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News from Around the Americas | December 2005
Colombian Military Implicated in Plot Against Chavez: Uribe AFP
| An opposition member dressed as the Statue of Liberty shouts slogans in support of Carlos Ortega during a rally in Caracas, Venezuela, Saturday, Dec.17, 2005. Opposition groups held a street march on Saturday to protest this week's 15-year prison sentence for Ortega, a labor boss who led a two-month strike that failed to oust President Hugo Chavez. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano) | Venezuelan former soldiers plotted against President Hugo Chavez's government at a Colombian military building, Colombian President Alvaro Uribe said.
Uribe made the stunning disclosure Saturday at this Caribbean resort town where he is meeting with Chavez, and after analyzing documents furnished by the Venezuelan leader.
"The Venezuelan soldiers who are in Bogota went to a building to meet with members of the Colombian military. President Chavez gave us these documents ... we analyzed them and this morning I said to President Chavez: 'I must tell you the truth: this is a building of Colombia's public forces,'" he said.
Uribe said that intelligence efforts against the Venezuelan government are conducted in the building, and took full responsibility for the affair.
The two presidents met for six hours amid a climate of unusual goodwill Saturday to discuss the purported Bogota-based conspiracy against the Venezuelan president, which Chavez first disclosed to his Colombian counterpart during a meeting in Venezuela on November 24.
Seven Venezuelans involved in a 48-hour coup against Chavez in April 2002 have been linked to the new plot.
Businessman Pedro Carmona, leader of the failed military-civilian coup, enjoys political asylum in Colombia, where he is working as a university professor.
Uribe refused asylum to six Venezuelan soldiers involved in the coup but gave them permission to live in Colombia while they look for safe haven in another country.
The conservative Colombian leader said Saturday that he takes responsibility for the events.
"I took responsibility before President Chavez and I took it in public, because the government of Colombia, which suffers from terrorism, cannot permit anyone to plot conspiracies, especially against a brother country," he said.
Chavez, a leftist, in turn underscored that he would support any Colombian peace process, in an apparent effort to counter critics' allegations that he supports leftist Colombian rebels.
"I beg Colombians not to believe any of that, because it is a lie," said Chavez. "We support Colombia's institutions, we support President Uribe, we support whatever the people of Colombia decide, we support Colombian democracy and we want armed groups to embrace peace."
Tuesday, Colombia's Attorney General Edgardo Maya said no charges had been filed in relation to the alleged plot.
"The attorney general's office has no information about it. International relations are handled strictly by the president of the republic," Maya said. |
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