CARACAS, Tuesday June 06, 2006 | Update
The Organization of American States (OAS) closed Tuesday
its annual meeting in Santo Domingo in the midst of cross-accusations
between Venezuela and Peru. Additional prevailing issues were
Venezuela's nomination to the United Nations (UN) Security
Council and a dramatic report on human rights under the government
of President Hugo Chávez.
Santiago Cantón, the executive secretary of the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), is to bring forward Tuesday
at the plenary session an annual report focused on five "troubled"
countries: Venezuela, Cuba, Colombia, Ecuador and Haiti.
This paper, regarded as very important by the US delegation,
will keep Venezuela's high profile for the third day in a
row since the opening of the summit last Sunday. That same
day, Social Democrat candidate Alan García was elected
the new Peruvian president. García has been continuously
at odds with President Chávez, AFP quoted.
Claims of interference both by Lima and Caracas, both behind
closed doors and in the open, prevailed in the first two rounds
of the summit. In the meantime, US Under Secretary of State
Robert Zoellick praised the defeat of Nationalist candidate
Ollanta Humala, supported by Chávez.
04:17 PM. Western Hemisphere. "Damned empire; I curse you one thousand times; some day you will be finished off and wrecked. I curse you one thousand times, empire." This is the least that President Hugo Chávez has uttered to refer to the US government. In urging the Bolivarian Armed Forces to prepare for war, he said that a US raid on Venezuela through Colombia would trigger and spread over the region "the 100-year war."