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http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,684564,00.html

Egg on face of Labour minister who called deposed
leader 'ranting demagogue' 

Michael White, political editor
Monday April 15, 2002
The Guardian 

The Labour minister who likened Venezuela's president,
Hugo Chavez, to Mussolini after his fall from power on
Friday welcomed his return to office yesterday. 
Denis MacShane, the Spanish-speaking Foreign Office
minister in charge of relations with Latin America,
called the failure of the military coup a blow for
democratic values and appealed for social dialogue. 

"Last week's coup has failed. Any change of government
in Venezuela as elsewhere in Latin America and the
world should come about by democratic means. In my
talks with President Chavez last week he spoke of his
admiration for the European model," he said in a
statement posted on the Foreign Office website. 

Diplomatic nimble-footedness could reconcile the
comment with Saturday's website statement in which the
MP for Rotherham appealed for "the swift return to a
legitimate, democratic government in Venezuela" - but
gave no indication that it might be the charismatic
populist Mr Chavez he had in mind. 

Less susceptible to nuance was the article the
minister, a former journalist, contributed to
Saturday's Times when it looked as if Mr Chavez was as
much history as his 19th-century hero, Simon Bolivar. 

Under the headline "I saw the calm, rational Chavez
turn into a ranting populist demagogue" Mr MacShane
described how his official 20-minute meeting with the
Venezuelan leader on Monday had turned into a two-hour
session in the presidential palace. 

"As we spoke about Latin America - I felt I was
talking to a normal, worldly-wise political leader. He
sounded positively Thatcherite in his desire to slim
down the bloated Venezuelan oil industry and welcomed
the bids by BP and British Gas to bring global
expertise to his country's energy sector," the
minister wrote. 

He went on to contrast that with a "bizarre three-hour
TV speech" in which Mr Chavez sacked six oil
executives and raised the minimum wage by 20%. 

As a general strike was mounted against him Mr
MacShane reported: "He was dressed in a red
paratrooper's beret and rugby shirt and waved his arms
up and down like Mussolini - an odd, disturbing
spectacle. The calm, rational Chavez had been replaced
by a ranting populist demagogue." 

It was not his ties to Saddam Hussein or Fidel Castro
that brought Mr Chavez down, but his failure to
deliver "economic efficiency, social justice and
political freedom", Mr MacShane averred on Saturday. 

Yesterday he suggested that the president might just
have stepped down temporarily to avoid bloodshed.




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