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A partir des idées de mes héros, Patrice Emery Lumumba et Laurent Désiré Kabila, je suis l'actualité politique de mon pays, la République Démocratique du Congo en partuclier et de l'Afrique en général et je donne mes commentaires. Antoine Roger Lokongo

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Chavez dies; Venezuela expels 2 USAF officers. "Chavez lives forever!" and "The fight continues!"

Chavez dies; Venezuela expels 2 USAF officers. "Chavez lives forever!" and "The fight continues!"

 

By Jeff Schogol - Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday Mar 5, 2013 14:28:17 EST
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2013/03/ap-venezuela-expel-usaf-attache-030513/

Hours before Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez died Tuesday, defense officials announced Venezuela expelled two Air Force officers based at the U.S. Embassy in Caracas over allegations of espionage.

The two have been accused of “contacting active members of the military in Venezuela to propose destabilizing projects from within the Bolivarian National Armed Forces,” according to the website for the Venezuelan embassy in Washington D.C.

“We are aware of the allegations made by Venezuelan Vice President Maduro over state-run television in Caracas, and can confirm that our Air Attaché, Col. David Delmonaco, is en route back to the United States,” Air Force spokeswoman Lt. Col. Laurel Tingley said in an email.

The assistant air attaché, Maj. Devlin Kostal, was also expelled, Tingley said. He is currently in the U.S. and will not return to Venezuela.

A State Department spokesman said the U.S. rejects the allegations against the Air Force officers:

“Notwithstanding the significant differences between our governments, we continue to believe it important to seek a functional and more productive relationship with Venezuela based on issues of mutual interest,” said Patrick Ventrell, in a statement. “This fallacious assertion of inappropriate U.S. action leads us to conclude that, unfortunately, the current Venezuelan government is not interested an improved relationship.

“An assertion that the United States was somehow involved in causing President [Hugo] Chavez’s illness is absurd, and we definitively reject it.”

Minutes after Ventrell emailed his statement to Air Force Times on Tuesday afternoon, The Associated Press reported that Chavez had died.

Venezuela announced earlier Tuesday that Chavez was suffering a “new and severe infection” following cancer treatment in Cuba.

“We will not permit any foreign intervention in our country,” Foreign Minister Elías Jaua said in a statement. “Do not think that the situation of pain over President Chávez’s health is going to translate into weakness. Here there is a government and a dignified people, and we do this out of respect for those patriotic and loyal officials that came out and gave testimony regarding the acts of provocation and incitation.”

 

Devastated, mourning Chavez supporters pour onto streets

CARACAS (Reuters) - Grieving and stunned supporters of deceasedVenezuelan President Hugo Chavez took to the streets on Tuesday weeping, chanting slogans and vowing to continue their hero's revolution.

Gathering in streets and squares across the South American nation of 29 million people, backers of the socialist leader shouted: "Chavez lives forever!" and "The fight continues!"

"We have to show that what he did was not in vain," said Jamila Rivas, 49, crying outside the military hospital where Chavez died. Hundreds of supporters flocked there.

Venezuelans have been tracking the ups-and-downs of Chavez's two-year battle against cancer, but some supporters felt a sense of disbelief that the flamboyant leader was gone.

"He was our father. 'Chavismo' will not end. We are his people. We will continue to fight!" said Nancy Jotiya, 56, in Caracas' downtown Bolivar Square, named for Venezuela's independence hero and Chavez's idol, Simon Bolivar.

"I admired him. He was a great man," said housewife Aleida Rodriguez, 50, who heard the news as she emerged from Caracas' underground transport system.

Venezuela's opposition leader, Henrique Capriles, offered condolences and called for unity.

Some opponents could not hide their happiness at the end to a rule they viewed as a cruel dictatorship.

"At last!" shouted some women, coming out of their homes in one upscale neighborhood.

Hatred for Chavez ran deep among the wealthier members of Venezuela's population.

Some openly celebrated his death on Twitter.

There were reports of isolated incidents of looting and violence, including the burning of tents belonging to students who had been protesting in a Caracas street for the last week against secrecy over Chavez's condition.

Around Latin America and the Caribbean, where Chavez's oil-fueled largesse was a source of support for various leftist governments, tributes and condolences poured in.

Bolivian President Evo Morales, a close personal friend, wept as he spoke of Chavez.

Brazil's Congress held a minute of silence.

"President Chavez has always been a friend of Brazil, regardless of his political position," said Renan Calheiros, president of the Brazilian Senate.

Colombia, whose pro-U.S. conservative governments have clashed fiercely with Chavez in the past, also paid homage.

"I think in the last two years ... our relations with Venezuela advanced really well, and he was also a very important support for the current peace process," Foreign Minister Maria Angela Holguin said, referring to her government's rapprochement with Chavez and ongoing peace talks with leftist rebels.

"Hopefully he'll find peace."

Former Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien told CBC television he met Chavez several times, was quite fond of him, and acted as a facilitator between Chavez and former U.S. President George W. Bush at a 2001 Summit of the Americas.

"He was a great baseball fan and player and he always told me that if I were to visit him in Venezuela we would go to a baseball field and he would throw balls to me for me to hit them," he said. "And we never had the occasion to do that."

(Additional reporting by Latin American bureaux, Louise Egan in Ottawa; Writing by Andrew Cawthorne and Stacey Joyce)

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