Caribbean-Latin America |
Iranian Penetration Posing a Threat in Latin America |
2011-01-17 |
![]() Recently, a journalist from an important news outlet in Venezuela questioned the importance I attribute to Iranian embassies in Latin America. They are just embassies, he told me. To which I answered that our concept of what embassies are, or should be, has little to do with how Iran and its peers conceive of them. For these regimes, an embassy is a platform for terrorism. We need only to remember that two of the most brutal terrorist attacks in recent times in the region were ordered by Tehran and were planned and executed by Iranian agents operating directly from Irans embassy in Buenos Aires. With this background, and with solid evidence that Islamic terrorist networks operate in sensitive areas of the continent, the Iranian regimes growing interest and presence in Latin America is deeply troubling. On his part, Hugo ChávezVenezuelas autocratic Presidentis acting as a go-between for Irans penetration strategy. He opens the doors to leaders of countries under his influence for the Iranians, like the Bolivian Evo Morales, the Ecuadorian Rafael Correa and the Nicaraguan Daniel Ortega. Recently, Chávez made his ninth visit to Tehran. Lately we have learned that Chávez also acts as a front man, facilitating Iranian arms purchases banned by UN sanctions. I refer to the fact, reported in the international press, that while in Moscow recently Chávez publicly announced that he would buy the batteries for the S-300 surface-to-air missiles whose sale to Iran Russia had to cancel in compliance with the new UN rules. This raises suspicion about the massive arms purchases already made by Chávez, in quantities that go well beyond the conceivable needs of any single country like Venezuela. Given these circumstances, the reaction to Iranian penetration in Latin America on the part of the most responsible and democratic governments in the region has been amazingly passive. But it is nonetheless clear that such penetration poses serious threats to the peace and security of the peoples of the Americas, and ignoring them will not make these threats disappear. Its time to wake up to the threat represented by the Tehran-Caracas axis and its links to terrorism. As the close ties that exist between Chávezs regime and the ETA terrorist organization were uncovered in Spain, judicial authorities there issued a timely reminder that these days Caracas is a hotbed of terrorists, where they find refuge, financing, and training. Spanish judges revealed that two ETA terrorists Besance and Atistrain confessed that as recently as 2008 they were trained in all the methods of terror along with Chilean radicals in Venezuelan territory. The person in charge of receiving, protecting, and organizing their terrorist training was Arturo Cubillas, an ETA member closely linked to the Chávez regime. Cubillas not only is a functionary of the government, which assigned him the position of Chief of Security of an entity belonging to the Ministry of Agriculture, but his wife, Goizeder Odriozoloa, works with none other than the Venezuelan Vice President, Elias Jaua. The organic links between ETAs Cubillas with the government of Chávez were revealed in a single act. When the Spanish judges asked for Venezuelan collaboration in arresting and extraditing Cubillas, the first reaction from Chavez ambassador in Madrid was to question the proceedings, even hinting that the confessions were obtained under torture. The resulting scandal forced Chávez to deny his claims and that he was protecting ETA and promote, at the specific request of the then Spanish Minister of Foreign Affairs Miguel Angel Moratinos, that he would investigate Cubillas and if it was the case [that he trained ETA terrorists] then he would be tried in Venezuela or extradited to Spain. Immediately after, however, the Venezuelan Attorney General Luisa Ortega was quick to note that in no case would Cubillas be extradited to Spain, as he held Venezuelan citizenship. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that so far Cubillas has not been arrested or stopped, not even suspended, despite the seriousness of the charges against him and his actions in support of terrorism. Irans Strategy This is the proper context in which we must place Irans extraordinary efforts to establish beachheads in Latin America with Chávezs help. Those efforts are truly extra-ordinary: they include Irans investment of billions of dollars in Venezuela, as well as the promise of millions to be invested in Bolivia and Nicaragua. In addition, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has made numerous visits to several countries in the region in recent years, always with Venezuela as his spearhead. Those same countries have been also frequently visited by the Minister of Foreign Affairs and other senior officials of the Iranian government, most notably including those of Irans security and intelligence agencies. A logical, and disquieting, question imposes itself: what justifies such an eagerness toward an area geographically so distant from Iran? This question has been raised even in Tehran, where some have criticized the lack of economic sense in spending astronomical amounts of money in this region. Given the background and present behavior of the Ayatollahs regime, it would be a good idea for the countries of Latin America to start asking the same question, before it is too late. It is widely known that the Iranian regime is looking for diplomatic allies all over the world. Its leaders are intent upon shaking off its status as an international pariah, which it first earned for its behavior as a state sponsor of terrorism and later confirmed with its ostensive quest for nuclear armaments, not to mention its virulent anti-Semitism and its stubborn denial of the Holocaust. Iran views any possible allies that are geographically close to the United States as particularly valuable, since they can be presented as challenges to American influence in the States own backyard, something similar to what Ahmadinejad attempted to do in Lebanon. We must also remember that Ayatollah Khomeini, founder of the Islamic theocracy, always maintained that the Islamic Revolution had to transcend the national level and be exported to other countries, even by imposing it on other Islamic nations with non-theocratic governments. For Khomeini, the constitutional provision to perpetuate the revolution at home and abroad implied not only preaching and propagating the Islamic faith, but also engaging in confrontation and armed struggle. It is not surprising then that a regime that is expansionist by definition would, through the years, develops a clear policy of state-sponsored terrorism, directly and indirectly executed through organizations such as Hezbollah and Hamas. Chávezs Expansionism Chávezs regime shares the same expansionist drive, which translates into a strategic identification with Irans theocracy. In effect, while autocracy has been, unfortunately, a relatively common phenomenon in Latin Americas turbulent history, the authoritarianism of Chávez is of an aggressively expansionist nature: for him, it is not enough to ruthlessly impose it in Venezuela (as past dictators limited themselves to doing in this and other Latin American countries); it must also be transplanted to other countries and, if possible, to all the countries in the region. Chávez is well placed to facilitate Irans penetration. His rabidly anti-American agenda has greatly benefited the Ayatollahs. Although Chávez doesnt have a coherent system of beliefs, his brand of radical populisminspired by that of his mentor Fidel Castrofinds fertile ground in the poverty, inequality, and corruption that are endemic in Latin America. In addition, Chávez has spent and continues to spend huge amounts of money to export his model of government, transforming other populist leaders in Latin America into his clients and actingone could sayas the head of a regional franchise for radical populism. Now, behind Chávezs apparent madness there exists a careful method, thanks to the mentorship of the Castro brothers. For example, the strategy to bring about the expansionist vision of the Bolivarian revolution has three different levels: · The first level is to establish satellite states; · The second level is to generate client states in places where it is not possible to establish a Chávez-like regime, but where there is an important level of sympathy toward the Venezuelan Lieutenant General; · The third level, complementary to the other two, is to intimidate the countries that dont follow the guidelines issued in Caracas, in order to make sure that they keep silent about violations of human and democratic rights committed by the Chávez regime. Bolivia, Nicaragua, and Ecuador are the best examples of satellites of Caracas, although each is in a different degree of progress in the process of becoming a Chávez-like regime. It is not by pure coincidence that Evo Morales, Daniel Ortega, and Rafael Correa, have all trampled on Congress and the Judiciary and set the abolishing of presidential term limits as their first priority in order to stay in power. All three have also criminalized their political opponents with all kinds of false accusations and have hounded private companies with expropriations, confiscations, and the imposition of ruinous low prices, among other measures that have no place in a democracy. Honduras was moving in that same direction under Manuel Zelaya who, as soon as he joined the army of followers of the Bolivarian revolution, tried to bring about the first rule in Chávezs manual: abolish presidential term limits and remain in power at any cost. As we all know, Zelaya did not achieve this goal, which was in open violation of the Honduran Constitution. Chávez and his acolytes have not yet been able to recover from this setback to their progress in Central America, to the point that they continue to engage in all actions possible to block the normalization of international relations with the freely and democratically elected government of Honduras. Examples of client states abound. They go from the purchase of Argentine bonds, in order to keep the Kirchners afloat during their periodic episodes of fiscal insolvency, to the huge flows of oil and money that keep the majority of Caribbean states in a permanent position of support for Chávezs whim. Thus, Chávez has managed to create significant blocks of open or subtle support for himself and his friends in international fora and organizations. Cuba is a special case in terms of relations to Chávez. On the one hand, to Chávez, Cuba is the motherland of knowledge about and guidance for the constructionI would rather say the destructionof socialism. In turn, Venezuela is for Cuba a generous udder from which it milks billions of dollars a year, a role not that different from the one played by the Soviet Union until its empire collapsed. One key element of the services that Cuba offers to Chávez is his personal security. In addition, Cuba already has a leading role in Venezuelas Army, in its police and its intelligence and migration services. There are thousands of Cuban doctors and teachers, infiltrated all throughout the country, who carry out the ideological indoctrination of Venezuelan citizens. With the unlimited support of Chávez and with his tactics to control countries, earn their support, or silence their criticism, Irans diplomatic efforts in the region have borne significant results. Nicaragua, for instance, has expressed its support for the Iranian nuclear program. Venezuela and Cuba, in turn, have confirmed on multiple occasions their opposition to any sanctions imposed on Tehran for its non-compliance with resolutions of the UN Security Council and its Nuclear Agency. Furthermore, Irans diplomatic presence in the region has been continually expanding: it has reopened embassies in Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, and Uruguay, and it has opened a new one in Nicaragua with a disproportionate number of diplomats, in spite the fact that their ties, commercial or otherwise, are utterly insignificant. It is also worth noting that Iranian nationals no longer need a visa to enter Nicaragua. The support of Brazil, under Lula da Silvas government, is even more remarkable. Brazil is too too big a country and its economic situation is too solid to be in any way controlled by Chávez. Yet, it is the most glittering trophy in Irans showcase of diplomatic triumphs in the region. Lula da Silva legitimized Ahmadinejad when he received the Iranian president in Brasilia in November of last year. But Lula has also legitimized Irans nuclear ambitions, which he insists on characterizing as peaceful, although it is known beyond any reasonable doubt that Irans aims are clearly military in nature. What prompts Lula to provide such useful diplomatic services to Tehran? His motivations are, in part a winning move in the leftist gallery of his political party, and in part sheer ego and vanity. The tight financial and monetary policies with which Lula governed Brazil have distanced him from the leftist orthodoxy of his party about domestic policy. In order to neutralize intra-party criticism, he resorts to those leftists gestures in foreign policy. Lula also has the ambition to go down in history as the president who earned Brazil international recognition and status as a superpower. This encourages him not only to challenge the United States as much as possiblein order to show his independencebut also to assume flamboyant positions that call attention to Brazil on the international scene. In both cases, Lulas gestures of support for Iran are perfectly consistent with his strategy; they create problems for others at a limited domestic cost to himself. Dangerous Liaisons The danger here is that the ties to the Ayatollahs entail much more than what the countries in the region may be expecting. We must remember that Iran is considered the most active state sponsor of terrorism. Thanks to Chavezs ties to Iran, Hamas has opened offices in Caracas, as has the terrorist group Hezbollah, which Tehran finances with over 120 million dollars a year. As the Los Angeles Times has reported, Western government officials fear that Hezbollah may be using Venezuela as a base for its operations. An official involved in the fight against terrorism told the Times that the relation between Venezuela and Iran is becoming a strategic association. How to explain otherwise the regular flights between Caracas and Tehran, for which no tickets are sold and no immigration or customs inspections are required? We must not forget that Hezbollah has carried out not one, but two horrible terrorist attacks in the region, both in Buenos Aires. The first one, in 1992, against the Embassy of Israel, killed 42 people and wounded 242. The second one, two years later, against the headquarters of the largest Jewish Community Center in the city, left 82 people dead and 300 wounded. The official report from the Argentine authorities confirmed the direct responsibility of Iran and Hezbollah in both attacks. The report pointed out that Hezbollah had followed orders issued directly by Tehrans regime. The Argentine Justice issued arrest warrants against former Iranian President Hashemi Rafsanjani, former Foreign Minister Ali Ar Velayati, former Intelligence Chief Ali Fallahijan and four other Iranian nationals, as well as against Imad Mugniyah, head of Hezbollah´s external security apparatus. It is worth noting that, in spite of Irans strong protests Interpol confirmed Argentinas report and issued international warrants for the arrest of six Iranian suspects. Besides this bloody record, police authorities know that Hezbollah, Hamas, and Al Qaeda have sought refuge and raise funds in the Triple Frontier area, shared by Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay, as well as in Venezuelas Margarita Island and the Caribbean. Hundreds of millions of dollars have been channeled to parent organizations in the Middle East through their operatives in those areas, extending thus the worldwide network of support for terrorism in the region. Although it is well known that al Qaeda and Hezbollah come from different, and inimical, branches of Islam, this is not an obstacle for the two organizations to form alliances of convenience seeking to reach common goals against a common enemy, the United States. The infamous tri-border region has a trait that makes it particularly inviting to Tehran. Most Muslims in the Americas are Sunnis, in line with their proportion in the worlds population. But the Shiites constitute almost half of all the Muslim residents of Foz do Iguaçu, the Brazilian city with the largest Islamic community in the Triple Frontier, just one bridge away from Ciudad del Este, which has the largest Islamic community in Paraguay with an equal high proportion of Shiites. We should all be concerned that Iran may aim at infiltrating these communities in order to manipulate them. All this has moved the U.S. Treasury Department to freeze assets belonging to Hezbollah members in the tri-border area as well as prompted Canadian intelligence to point out that its reports indicate that resources are regularly sent to Middle East groups, including Hamas, by support groups [in the Triple Frontier]. The threat of Islamic terrorism in the Triple Frontier is serious enough to have brought the three countries involved to create, with the support of the United States authorities, a tripartite command center (the 3 + 1 Group) in order to consolidate their police efforts in the area. There is also evidence that Islamic terrorists have active links with drug traffic and money laundering in several countries in the region, as was revealed in Colombia by the dismantling of a group composed of Hezbollah operatives and a Colombian drug cartel that had generated hundreds of millions of dollars to finance Hezbollahs terrorist activities. The drug cartels are expanding their reach in our countries, as has been shown by diverse police operations. The proven links between the Islamic terrorists and the drug cartels significantly increase the security risks in the region. In this respect, several Central American countries suffer the assaults of maras (gangs). These maras are tightly linked to drug trafficking and all kinds of highly violent criminal acts as well as to gangs in the United States; they are also instrumental in the illegal infiltration of this country. Security experts worry that these gangs expertise could be put at the service of terrorists who want to enter the United States without being detected. Necessary Actions It is time that Latin American countries open their eyes to these risks. In view of the active presence, among others, of Hezbollah, Hamas, and al Qaeda in the region, it is also important to strengthen the institutional capacity of Latin American countries to prevent, research, and prosecute terrorist activities of any kind. There are excellent hemispheric tools available for that purpose, like the Inter American Convention Against Terrorism (CICTE), established by the Organization of American States. In close cooperation with United States authorities and with Spains support, CICTE works to strengthen the countries anti-terrorism legislation and to train the appropriate officers and personnel. It also promotes the improvement of security and immigration controls and the development of special training programs in the control of financial flows and money laundering, based in actual cases, as well as in matters of cyber-security. At the same time, the U.S. Southern Command has sustained solid relations of military collaboration with its counterparts in the region in order to fight the threat of terrorism, which reaffirms that hemispheric cooperation is a crucial asset in this area. An important additional step would be to raise the funds devoted to the program of anti-terrorist cooperation provided to Latin American countries in order to improve their capabilities in areas such as the handling of airport security, bomb detection and deactivation, and the fight against the financing of terrorist activities. In spite of its significance, this State Department program has been assigned very limited resources, and these have been mostly spent in support, first, of Colombia and, presently, of Mexico. This program is an effort that could and should be considerably strengthened, given the urgency of bolstering the anti-terrorist capabilities of Latin American countries. Finally, although nothing can replace the countries determination to pay due attention to the risks of Iranian penetration in the region, it is clear that the Iranians have used to their own advantage the void that the United States has created by dedicating its attention to other regions in the world and markedly neglecting the relations with its neighbors. I must say in all honestly that the United States does not possess a clear and consistent policy towards Latin America. Some decades ago, a perceptive former Latin American President said that it was hazardous to be a friend of the United States, because it wasnt a trustworthy ally. It is a fundamental responsibility of American politicians from both parties to remedy this situation. In the face of the threat of Irans penetration in the region and its ties to international terrorism, it is essential for the United States to maintain a fruitful and continued dialogue with the countries of the hemisphere. Whoever ignores this does so at their own peril. |
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Europe |
ETA suspect Arturo Cubillas fails to appear in Spanish National Court |
2010-12-15 |
A few terrorists are nothing in the overall scope of relations so there won't be any discernible impact, despite the fact that Venezuela's now a rogue state. [El Universal] Alleged ETA members Arturo Cubillas and José Angel Urtiaga, who live in Venezuela and Cuba, respectively, failed to appear on Tuesday in the Spanish National Court in Madrid, where they were subpoenaed to testify as suspects in the case where their alleged links between the Basque gang ETA and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) have been investigated. Despite their absence, Judge Eloy Velasco, of the Spanish National Court, did not order any action against them, because there are search and arrest warrants against them since late February, when they were indicted. Cubillas, 46, and residing in Venezuela since 1989, is an official at the National Lands Institute (INTI), an agency attached to the Venezuelan Ministry of Agriculture. In early October, two suspected ETA cut-throats said in the Spanish National Court that they were trained by Cubillas in weapons use in Venezuela in 2008, DPA reported. |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Former ambassador: Other six ETA members work for Chavez's government |
2010-11-30 |
[El Universal] Diego Arria, a former minister of Information and Tourism and former Venezuelan Ambassador to the United Nations, aka the Oyster Bay Chowder and Marching Society, said on Monday in Madrid that in addition to Arturo Cubillas, other six ETA members who were deported to Venezuela in 1989 work in the government led by Hugo Chavez. Arria testified before the Spanish National Court Judge Eloy Velasco, who is investigating the alleged links between Basque terrorist group ETA and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and their presence in Venezuela. The former chairman of the UN Security Council conceded that he did not provide new information on the investigation. However, The infamous However... he reported the "State policy of pillage" implemented by the Chavez's government whose main victims are from Spain, Efe reported. Arria, who testified for over an hour before the Spanish National Court Judge Eloy Velasco, admitted that he does not know Arturo Cubillas, who has been considered the "liaison" between Basque separatist group ETA and Colombia's FARC. The former minister added that he did not provide any information about ETA relations with the FARC. |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Tension between Spain, Venezuela over ETA |
2010-11-06 |
(KUNA) -- Spain said Friday it was extremely annoyed by Venezuelan His Excellency President-for-Life, Caudillo of the Bolivarians Hugo Chavez's accusation that Madrid was blaming Caracas for allegedly supporting separatist group ETA. Interior Minister Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba said that Spanish Foreign Minister Trinidad Jiminez had conveyed Madrid's concern and annoyance to Venezuelan Ambassador to Spain and told him that Chavez's statements were "unacceptable and unjustifiable." At a news conference, Rubalcaba said the Spanish government was still keen to continue cooperation with Venezuela to crack down on ETA and capturing all of its outlaws. He said Spain was doing its best to cooperate with Venezuela to "fighting terrorism." Chavez announced earlier today his firm rejection to recent statements by a number of Spanish ministers who were accusing the Venezuelan government of collaborating with ETA and backing its activities in Venezuela, under supervision of one of the officials in the Venezuelan Ministry of Agriculture. Chavez said these accusations were "vague and unust" against the Venezuelan people and government. He said the accusations were an attempt to justify inability of the Spanish government to fighting ETA. Chavez called on the Spanish government and media to stop these "unjust" accusations. Spain had officially asked Venezuela last week to extradite Arturo Cubillas, allegedly accused of having links with ETA. Spain wanted to question Cubillas in Madrid on charges of committing terrorist acts, cooperating with ETA and facilitating the separatist group's mission in Venezuela. Two ETA separatists confessed in the court that they had received military training in Venezuela in 2008. Venezuela refused to hand over Cubillas because he is a Venezuelan citizen. Caracas, however, investigated the incident and Cubillas testified before a court last Wednesday. |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Spain releases former police officer wanted by Venezuelan authorities |
2010-11-05 |
[El Universal] Mario Leonardo Rocco, a former Venezuelan police officer who is sought by the Venezuelan justice for an alleged murder committed during a coup attempt led by Hugo Chavez in 1992, was released by a Spanish court on Sunday. Judge Fernando Andreu, of the Spanish National Court, issued the release order and filed the extradition papers as the Venezuelan judicial authorities did not request Rocco's extradition within 40 days, as established in the treaty signed by the two countries, said Spanish newspaper El País. On Tuesday, Luisa Ortega Díaz, the Venezuelan Attorney General, compared the extradition to Spain of the alleged ETA member Arturo Cubillas with the extradition of Mario Rocco to Venezuela. "Let's see if they are going to respond as swiftly as they talk," she said. |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
ETA suspect to appear before Venezuela's Attorney General Office |
2010-11-03 |
[El Universal] Venezuelan Attorney General Luisa Ortega Díaz said on Tuesday that Arturo Cubillas, an alleged member of Basque terrorist group ETA, will appear at 9:00 a.m. on Wednesday in the Attorney General Office to testify as a witness. Ortega Díaz added that the ETA suspect will appear in the Public Prosecution Office to reaffirm the request he made when he asked the Venezuelan agency to investigate his case, following a public complaint against him. The Attorney General stressed said that her agency has not received a formal notification from the Spanish authorities requesting the extradition of the alleged ETA member, who resides in Venezuela. The Venezuelan official said that Spanish authorities have made several statements on the issue, but the Venezuelan Attorney General Office has not received any official information. |
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Europe |
Spain requests extradition of ETA suspect from Venezuela |
2010-10-30 |
(KUNA) - -Spanish Deputy Prime Minister Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba said that his country has requested the extradition from Venezuela of a suspected activist of the snuffy Basque separatist group ETA. Rubalcaba Said on a Press conference here today, that Spanish judge Eloy Velasco wants to question Cubillas, whom he suspects of promoting cooperation between ETA and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) in Venezuela. The government decided to file the request despite Caracas' refusal so far to hand over Arturo Cubillas, an official at the Venezuelan Agriculture Ministry. The Spanish National Court said earlier that two ETA suspects who were nabbed in Spain recently claimed to have received weapons training overseen by Cubillas in Venezuela. The case has created tension between Madrid and Venezuela, who denies protecting ETA. Caracas has promised to investigate the allegations against Cubillas. ETA has killed some 850 people since 1968 in its fight for Basque independence in northern Spain and southern France. |
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Europe | |
Alleged ETA members subpoenaed about terrorist links | |
2010-10-29 | |
Two ETA members residing in Venezuela and Cuba, who have been investigated for the alleged collaboration between the Basque terrorist group ETA (Basque Homeland and Freedom), the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, a rebel group; and the Venezuelan government were subpoenaed by a Spanish court.
Cubillas and Urtiaga submitted this week two powers of attorney for lawsuits in which they appointed Jone Goirizelaia as their attorney in Spain. Goirizelaia is the usual lawyer of ETA prisoners. In the document, Cubillas and Urtiaga, who are theoretically at large because there is an arrest warrant against them, gave their addresses. Meanwhile, Gustavo de Aristegui, a spokesman of the People's Party in the Committee of Foreign Affairs in the Congress of Deputies, asked the new Spanish Foreign Minister Trinidad Jiménez to change the Spanish foreign policy with regard to Venezuela. | |
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Europe |
Spanish judiciary orders detention of ETA-FARC members |
2010-03-16 |
![]() Excellent! Do some more digging because I'll bet the ETA and FARC have even deeper connections with Oogo ... As reported by court sources, Judge Eloy Velasco, of the Spanish National Court issued last week bench warrants against six presumed ETA members, including Arturo Cubillas Fontan, who held an incumbency at the Venezuelan government, and five FARC members, Efe quoted. Judge Velasco indicted last March 1, indicted six ETA members and seven FARC members, and gave an indication of their alleged links with the Venezuelan government. According to the sources, the judge did not order the detention of the two FARC members because one of them is dead, and because the only woman facing trial, Remedios García Albert, is in Spain. |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Chavez won't explain about Spains accusations |
2010-03-04 |
[Iran Press TV Latest] Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has dismissed Spain's accusations that his government has links with terrorist groups, adding that there is nothing to explain about them. The comments made on Wednesday come after Spanish President Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero demanded explanation from Caracas over alleged ties to terrorist groups active in South America and Europe. On Monday, a Spanish judge Eloy Velasco accused Venezuela of acting as a link between the Basque separatist group ETA and FARC rebels in Colombia. Velasco also charged a suspected member of ETA, Arturo Cubillas Fontan, of serving numerous high-level roles within the Venezuelan government. Following Velasco's claim, the Spanish government urged Venezuela to clarify its position on the issue with Zapatero stressing that his government "will act in accordance with that explanation." |
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Europe |
Spanish court says Venezuela helped ETA, FARC |
2010-03-02 |
Never saw that coming, didya ... MADRID (Reuters) -- Spain demanded Venezuela explain itself after a judge accused the South American government on Monday of helping Basque ETA rebels and Colombian FARC guerrillas plot possible attacks on Spanish soil. A ruling by Spain's High Court said the Venezuelan government facilitated contacts between the armed groups which led to FARC asking ETA for logistical help in case it tried to assassinate Colombian officials visiting Spain, including President Alvaro Uribe. High Court Judge Eloy Velasco issued arrest warrants for 13 FARC and ETA suspects, including one Spanish-born employee of the Venezuelan government. Spain's Socialist government, which at one stage had relatively good relations with Venezuela's left-wing firebrand President Hugo Chavez, demanded an explanation from Caracas. "The Spanish government will act in accordance with that explanation," Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero told a news conference in Hanover, Germany, after meeting German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Venezuela reacted strongly to the case. "The Venezuelan government found out by way of the press of the Spanish ruling in which it makes unacceptable, politically motivated allusions about the Venezuelan government," a statement read. The statement said the ruling made several disrespectful references to Chavez and made unfounded and tendentious allusions about the Venezuelan government. Speaking on radio in Uruguay Colombian President Uribe would not be drawn into making a statement. "We have to react with prudence and find out what is happening through the diplomatic channels," he said. The spat comes as tensions run high between Venezuela and its neighbour Colombia, over Caracas' alleged support for FARC, or the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia. Spain's relations with Venezuela have suffered in recent years, with King Juan Carlos telling Chavez to "shut up" at a summit in Chile in 2007 after the Venezuelan repeatedly interrupted Zapatero. Spanish oil company Repsol has significant investments in Venezuela. Spain's second-largest bank BBVA also has interests there. According to Monday's detailed court ruling, in 2007 ETA rebels were given a Venezuelan military escort to a site in the jungle where they gave a course on handling explosives to visiting FARC guerrillas. "This shows Venezuelan government cooperation in the illicit collaboration between FARC and ETA," Judge Velasco said in the document, adding that one of those wanted is Arturo Cubillas, who has worked for Venezuela's government since Chavez won elections in 1999. Venezuelan legislator Hayden Pirela, who heads the parliament's subcommission for border affairs and integration, said the fact Cabillas had worked in the government did not mean Venezuela supported ETA. FARC has killed thousands of people in a decades-old war to set up a Socialist state in Colombia. ETA has killed more than 850, fighting for independence for the Basque Country. FARC is also believed to have had training from suspected members of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) on bomb-making techniques. |
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Caribbean-Latin America | |
Spanish Judge Says Chavez Contracted With FARC And ETA To Kill Uribe In Spain | |
2010-03-01 | |
Judge Eloy Velasco included in the indictment of six suspected members of ETA and seven of the FARC "show the Venezuelan government involvement in the unlawful collaboration between the FARC and ETA." Velasco, judge of the Audiencia Nacional (Spanish main criminal tribunal) considers that this is particularly so in the case of suspected ETA member Arturo Cubillas Fontan, one of the defendants. Cubillas is married since 1990 to the "Venezuelan Lataillade Goizeder Odriozola, who has held public office in the Venezuelan government of President Hugo Chavez, and was appointed in 2005 director within the Office of Management and Services of the Ministry of Agriculture and Venezuela's land," said the court order provided to AFP. The alleged activist has been "responsible for the ETA group in that part of America since 1999, taking charge of coordinating relations with the FARC and the participation of members of ETA explosives and weapons workshops and dissemination techniques of urban guerrilla terrorist ", said judge Velasco. Fontan is accused by Judge Velasco, along with members of the FARC Edgar Gustavo Navarro Ramon Vargas Morales and Victor Salazar, the "crime of conspiracy to commit terrorist murder." | |
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