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Presidential race hots up in Venezuela

Published: 01 Oct 2012 - 11:30 am | Last Updated: 07 Feb 2022 - 12:49 am

CARACAS: President Hugo Chavez vowed yesterday to run a more efficient government if he wins Venezuela’s election next weekend while rival Henrique Capriles demanded justice for the shooting of two opposition activists.

With the South American Opec member’s October 7 presidential vote shaping into a close fight, Capriles is hammering Chavez daily on his record with day-to-day problems such as crime, blackouts and shoddy infrastructure.

“Efficiency, that is one of my promises for the next period. We have to correct things,” the 58-year-old president said in his most direct comment on a theme the opposition hopes could sway former “Chavistas” into 

their camp.

In recent days, Chavez has added into his campaign speeches an acknowledgement of Venezuelans’ frustration with grassroots problems but has said things would be far worse under Capriles, who he paints as a heartless capitalist elitist.

Capriles, 40, a state governor who has a centrist vision of business-friendly government with strong welfare policies, lambasted the government overnight for the fatal shootings of two local opposition leaders in Barinas state.

“We demand an immediate investigation into something that should have never have occurred — a campaign motorcade attacked with gunshots,” Capriles said on Twitter.

“We Venezuelans are sick of violence and we are going to defeat it, along with its government, on the 7th of October ... The violent discourse of the government candidate will be defeated.”

Gunmen killed the two activists, including one from Capriles’ First Justice party, at a rally on Saturday afternoon in the worst violence of the volatile election campaign.

The party said gunmen had fired from a van, which witnesses identified as belonging to a state institution, after Chavez supporters blocked an opposition motorcade.

The government did not confirm that version but promised an investigation into what it said was an isolated incident.

Venezuela is awash with arms, and voters cite violent crime as their No 1 worry. There had been some gunshots and clashes at previous opposition rallies but no deaths.

With one week to go, polls are mixed, leading both sides to claim they are heading for victory. Venezuelans are fearful of violence if the result is close and then disputed by one side.

Of the half dozen best-known pollsters in Venezuela, a majority put Chavez ahead but they also show Capriles creeping up in recent weeks, and two polls put him just ahead. Despite two bouts of cancer since mid-2011, Chavez has declared himself completely cured and is trying to recapture his old energy to win another six-year term. He was campaigning in two states yesterday while Capriles was hoping for his biggest turnout yet at a rally in Caracas. REUTERS