CARACAS, Friday November 30, 2007 | Update
EL UNIVERSAL
Government followers started to rally on Friday early afternoon
on Bolívar Avenue, downtown Caracas, to endorse the changes
to the Constitution advanced by President Hugo Chávez
and close the electoral campaign ahead of next December 2nd
referendum.
Groups of President Chávez's followers in red vests
and a large number of buses from the province appeared since
early morning in the streets near the main avenue.
Jesse Chacón, a leader of pro-government electoral taskforce
Comando Zamora, said that demonstrators were gathering in
several places in Caracas. They did not stage a march, but
a rally on Bolívar Avenue. President Chávez addressed
the supporters of his intended changes to the Constitution,
thus closing his electoral campaign.
Chávez: Those who vote NO are doing a favor to
George W. Bush
President Chávez said to thousands of followers
rallied on Bolívar Avenue that those people who
vote NO are doing a favor to US President George W. Bush.
Chávez said that this is the real confrontation Venezuela
is currently going through. "Our real opponent, our real enemy
is the US Empire."
"On Sunday we are going to deal another knockout blow
to the American imperialism. Nobody should forget that it
is the backdrop of the battle," Chávez said.
Chávez threatens to nationalize Spanish banks
in Venezuela
President Hugo Chavez threatened Friday to nationalize the
Venezuelan subsidiaries of Spanish banks Banco Santander SA
and Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA, if Spain's King Juan
Carlos does not apologize.
The Spanish king asked Chávez to shup up during the
Ibero-American summit held in Chile early November. After
the incident, President Chávez decided to "freeze" relations
with Spain.
''The only way this is going to be fixed is with an apology by
the king of Spain,'' Chávez said.
"It doesn't cost me anything to take Spanish banks and nationalize
them, and put them in the service of the Venezuelan people.''
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."