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The Venezuelan president, Hugo Chavez,
is due to arrive in Baghdad today, defying western objections and
delivering a propaganda coup for the Iraqi leader, Saddam Hussein.
Mr Chavez will be the first elected head of state to meet Mr
Saddam since the 1991 Gulf war. Iraq yesterday hailed the visit as
a slap in the face for the United States.
"Every now and then, the rulers of America receive slaps
from representatives of other countries," an Iraqi foreign
ministry spokesman said.
Venezuela says the visit is justified because it holds the
rotating presidency of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (Opec), of which Iraq is a member.
On Monday, the US state department said it was "deeply
concerned" about the planned meeting with President Saddam,
but Venezuela insisted that the president would not change his
plan. "Nobody can influence our decision. He's going to
arrive, whether it be on a skateboard or on a camel," Jose
Vicente Rangel, the foreign minister, said.
Mr Chavez is expected to travel by land from Iran to avoid the
UN-imposed air embargo. But the Americans accuse him of breaking
political sanctions, and say that he did not seek advice from the
UN sanctions committee before deciding on the visit.
In Britain, Ann Clwyd MP, the chairwoman of Indict, the
organisation which is seeking to prosecute leading members of the
Iraqi regime, described the trip as a bad move.
"I would remind democratically elected presidents of the
Iraqi regime's record - it is one of the worst since the second
world war," she said. "People forget and start treating
[Iraq's leaders] like ordinary human beings. That's why it's
important that the UN does set up a war-crimes tribunal and stops
dragging its feet."
Iraq was preparing a ceremonial welcome yesterday for the man
it described as "a dear guest", and was laying on
special facilities for the foreign media to maximise the west's
embarrassment.
Mr Chavez is touring Opec countries handing out invitations to
Caracas next month for what he hopes will be the organisation's
first heads-of-state summit for 25 years. He has already visited
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar.
Under American pressure, the Saudis have been seeking to
increase Opec oil-production quotas, to reduce prices from their
peak of around $30 (£20) a barrel. But Venezuela - which at 3.1m
barrels a day is Latin America's largest producer - is almost
totally dependent on oil revenue, and each $1 drop in oil prices
costs it about $1bn (£665m) a year.
Mr Chavez argues that the real issue is not high prices, but
fair prices.
"We understand that they [consumers] start to feel uneasy
when crude oil prices reach $30 a barrel, but they can imagine how
it must have been for us when it fell to $8," he said
recently.
Last month, in a presidential election which the US described
as free and fair, Mr Chavez was re-elected with around 60% of the
vote. He is a charismatic, populist leader who, despite high oil
prices, has failed to deliver economically.
During the election, he promised an "economic
revolution" to get the economy back on its feet and give the
poor - his main source of support - a larger share in
oil-generated profits.
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Hugo Chavez
Age 46
President since 1998
Former paratrooper colonel who led a failed coup
attempt in1992. Spent two years in prison before being
pardoned.
A democratically elected strongmen and populist
leader, considered Latin America's greatest orator
after Fidel Castro. Regarded with suspicion by the US
because of his leftwing policies
Has close links with Cuba and once described Libya
as 'a model of participatory democracy'. |
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Saddam Hussein
Age 63
President since 1979
Became lieutenant-general in 1976, field marshal in
1979
Led Iraq through eight-year war against Iran, with
support from US and several Arab states. Outlawed in
1990 following invasion of Kuwait
Survives through brutality more than popularity,
but has turned western onslaughts - bombing,
sanctions, etc - to his political advantage. |
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