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Chavez: Don't mess with me
Caracas
- Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez accused Mexican leader Vicente Fox on Sunday
of disrespecting him and his close ally the Argentine president, warning Fox:
"Don't mess with me."
Tensions between Fox and Chavez
spilled over after this month's Summit of the Americas in Argentina, where Fox
sought to defend a United States-backed proposal for a free trade zone while
Chavez proclaimed the idea dead.
"President Fox left bleeding from
his wound," Chavez said during his weekly radio and TV show, echoing remarks
days ago in which he accused Fox of being a "puppy" of the US government for
supporting its plans for the Free Trade Area of the Americas
Chavez recalled a folk song from
Venezuela's cattle-raising plains about a thorn, saying it seems appropriate for
Fox since "you're a man of horses". After reciting the lyrics, Chavez said:
"Don't mess with me, sir, because you'll come out pricked."
Chavez defending Venezuela
The
Venezuelan leader has proclaimed the recent summit a victory, noting Argentina,
Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay brought up opposition to the free trade pact.
Fox, apparently irked by the
resistance of Chavez and Argentine President Nestor Kirchner, said after the
summit "there we have some presidents, fortunately a minority, who blame other
countries for all their problems".
Chavez accused Fox of "attacking"
him and Kirchner, and of violating summit protocol in trying to press for an
agreement on the free trade zone when that wasn't on the agenda.
"The only very hard response I've
given to any president was to President Fox. He disrespected me," Chavez said,
adding that by responding he was simply defending his country.
Chavez's stinging accusations
against Fox on Wednesday sparked a diplomatic response, with Mexico demanding a
"satisfactory explanation".
Talking about the incident
Venezuela has offered no apologies
while top diplomats have held talks on the matter. Chavez's latest accusations
showed he had no intention of backing down.
He said Fox and other leaders who
sought to back the free trade plan "weren't able to achieve their plan" at the
summit.
The US-proposed Free Trade Area of
the Americas (FTAA), which aims to create the world's largest free trade zone,
was first proposed in 1994 and was supposed to have been finalised in January
but has been stalled amid deep divisions in Latin America.
Chavez argues the plan would help
big US companies at the expense of Latin America's poor and has instead proposed
a "Bolivarian Alternative" pact based on socialist principles.
The Venezuelan leader said US
President George W Bush left the summit "with his tail between his legs". He
called Bush "Mr Danger" and said he stands for "false democracy, democracy of
the elites".
In a programme that lasted about six
hours, Chavez also replayed videos of debates in the summit and criticised Peru,
Panama and Trinidad and Tobago for favouring the free trade pact.
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