CARACAS, Monday November 03, 2008 | Update
"The ideas of the government team (in Venezuela) are really bad," said the ex Poland's president (Photo: Carlos Hernández / File)
Politics
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Lech Walesa lambasted on Monday
Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez for being leftward,
and said that his government should learn from the Polish
experience about the damages that may be caused by communism.
"The ideas of the government team (in Venezuela) are really
bad," said the former president of Poland.
"I am the best evidence that communism collapsed because
it was a bad system, and introducing it here (in Venezuela)
is the worst mistake made in the region," said in a TV interview,
broadcast by AP.
Walesa, 65, resolved not to attend a forum on democracy held
this week in Venezuela and hosted by dissenting students,
as the authorities told him that no assurances could be given
for his security.
Walesa construed it as a non-welcome signal.
"There is upcoming election there and some people are afraid
of me." Walesa, also a former trade union leader, said that
his voice is heard in Venezuela because a number of opposition
members are friends of him and invited him to a forum.
Venezuela's Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs for Europe,
Alejandro Fleming, denied that Walesa would not be welcome
in Venezuela.
10:07 AM. DIPLOMACY. Admired by the Colombian guerrilla after his coup attempt in 1992, the then lieutenant colonel Hugo Chávez Frías received financial support by the Colombian Revolutionary Armed Forces (FARC) for his projects after his capture that year. This mostly explains the relationship and "debt" between the parties, as revealed by a paper of the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) of the United Kingdom.