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Arrest prompts fears of Chavez
crackdown
Andy Webb-Vidal Financial Times
Venezuela's government stepped
up what appeared to be a retaliatory crackdown on opponents of
President Hugo Chavez yesterday with the arrest of the business
leader who led a two-month strike aimed at forcing the president's
resignation.
Carlos Fernandez, head of the Fedecamaras
business federation, was captured by a group of heavily armed men
outside a restaurant, witnesses said, and taken to the headquarters
of the Disip political police in Caracas. A judge said a warrant
had been issued for the arrest of Mr Fernandez on charges of
"treason" and "civil rebellion". A similar warrant was also issued
for Carlos Ortega, leader of the main labour union, which backed the
strike in December and January.
Opposition leaders condemned
the detention as evidence that Mr Chavez was drifting towards
"dictatorship" and embarking on a "campaign of intimidation".
Government legislators said the arrest followed correct legal
procedures.
Mr Chavez, emboldened by his survival after the
stoppage, has promised to jail the strike's organisers for
"sabotaging" the economy and has warned that exchange controls will
be used to deprive opposition-aligned businesses of foreign
currency.
The strike at Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), which
is producing only about half of the 3m barrels a day from before the
strike, has left what was the world's fifth-largest oil-exporting
economy facing a contraction of at least 15 per cent this
year.
Rafael Alfonzo, an opposition negotiator in talks
intended to defuse Venezuela's political deadlock, said Mr
Fernandez's arrest undermined an anti-violence pact signed only two
days ago with the government. The agreement was the first
breakthrough in three months of negotiations backed by the
Organisation of American States aimed at finding an electoral
solution to the tensions between Mr Chavez and opposition
groups. Mr Fernandez's arrest comes a day after Washington-based
Human Rights Watch urged the Venezuelan government to investigate
the murder of four opposition supporters this week.
The
bodies of three junior military staff and a civilian woman who had
joined dissident officers pressing for Mr Chavez's resignation were
found dumped on a roadside outside Caracas. "The circumstances
strongly suggest that these were political killings," said Jose
Miguel Vivanco, executive director of the Americas Division of Human
Rights Watch.
See also:
Carlos Ortega has
no intentions to appear before any law enforcing agency
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