Chavez rejects demands for his resignation
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -- President Hugo Chavez dismissed demands
that he step down or call early elections, telling thousands of supporters
that the Constitution he pushed through in 1999 won't let him.
"I'd call early elections just to beat them once more if the Constitution
permitted it," Chavez said
before a massive march staged by his supporters in downtown Caracas on
Sunday.
"(But) that's impossible, nobody can call early elections ," he said.
Opposition groups, including the nation's largest trade union and business
chamber, demanded
Chavez call early elections by Wednesday or face a general strike on Oct.
21.
They say Chavez is responsible for the economic turmoil in Venezuela, where
80 percent of the
population lives in poverty, and must leave before his term expires in
2007.
Venezuela's Constitution, pushed through in 1999 by a popularly elected
assembly packed with
Chavez' allies, doesn't stipulate how to hold early elections.
However, it does allow for a national referendum to revoke the president's
mandate halfway
through his term, which will be in August 2003. Opposition leaders say
the country can't wait
that long.
Chavez was elected in 1998 and was re-elected two years later. He said
attempts to remove
him would be handily defeated "on the political and military stage."
Chavez already survived one coup attempt in April, when dissident officers
angered by the
slayings of 19 people during an opposition march booted him from office.
The coup fell apart when thousands of angry citizens converged on the presidential
palace in
support of Chavez, who was restored by loyalist troops.
Chavez boasted the latest march drew 2 million people -- in a nation whose
population is 24
million. The crowd's size was impossible to verify, but the claim appeared
directed to organizers
of Thursday's opposition march, who said 1 million people showed up.
People from across the country marched a four-mile route in Caracas. Chavez
showed up
wearing a red beret like the one he wore as a former army paratrooper who
staged a failed
1992 coup attempt. A green parrot wearing a tiny red beret of its own perched
on his shoulder.
"Chavez is here to stay. The opposition is wrong if they think they'll
sack him again," said
Robinson Canizales, a 46-year-old teacher.
Chavez, who claims his government foiled a coup plot earlier this month,
downplayed the
opposition ultimatum. "How scared I am!" he deadpanned.
Chanting "Chavez Makes Them Crazy!" and wearing the red, yellow and blue
colors of
Venezuela's flag, the crowds streamed into downtown Caracas led by Chavez's
Cabinet
ministers and key political allies.
Music from Venezuela's plains region, where Chavez was born and raised,
blared from
souped-up sound systems atop pickup trucks packed with cheering supporters.
"No to the coup
plotters!" read many banners.
After three years under Chavez, Venezuela's economy is in a tailspin, the
armed forces are
dangerously divided and international efforts to broker negotiations with
the large but
disorganized opposition have stalled.
The Organization of American States and the United Nations want the two
sides to sign a
"declaration of principles" committing them to dialogue. The government
said it will sign this
week, but Chavez will be touring Europe all week and won't return until
Saturday.
(Copyright 2002 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)