The forum was interrupted when Yon Goicoechea, a law student at the Andrés Bello Catholic University (UCAB), was addressing the audience and pro-Chávez demonstrators entered the room demanding a debate
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GUSTAVO MÉNDEZ
EL UNIVERSAL
Clashes last October 23 with students taking part in a march
to demonstrate against the changes proposed to the Constitution
did not meet the quota of violence of President Hugo Chávez'
followers.
On Thursday, pro-Chávez students targeted the speakers
at a forum on the constitutional reform hosted by the Venezuelan
Professional Association of Teachers in the Caracas Pedagogic
College.
They used their eternal allegation, they want a debate. However,
the event taking place in the conference hall of the higher
education institution was a forum, not a debate. When they
were given a chance to take the floor, violence erupted in
both the conference room and the parking lot of the college.
Alejandro Burgos, one of the pro-Chávez students, argued
that the speakers taking part in the forum were "rightwing"
people. The participants were student leader Yon Goicoechea,
Movimiento al Socialismo (Movement to Socialism) Pompeyo Márquez,
Enrique Sánchez Falcón and Edgar Bazán. "You
cannot talk about democracy when you are listening to
one trend only. We want to talk too," Burgos said.
Student leader Elizabeth Álvarez rejected the fact that
no teachers or students of the Caracas Pedagogic College were
invited to participate in the forum as speakers.
The forum was interrupted when Yon Goicoechea, a law student
at the Andrés Bello Catholic University (UCAB), was addressing
the audience and pro-Chávez demonstrators entered the
room demanding a debate.
Students started to struggle and an explosive device was
detonated in the room. Then, the verbal and physical clashes
continued in the parking lot.
Goicoechea ended up with wounds in his nose and face.
The chair of the Venezuelan Professional Association of Teachers
Edgar Bazán claimed the pro-government students disrupted
the event and prevented the forum from taking place. "They
took an aggressive stance from the beginning. Their goal was
sabotaging the event, but as usual they claimed they wanted
to debate."
The principal of the Caracas Pedagogic College Pablo Ojeda
rejected the vandalic attitude of four or five students,"
adding that such behavior did not match "the features of our
students."
Ojeda clarified that the Caracas Pedagogic College authorities
issued the relevant permission for the event.
On Friday, the college's authorities are holding a meeting
to address the issue. Ojeda pledged to determine the "relevant
liabilities."
Translated by Maryflor Suárez R.
msuarez@eluniversal.com
Oil Scenario
HYDROCARBONS Rafael Ramírez, Venezuela's Minister of Petroleum and Mining and president of state-run oil company Petróleos de Venezuela (Pdvsa) specified that oil exports to China would be equal to current shipments of Venezuelan oil to the United States.
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