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Chavez puts on show of strength before referendum Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez led a rally of hundreds of thousands of supporters Sunday one week before a crucial referendum on his rule, which he said would be a contest between him and U.S. "imperialism." The extrovert left-wing populist leader joined the huge crowd in Caracas in a noisy chorus of "Noooooo!," urging Venezuelans to cast their ballots against opposition plans to try to vote him out of office in the Aug. 15 poll.
In a rambling three-hour speech mixing songs, poetry, history and quotes from Holy Scripture, Chavez defended his rule as a revolutionary crusade to help Venezuela's poor and reject U.S. meddling in the world's No. 5 oil exporter.
"We mustn't forget that we're facing U.S. imperialism," Chavez said. A vote against his recall in the referendum would be "Christ's vote against imperialism," he added.
The United States is the biggest single buyer of Venezuela's oil, but Chavez accuses U.S. President Bush of trying to topple him and has threatened to cut off oil shipments if the United States intervenes in its affairs.
Washington rejects these accusations.
SAYS OPPOSITION INCAPABLE
Dismissing his opponents as incapable of ruling, Chavez warned the U.S. government that defeat for him in the referendum could trigger unrest and instability in Venezuela, which could send already high oil prices shooting up to $100 a barrel.
"Only we can guarantee peace," he said.
Since he was elected in 1998, six years after leading a failed coup, Chavez's rule has split Venezuela between foes who see him as a bullying demagogue and supporters who hail him as a champion of the poor.
Wearing red, the symbol of Chavez's self-styled revolution, the president's supporters overflowed a central avenue in Caracas. Many were bused in from outside the capital.
"We want to show the world the president has support in Venezuela," said Marcos Laserna, a street vendor.
Slogans on the demonstrators' banners, T-shirts and caps urged Venezuelans to "Vote No" to oppose the recall of the firebrand president, who was comfortably re-elected in 2000.
Much is at stake in the referendum.
For Chavez's critics, it marks their last opportunity until December 2006 elections to vote out a president they vilify as a fledgling dictator leading Venezuela to Cuba-style communism and economic ruin.
OPPOSITION HOLDS CONCERTS
For Chavez, losing power would mean an interruption of a left-leaning nationalist program, which he presents as a model for Latin America. Opposition sympathizers Sunday held concerts in east Caracas urging a "Yes" vote to recall the president. World leaders hope the referendum will resolve Venezuela's political crisis. But some observers fear a close vote could worsen the polarization and trigger fresh outbreaks of the political violence that has killed dozens of people over the last three years. This included a short-lived 2002 coup. To recall Chavez, the opposition must equal or beat the 3.76 million votes he received when he was re-elected in 2000. But if the no vote against his recall is bigger, he stays in office. If Chavez loses next Sunday's referendum, a presidential election will be held within 30 days. The Supreme Court still has to rule on whether he can run in that poll. |
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