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Venezuela leader in Belarus decries "U.S. imperialism"

MINSK
Wed Jul 23, 2008 12:39pm EDT
Belarus' President Alexander Lukashenko (R) and Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez meet in Minsk July 23, 2008. REUTERS/BelTa/Nikolai Petrov/Pool

MINSK (Reuters) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez vowed on Wednesday to work with Belarus, an ex-Soviet state long at odds with Washington, to defeat "hegemonistic" U.S. imperialism.

World  |  Russia

Chavez, a self-styled socialist revolutionary, was making his third visit to Belarus in as many years after overseeing energy deals in Russia that consolidated his country's relations with Moscow.

Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko, described by Chavez as a "brother", has long railed against the influence of the United States in world affairs. Western nations accuse him of flouting freedom of speech and assembly in 14 years in power.

"We are struggling against the same adversary -- U.S. imperialism, against countries which serve as lackeys of that imperialism," Chavez said after receiving the "Friendship of Nations" award from the Belarussian leader.

"We are winning, but a long battle still lies ahead. The hegemonist aims have collapsed. American imperialism will continue to fall."

Lukashenko was more reserved during the ceremony in a square named after Latin American revolutionary hero Simon Bolivar, praising Belarus's alliance with Venezuela and calling for the creation of a "multi-polar" world.

"No president of any other country has done as much as this man has done for our country since our independence," he said of Chavez. "No one deserves this award more than you, Hugo. Please look after yourself."

In Moscow earlier Chavez said he hoped to purchase Russian arms to meet what he calls a U.S. threat to his country.

VENEZUELAN OIL

Belarus last year quarreled with Russia over energy prices and has since begun seeking alternative sources of supply, including extraction of oil in Venezuela.

The venture, together with Venezuelan state company PDVSA, is expected to produce 640,000 tons of oil this year, and a memorandum signed during Chavez's visit provided it with three new deposits. Plans had originally called for the enterprise to produce 900,000 tons annually from 2008.

"All issues should be resolved within two months and capacity will be doubled," Deputy Belarussian Prime Minister Vladimir Semashko said during the talks.

Lukashenko is barred from the United States and European Union on grounds that he rigged his re-election in 2006.

Belarus is particularly aggrieved at U.S. sanctions against oil firm Belneftekhi and earlier this year urged the U.S. ambassador to leave Minsk and ordered cuts in the size of Washington's embassy.

(Writing by Ron Popeski; editing by Ralph Boulton)



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