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Mr Chavez is a fierce critic
of US foreign policy |
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has blamed Washington's brand of capitalism for
the recent troubles in Bolivia.
Speaking on his weekly TV programme, he said US open market policies in Latin
America had led to "exclusion, misery and destabilisation".
He called President George W Bush's proposal for a regional free trade agreement
a "medicine of death".
Bolivia was brought to a virtual standstill by protesters calling for economic
and constitutional reforms.
"Look at Bolivia. Fortunately the Bolivians opened the door toward a peaceful
path, but they were on the verge of a civil war," said Mr Chavez.
'Interference'
The Venezuelan leader, who is an outspoken critic of Mr Bush's foreign policy,
was responding to suggestions by some US officials that he was stirring up the
Bolivian protests.
US assistant secretary of state Roger Noriega said President Chavez's support
for the Bolivian indigenous leader Evo Morales might be partly to blame for
the mass protests there.
But a report in the Argentinian newspaper Clarin quoted unnamed diplomatic sources
as saying that Mr Chavez may have played a key part in achieving a solution to
Bolivia's crisis.
The report said that a frenetic exchange of phone calls with Caracas encouraged
Mr Morales to accept the constitutional outcome.
Clarin also carried an interview with former Bolivian President Carlos Mesa,
who said that although the sympathy between Mr Chavez and Mr Morales was widely
known, he had not seen any evidence of Venezuelan interference.
Mr Mesa's predecessor as president, Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada, who was ousted
in 2003, told the BBC on Monday he blamed Colombian drug trade interests for
stirring up division in Bolivia with an eye to controlling cocaine production
there.
'No, Mr Bush'
During his programme on Sunday, which lasted more than seven hours, Mr Chavez
said Latin American countries were moving towards socialist economic models
instead of US-style capitalism.
He said Mr Bush's idea for a hemisphere-wide free trade zone, mooted last week
at a meeting of the Organisation of American States in Florida, would lead to
more poverty and protests in the region.
"We say no Mr Bush, no sir... I'm sorry for you," he said. "The
people of Latin America are saying 'no' to you, Mr Danger, they are saying no
to your medicine.
"Capitalism is the road to destabilisation, violence and war between brothers."
The blockades in Bolivia starved the capital La Paz of fuel and food, and forced
the resignation of President Mesa last Thursday.
He was replaced by Eduardo Rodriguez, who on Sunday met representatives of
the protesters. They have now put their action on hold.
They told Mr Rodriguez that they would maintain the truce if he agreed to demands
to nationalise the natural gas industry and increase political representation
for the country's Indian majority.