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Caribbean-Latin America
Gunmen fire on Venezuelan protesters
2007-11-08
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -- Gunmen opened fire on students returning from a march Wednesday in which 80,000 people denounced President Hugo Chavez's attempts to expand his power. At least eight people were injured, including one by gunfire, officials said.

Photographers for The Associated Press saw at least four gunmen -- their faces covered by ski masks or T-shirts -- firing handguns at the anti-Chavez crowd. Terrified students ran through the campus as ambulances arrived.

National Guard troops gathered outside the Central University of Venezuela, the nation's largest and a center for opposition to Chavez's government. Venezuelan law bars state security forces from entering the campus, but Luis Acuna, the minister of higher education, said they could be called in if the university requests them.

Antonio Rivero, director of Venezuela's Civil Defense agency, told local Union Radio that at least eight people were injured, including one by gunfire, and that no one had been killed. Earlier, Rivero said he had been informed that one person had died in the violence.

The violence broke out after anti-Chavez demonstrators -- led by university students -- marched peacefully to the Supreme Court to protest constitutional changes that Venezuelans will consider in a December referendum. The amendments would abolish presidential term limits, give the president control over the Central Bank and let him create new provinces governed by handpicked officials.

The protesters demand the referendum be suspended, saying the amendments would weaken civil liberties in one of South America's oldest democracies and give Chavez unprecedented power to declare states of emergency. "Don't allow Venezuela to go down a path that nobody wants to cross," student leader Freddy Guevara told Globovision. The Supreme Court is unlikely to act on the students' demands, given that pro-Chavez lawmakers appointed all 32 of its justices.

Chavez, who was first elected in 1998, denies the reforms threaten freedom. He says they would instead move Venezuela toward what he calls "21st century socialism."

Hundreds of National Guardsmen and police in riot gear were posted along the march route to prevent clashes between protesters and Chavez sympathizers, but they were restricted from entering the campus.
Posted by:Steve White

#9  I think we should pay all the supermodels in bolivars, since they apparently don't like dollars.
Posted by: Abdominal Snowman   2007-11-08 19:23  

#8  no Supermodels™ hurt, I hope. The world needs them
Posted by: Frank G   2007-11-08 15:41  

#7  *happy sigh* That was wonderful, OregonGuy.
Posted by: trailing wife   2007-11-08 15:03  

#6  I'm interested in the on-going developments in Venezuela and encourage any aspiring economist to use this opportunity to catalogue the mistakes of this regime. As a modern state devolves into Utopia, it will be worthwhile to the prospective doctoral candidate to have at his finger tips the political turning points and resultant economic dispair.

Capital formation is one of the greatest hurdles facing third world countries' entry into second world status. Watching the populist implosion of a country's capital is a rare and unique opportunity. Mugabe's actions are resulting in third world to simple dis-civilization. Chavez' devolution will result in a second world country becoming a third world country. Which, in the '50's, '60's and '70's was--being a third world country--a necessary condition for the rise and growth of Soviet and Chinese supported communist parties. The irony of returning to this "necessary condition" is painful, but an almost comedic playing out of what implementation of these Socialist/Lefty/Democrat prescriptions would mean, and could do, to our own national economy.

Lefties are convinced they know the path to social justice. It is not whimsically that they choose Malthus as their intellectual fulcrum. Their nightmarish convictions lead them to see the need to control the impulses of freedom...while granting the tyrant the power to enforce their convictions.

Take notes. There will be a test.
Posted by: OregonGuy   2007-11-08 14:09  

#5  Who's coming? Not farmworkers or day laborers. Sadly for Venezuela, we're getting the cream of the crop. The doctors working in department stores and teachers working in fast food places are among the many coming here who've had some opportunity to develop their skills as professionals and entrepreneurs.

That's the way it usually starts. Those that can get out are usually the first ones out. When the lawnmowers, cabbies, and sheetrock guys start showing up illegally, you'll know Hugo's screwed...
Posted by: tu3031   2007-11-08 12:36  

#4  So, all is not Eden in Commie paradise?
Posted by: JohnQC   2007-11-08 12:34  

#3  Well, since you asked tu. Here and here. :)

The U.S.-Venezuelan community, centered around the Doral neighborhood of Miami and in the "Little Caracas" city of Weston just north of it, numbers at least 40,000 and may be as high as 180,000, the Miami Herald reports.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2007-11-08 12:29  

#2  So...does Miami have enough room for "Little Caracas"?
Posted by: tu3031   2007-11-08 10:14  

#1  We knew this wouldn't be long in happening. If the protesters don't get quiet and toe the line, this could get real bloody with a full civil war. Hopefully the US will help the anti-Chavez side.
Posted by: DarthVader   2007-11-08 09:50  

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