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International News Updates |
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4 May 2009 On Thursday, the U.S. State Department
released its Country Reports on Terrorism for 2008, in
which it asserts that Venezuelan President Hugo
Chávez's "ideological sympathy" with the Colombian
guerrillas "limited Venezuelan cooperation with
Colombia in combating terrorism."
The report criticizes Venezuela for not
systematically policing its 1,400 mile border with
Colombia, which left-wing guerrillas and right-wing
paramilitaries from Colombia are believed to have
crossed to take refuge and raise funds illegally.
The report also says Venezuela has not sufficiently
investigated and prosecuted public officials who are
suspected of supporting Colombian guerrilla groups
such as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC)
and the National Liberation Army (ELN), and does not
properly monitor international flight arrivals from
Iran, which is classified as a state sponsor of
terrorism in the report.
During a May Day march on Friday, President Chávez
rejected the report. "A new report by the U.S.
government has come out attacking Venezuela once
again. From here, I reject, in the name of the
Venezuelan people, this new aggression by the North
American empire," he said.
"If there is any government that has attacked the
people of our continent and the world, using different
illegal, violent, terrorist methods for more than a
hundred years, it has been the United States
government," said Chávez. "Leave us in peace! We have
been able to break the chains of centuries and be
free. And we will be free."
Chávez has consistently advocated against a
military solution to the nearly fifty-year conflict in
Colombia, and has pressured for the international
community to consider the FARC and ELN belligerent
armies rather than terrorist groups, in order to
enable peaceful negotiations.
In early 2008, Chávez negotiated the unilateral
release of six FARC hostages. He later publicly called
on the FARC to release all their hostages and disarm,
and asserted that "guerrilla warfare is history."
After the Colombian military bombarded a FARC
encampment within Ecuadoran territory in March 2008,
Chávez harshly criticized the policy of Colombian
President Álvaro Uribe, calling it militaristic and
disrespectful of national sovereignty. Chávez also
held a moment of silence for the FARC's
second-in-command who was killed in the attack.
This year, Uribe and Chávez have met in person
three times and pledged to cooperate to create peace
in Colombia, establish a bi-national investment bank,
and construct a bi-national oil pipeline.
On Wednesday, Uribe asked the Chávez government to
capture a group of FARC militants who, Uribe said, had
killed eight Colombian soldiers in a battle in eastern
Colombia then took refuge in Venezuelan territory.
"We have asked the Venezuelan authorities, we ask
President Hugo Chávez to help us capture these
outlaws," said Uribe. "I am sure that President Chávez
is going to be in solidarity with the life of our
soldiers."
President Chávez replied by reiterating that his
administration does not support guerrilla groups, and
warning both the FARC and the Colombian military to
keep their conflict out of Venezuela.
"We do not support the Colombian guerrillas. We do
not support armed movements in any part of the world,"
said Chávez. "I have the same position as always. We
will not permit any armed incursion, wherever it comes
from, to violate Venezuelan sovereignty."
Chávez said he desires peace in Colombia, and that
Venezuela will stay out of the conflict. "This war is
not ours. This war is Colombia's, shamefully. And we
are not going to insert ourselves in this war."
Meanwhile, at the meeting of ministers of the
Non-Aligned Countries Movement, Venezuelan Foreign
Relations Minister Nicolás Maduro, said Venezuelan
security forces would apprehend any military forces
that come from Colombia.
"The different types of irregular Colombian forces
that participate in the conflict know that they may
not enter Venezuelan territory, they may not break the
law and they will be confronted by all the possible
force of the Venezuelan authorities," said Maduro.
Since May 2008, the U.S. has classified Venezuela
as a country that "does not fully cooperate" with the
U.S.'s anti-terrorism efforts. It has also accused
Venezuela of not cooperating in the U.S.'s anti-drug
trafficking efforts. Venezuela has responded by citing
increased drug interdictions in Venezuela since 2005
and telling the U.S. to focus on its own drug
consumption problem. |