Venezuela
may expel U.S. envoy over vote suspicions
CARACAS
Petroleumworld.com
11 29 07
Venezuela
could expel a U.S. diplomat it suspects of interfering
in its internal affairs by working against
President Hugo
Chavez's plan to run for reelection indefinitely, a senior
official said on Wednesday.
Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro told state television he
had a document that appeared to be from an American at
the embassy in Caracas referring to a plan to impede the
anti-U.S. president winning a referendum on Sunday.
"
If it's true, we are going to declare this official from
the U.S. Embassy persona non grata and eject him from the
country because he would have been interfering in the internal
matters of Venezuela," he said.
In the last days of a campaign with the "Yes" and "No" camps
neck-and-neck, Chavez's government has become embroiled
in diplomatic spats, accused the CNN network of instigating
an assassination bid and created news by setting a date
for Venezuela to adopt its own unique time zone.
Political analysts say the moves could be part of a strategy
to burnish Chavez's nationalist credentials and distract
voters from unpopular details in his raft of constitutional
changes that must be passed in a referendum.
Chavez wants Venezuelans to vote to let him stay in power
as long he keeps winning elections, one of a series of
measures that includes letting him take full control of
currency reserves and censor the media during political
emergencies.
Early last year, Chavez expelled a U.S. naval attache he
accused of spying. The United States retaliated by ejecting
from Washington the Venezuelan ambassador's chief-of-staff.
The incident did not hurt bilateral commercial ties.
Despite Chavez's diatribes against U.S. imperialism, Venezuela
has remained the No. 4 supplier of oil to the United States,
its top customer.
In the past few years, the countries have sparred over
everything from oil prices to free trade to democracy.
But this year, the United States has studiously avoided
being drawn into diplomatic disputes with the ally of Cuba
and Iran.
In that vacuum, Chavez has focused on other targets.
Earlier on Wednesday, he called for an investigation into
the U.S.-based TV network CNN on suspicion it might have
subliminally instigated an assassination attempt against
him.
Hours later, the former paratrooper also broke off diplomatic
ties with Colombia after calling its president a U.S. pawn
for canceling his role as a mediator in talks with Colombian
rebels aimed at freeing a large number of hostages.
Story
by Patricia
Rondon, writing
by Saul Hudson, editing by Eric Walsh from Reuters 28
11 07
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