Venezuela's Chavez accuses Israel of genocide

Wed Sep 9, 2009 4:17am EDT
 
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PARIS, Sept 9 (Reuters) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has accused Israel of genocide against the Palestinian people, telling a French newspaper that the bombing of Gaza late last year was an unprovoked attack.

"The question is not whether the Israelis want to exterminate the Palestinians. They're doing it openly," Chavez said in an interview with Le Figaro published on Wednesday.

The Venezuelan president, who has just completed a tour of Middle Eastern and Arab countries, brushed aside Israeli assertions that its attack on Gaza was a response to rocket fire from Islamist group Hamas which rules the coastal enclave.

"What was it if not genocide? ... The Israelis were looking for an excuse to exterminate the Palestinians," Chavez said, adding that sanctions should have been slapped on Israel.

Israel launched an offensive against the Gaza Strip on Dec. 27 2008 with the declared aim of curbing rocket fire from the region into southern Israel.

The land, sea and air assault lasted 22 days, and left some 1,300 Palestinians dead, according to medical sources.

Chavez said he recognised Israel's right to exist, as with all countries, but added that the Jewish state must respect the Palestinian people's right to self-determination.

The Venezuelan president said he wanted more clarity from the United States on its foreign policy, adding that he was disappointed by recent U.S. dealings in South America, including the installation of military bases in Colombia.

"Sadly, the arrival of Obama brought with it a lot of hope, but little change," he said. (Reporting by Vicky Buffery)




 
A man looks at stock market monitors inside a bank in Taipei September 16, 2008. Taiwan stocks dropped 4.8 percent on Tuesday, dipping below the key 6,000-point level for the first time since November 2005, as banking shares like Shin Kong extended their fall. The island's top financial regulators said late on Monday that Taiwan financial companies and retail investors had about T$80 billion ($2.5 billion) of exposure to investments of Lehman Brothers. REUTERS/Nicky Loh (TAIWAN)
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