Adamant: Hardest metal
Saturday, January 4, 2003

Two Shot Dead in Venezuelan Clashes

Posted on Fri, Jan. 03, 2003 BY PATRICK MARKEY Reuters

CARACAS, Venezuela - Two people were shot dead and two dozen were wounded on Friday when foes and supporters of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez clashed in Caracas as the opposition stepped up street protests in its drive to force the leftist leader to resign.

Demonstrators and police ran for cover after dozens of gunshots rang out near the capital's military headquarters, breaking the uneasy Christmas calm that had settled over the streets during an ongoing 33-day-old opposition strike.

"There was a volley of shots. We all threw ourselves to the ground. There was chaos and total panic. The shooting didn't stop," said a Reuters photographer at the scene.

National Guard troops and police fired tear gas and shotgun pellets to stop a few hundred Chavez supporters from attacking thousands of opposition marchers, who were also forced back by troops. Confused running battles broke out as groups from both sides hurled rocks.

City health officials said two of six people hit by gunfire had died. Another person was injured by police shotgun pellets and at least 20 people were wounded by stones and objects thrown by protesters.

It was unclear who had opened fire, but witnesses saw several people on both sides produce handguns after the shooting began.

Columns of smoke wafted high above apartment blocks in the southwest part of Caracas as pro-Chavez demonstrators set up burning barricades near Fuerte Tiuna military base to block the opposition marchers demanding the government free a dissident general detained this week.

STALEMATE OVER OIL SHUTDOWN

The opposition strike, started on Dec. 2, has choked oil shipments and stoked fears of violence in the world's No. 5 petroleum exporter. Global oil prices have hit two-year highs due to the strike and a possible U.S. war with Iraq.

Opposition leaders are locked in a stalemate with the government as they vow to keep up the strike until Chavez quits and accepts early elections. They have held daily marches and urged supporters not to pay taxes to keep up the pressure.

But the populist president has refused to quit and promised to defeat the shutdown, which he calls an attempt to topple him. Chavez said that he would only consider declaring a state of emergency if the situation required such a measure.

"That would be decided by the circumstances," Chavez said. "I am obliged to protect public order."

Opponents and supporters of the president have been caught up in a bitter political conflict for more than a year and rival rallies and marches have often ended in violent clashes.

Foes of Chavez say he has failed in his electoral promise to tackle poverty and corruption. Instead, they say, his self-styled "revolution" has driven Venezuela toward economic ruin and chaos with its left-wing reforms and mismanagement.

Since his 1998 election, Chavez has portrayed himself as a champion of the poor in a nation where impoverished slums sit uneasily alongside rich neighborhoods. Despite Venezuela's vast oil wealth, most of its population lives in poverty.

Opposition leaders, who accuse former paratrooper Chavez of ruling like a dictator, have appealed to the armed forces to help secure the release of Gen. Carlos Alfonso Martinez, who was involved in a short-lived April coup against Chavez.

Provoking opposition outrage, the National Guard general is being held despite a court order for his release. Military authorities have not announced formal charges against him. But he and more than 100 other anti-Chavez officers have staged a peaceful protest in an east Caracas square since late October.

ELECTION CONTROVERSY

Fears over splits within the armed forces have rattled Venezuela since April when Chavez was briefly toppled by rebel generals and admirals. Top military commanders appear to back the president despite calls for popular resistance.

Nearly five weeks into the strike, the government and opposition are locked in a struggle for control of the oil industry. Chavez, who has tried to restart strike-bound state oil giant PDVSA using troops, loyal workers and retirees.

But strikers have argued it would take at least four months for operations to resume.

Talks between both sides chaired by the Organization of American States and backed by the United States have gone nowhere. Negotiations continued Friday with no result.

The opposition is demanding elections in the first three months of this year. They also want to hold a nonbinding referendum on Chavez's rule on Feb. 2, hoping to illustrate how far his popularity has fallen. Chavez said on Friday the referendum still needed to be ratified by the Supreme Court, but the opposition said it would go ahead with the poll.

The president has said he will ignore the vote, saying the constitution only allows a referendum on his mandate in August -- halfway through his current term which ends in 2007.

(Additional reporting by Ana Isabel Martinez and Kim White)

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