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 VenezuelaThe Hugo Chavez Era BeginsLeftist president Hugo Chavez took office in 1999,
pledging political and economic reforms to give the poor a greater share of
the country's oil wealth. A constituent assembly was formed to rewrite the
constitution in July 1999, followed by the creation of a constitutional
assembly made up of Chavez's allies that replaced the democratically elected
Congress. Chavez's assumption of greater power prompted charges that he is
establishing a left-wing dictatorship.
Chavez was reelected to a
six-year term in July 2000. Troops were called in to quell serious protests
over the election in several cities. In 2000 Chavez visited other OPEC
countries, becoming the first foreign head of state to visit Iraq since the
1991 Gulf War. He is close to President Fidel Castro of Cuba, which receives
Venezuelan oil at reduced prices.
In Dec. 2001, business and labor
organizations held a work stoppage to protest Chavez's increasingly
authoritarian government. In April 2002, tensions reached a boiling point as
workers reduced oil production to protest Chavez's policies. Following a
massive anti-Chavez demonstration during which 12 people were killed, a
coalition of business and military leaders forced Chavez from power. But
international criticism of the coup, especially in Latin America, and an
outpouring of support from the president's followers returned Chavez to
power just two days later. After the coup, Chavez remained highly popular
among the poor, despite the desperate state of the economy. Venezuelan labor
unions, business organizations, the media, and a good part of the military
remained substantially less enchanted.
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