambitions, offering assurances his aims are peaceful and that Venezuela will simply be following in the footsteps of other South American nations using atomic energy.

Yet his project remains in its planning stages and still faces a host of practical hurdles, likely requiring billions of dollars, as well as technology and expertise that Venezuela lacks.

Russia has offered to help bridge that gap, and Chavez has announced that the two countries have created an atomic energy commission.

“I say it before the world, Venezuela is going to start the process of developing nuclear energy, but we’re not going to make an atomic bomb, so don’t be bothering us afterward …


Hugo Chavez

Hugo Chavez

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Venezuela gets USD 2.2 bln in credit for Russian arms

News4u-News Desk-Russia has opened a USD 2.2 billion line of credit for Venezuela to purchase weapons including armoured vehicles and surface-to-air missiles, President Hugo Chavez said on Monday

Venezuela is buying more arms because it feels threatened by Colombia’s decision to give US troops greater access to its military bases, Chavez said.

Repeating a frequent theme of his presidency, the socialist leader said the United States would like to invade Venezuela and seize the country’s oil fields.

He said the bases in Colombia could help the US stage such an attack.

The arms deal was announced last week during Chavez’s visit to Moscow, and he gave details on Monday.

Chavez said the deal calls for Venezuela to buy 92 Russian-made T-72 tanks as well as Smerch anti-aircraft missile launching systems. He didn’t say how many missile launchers Venezuela was buying.

“The Russian government approved financing for USD 2.2 billion. For what? For weapons, and we must thank them,” Chavez said. “We’ve decided to install a powerful anti-air defence system.”

Last week, Chavez said the deal also included the purchase of ground-to-ground missiles with a range of up to 300 kilometres. He said they were needed to improve Venezuela’s defences.

Chavez said nobody should be alarmed by Venezuela’s newest arms purchases. Venezuela “doesn’t plan to invade anybody,” he said.


President Hugo Chavez

President Hugo Chavez

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Ahmadinejad, Chavez unite against ‘imperialism’

News4u-News Desk-Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez have railed against the West, pledging to deepen their ties and stand together against the United States and world powers the two perceive as imperialistic.

Chavez is on an 11-day tour that has taken him to Libya, Algeria, Syria and Iran.

The leftist Venezuelan leader is also to visit Belarus, Russia and Spain in the trip he has described as a bid to build a “multi-polar world” and counter US influence.

After landing in Tehran late Friday, Chavez said Iran is “a true strategic ally, a staunch ally” to his country and defended Iran’s right to a nuclear program.

He praised Iran for standing up to alleged attempts by “Western forces” to destabilise it after the June presidential election that brought his ally Ahmadinejad a second term in office. These attempts have failed, Chavez said, and “Iran has been strengthened.”

During Chavez’s meeting on Saturday with Ahmadinejad, Iran’s English-language state TV quoted the Iranian president as saying their two countries have “important missions to help the oppressed and revolutionary nations and to expand the anti-imperialist front in the world.”
“Time has passed for arrogant powers to have influence on revolutionary nations,” Ahmadinejad said.

Chavez and Ahmadinejad — both well-known for their anti-US rhetoric — have forged ties in everything from finance to factories.


Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and  Hugo Chavez

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Hugo Chavez

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