
University students block a highway during a protest in Caracas, Friday, Nov. 2, 2007. Students protest constitutional reforms that would permit Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez to run for re-election indefinitely. (AP Photo/Howard Yanes)
Daniel at Venezuela News and Views describes the horrible security situation for the opposition members in Caracas.

Opposition supporters against President Hugo Chavez gather during a rally in Caracas November 3, 2007. Thousands of opposition supporters gather on Saturday after congress passed Chavez's proposal to scrap presidential term limits in a package of constitution changes that Venezuelans are likely to approve in a December referendum. The banner reads, "We, Venezuelans, reject the reform and the changes to the presidential term limits. That is dictatorship." (REUTERS/Jorge Silva)
Thousands protested against Chavez dictatorship in Caracas again on Saturday after violent protests on Thursday.
The International Herald Tribune reported:
Thousands of Venezuelans on Saturday protested proposed constitutional reforms that would allow President Hugo Chavez to run for re-election indefinitely and give him the power to create provinces governed by federally appointed officials.
Waving red, yellow and blue Venezuelan flags, government opponents jammed a downtown Caracas avenue where opposition leaders warned that 69 amendments approved by the Chavista-dominated National Assembly would severely weaken democracy and violate civil liberties.
To take effect, the reforms must be approved by voters in a Dec. 2 referendum. Lawmakers approved the amendments Friday.
"We are going to say 'No!' to this dictatorship they want to impose in our country," Gabriel Puerta, secretary-general of the Red Flag opposition party, shouted from a podium amid cheers from the crowd. "We will fight for our democracy and freedom."

Demonstrators shout slogans against the government during a protest in Caracas, Saturday, Nov.3, 2007. Thousands of Venezuelans protested proposed constitutional reforms that would allow President Hugo Chavez to run for re-election indefinitely and give him the power to create provinces governed by federally appointed officials.(AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

Demonstrators wave a giant Venezuelan flag during a protest in Caracas, Saturday, Nov.3, 2007. Thousands of people protested proposed constitutional reforms that would allow President Hugo Chavez to run for re-election indefinitely and give him the power to create provinces governed by federally appointed officials. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)
Previously:
Chavez Soldiers Bust Up Student Demonstrations (Video)
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ReplyDeletetis said what a difference a day makes, just not for the next X amount of years in Hugoland..
2 days ago..
tis also said better late than never, not too sure about that either..
eh, we could always hope the pig chokes on a chicken bone.. sort of the opposite of putting a dog out of it's misery.. no disrespect meant to the animals mentioned..
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Looks like HC is eager to be absolutely corrupted. He can't have all that far to go!
ReplyDeleteMeanwhile Sean Penn, Danny Glover, Harry Belafonte, Kevin Spacey, and Naomi Campbell have said...
ReplyDeleteOh wait! Nothing from that crew of dreck spewing fools has been heard about this yearning for freedom by the people...
Imagine that!
I put my money on Hugo becoming president-for-life. Something in the Latin soul yearns for authoritarism. The caudillos know how to deal with student protests.
ReplyDeleteThis was on about page 20 in the Sunday (yesterday) Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel--in contrast to how it covered pro-Chavez news.
ReplyDelete