CARACAS, Tuesday January 31, 2006 | Update
President Hugo Chávez late Monday warned Spain Venezuela
would purchase from any other country the patrol boats it
agreed to buy from Spanish shipyards in the event that Madrid
respects a US veto on the sale, Efe reported.
"We are going to ask Spain to make a decision on whether
they are going to sell them or not. Otherwise, we will buy
these patrol boats from Russia, China, Iran, India or even
Brazil," Chávez said during an event with local businesspeople.
Venezuela and Spain last year initialed a weaponry sales
agreement comprising the patrol boats Chávez mentioned
on Monday.
"We have no problem if they do not sell them to us. We wanted
to help Spain because President (José Luis Rodríguez
Zapatero) told me one day they faced some problems with shipyards,"
Chávez added.
Under the agreement, Venezuela ordered from Spanish firms
Navantia and EADS-CASA the construction of 12 aircrafts, including
10 transportation C-295 planes and two coastal surveillance
CL-235 airplanes, as well as eight patrol boats, including
four boats for monitoring the exclusive economic zone and
four coast guard boats.
Chávez claimed that uncertainty around the operation
emerged following the United States move to veto the Spanish
sale to Venezuela.
According to the Venezuelan ruler, if Madrid chooses not
to comply with the sales agreement, he would be forced to
purchase such equipment anywhere else. "Venezuela will have
those patrol boats!" Chávez decidedly.
Chávez attributed the US veto to tensions between his
government and US President George W. Bush' administration.
04:20 PM. Western Hemisphere. Colombian President Álvaro Uribe said on Tuesday that governments should ensure citizens' rights to live on the border, in reference to a political and diplomatic crisis with Venezuela and its effects on border residents.