CARACAS, Sunday February 15, 2009 | Update
Parlamentarian Luis Herrero talks with reporters in landing on Barajas Airport, from São Paulo, Brazil (Photo: Sergio Barrenechea / Efe)
Politics
Luis Herrero, the Spanish deputy of the European Parliament
who was expelled last Friday from Venezuela after having called
President Hugo Chávez a "dictator" and criticized the
National Electoral Council (CNE), said on Sunday, in arriving
in Madrid, that he regrets "absolutely nothing" about what
he said in Caracas.
Herrero, a deputy for the right-wing People's Party, which
forms part of the bloc of the European People's Party (PPE),
told the Spanish reporters who were waiting for his arrival
in Madrid airport, that he would remove "not a single comma"
of his remarks made in Venezuela.
The senior official had been invited to Caracas by opposition
political Copei party to follow up a referendum held on Sunday.
He was expelled on Friday for calling President Chávez
"dictator" and lashing out at the CNE, said the Venezuelan
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, AFP quoted.
When speaking to the Venezuelan press, the deputy urged Venezuelans
to "vote in freedom and not for fear, as a dictator is trying
to spread."
Chávez is "a guy who does not understand the rules of
democracy," said Herrero in Madrid, after commenting that
what he saw and listened to in Venezuela seemed to him "absolutely
not presentable."
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.