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Venezuela's
Chavez threatens to boot US envoy
By
Tibisay Soto
AFP
CARACAS
Petroleumworld.com
04 10 06
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on Sunday threatened to expel the US
ambassador and blamed him for triggering protests in which his car was
pelted with tomatoes and eggs.
"If you continue making provocations, you're going to have to pack
your bags, mister, because I'm going to throw you out of here, Ambassador
(William) Brownfield," Chavez said on his "Hello Mr. President!"
weekly broadcast.
Chavez's threat is just the latest salvo in a long-standing slug-fest
between the leftist populist and the administration of US President
George W. Bush.
"If you're going to continue to provoke the Venezuelan people,
you're going to have to go!" Chavez president declared. The provocation
consisted of "traveling with armed guards, traveling with security
details," he said.
On Saturday, acting foreign minister Alcides Rondon warned demonstrators
against such displays: "The Venezuelan government and people repudiate
any act of protest that goes beyond the limits of respect."
That came shortly after a US government warning on Friday, when protesters
showered Brownfield's car in a neighborhood south of Caracas.
State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told AFP that Nicholas Burns,
the US undersecretary of state for political affairs, called Caracas
last week to protest the incident.
"This action was an outrageous violation of the Vienna Convention,"
McCormack quoted Burns, the department's number-three official, as having
told told the Venezuelan government.
"Nick told the Venezuelan ambassador that we hold the government
of Venezuela responsible for the ambassador's security, and if such
an incident happens again, there will be severe diplomatic consequences
between the two countries," the spokesman said in Washington Friday.
Brownfield met with a hostile reception as he arrived at a sports center
in the working-class suburb of Coche, south of the capital, Friday to
present a donation to a youth baseball team, embassy spokeswoman Salome
Hernandez said.
She said the US envoy was egged and blocked from attending a charity
event at a Venezuelan sports center in Caracas.
Relations between Chavez and US President George W. Bush's administration
have worsened in recent years.
Washington has charged Chavez's government with restricting the freedom
of the press and harassing the opposition, while Chavez frequently criticizes
Bush for the Iraq war and has openly called the US leader a "coward"
and a "murderer."
Venezuela, the only Latin American member of the Organization of the
Oil Producing Countries (OPEC) is one of the most important sources
of imported US oil.
Chavez blames the Bush administration for backing an aborted 2002 coup,
in which he was removed from power for less than 48 hours, and claims
the United States has plans to remove him from power.
AFP 04 09 06 2130 GMT
Copyright
© 1994-2006 Agence France-Presse. All Rights Reserved.
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