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Reply #69: Well take a good look; if you think that's fiction, I can't help you. [View All]

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barb162 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Nov-13-07 01:22 AM
Response to Reply #63
69. Well take a good look; if you think that's fiction, I can't help you.
Edited on Tue Nov-13-07 01:33 AM by barb162
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/10/world/americas/10venez.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

Students Emerge as a Leading Force Against Chávez
By SIMON ROMERO
Published: November 10, 2007
CARACAS, Venezuela, Nov. 9 — Finding Yon Goicoechea, a leader of the nascent student movement protesting the expanding power of President Hugo Chávez, is not easy. He changes cellphones every few days. After receiving dozens of death threats, he moves among the apartments of friends here each day in search of a safe place to sleep.

In an interview this week in a back room at one such residence, a villa in a leafy district in this city, Mr. Goicoechea described the movement that has supplanted traditional political parties in recent weeks as the most cohesive and respected challenger to Mr. Chávez’s government.

“We believe in exhausting the democratic options available to us through peaceful action,” said Mr. Goicoechea, 23, who studies law at Andrés Bello Catholic University here, referring to the students’ opposition to a constitutional overhaul. In the polarized world of Venezuelan political debate, such parsed and polished statements are rare.

But what about the claims, from Mr. Chávez and his loyalists, that the students ultimately want to oust him from office? “We want social transformation, not a coup,” Mr. Goicoechea said. “The real coup d’état is coming from Chávez, who wants to perpetuate himself in power.”


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