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Venezuelan students protest university law
by Fabiola Sanches
The Associated Press Translate This Article
23 December 2010
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) - Police and soldiers fired water cannons and plastic bullets Thursday as thousands of students protested against a law passed by Venezuela's congress that increases government powers over the country's universities.
At least three people were injured, including a news photographer who was treated for a cut to the head after being hit with an object.
Dozens of police and National Guard troops in anti-riot gear blocked student protesters outside the Central University of Venezuela in Caracas, firing plastic bullets into the air.
The law governing universities was approved by the National Assembly early Thursday, and students denounced it as an attempt by President Hugo Chavez to clamp down on autonomous state universities that have been a bastion of opposition to his government.
'They won't take away our right to protest,' the protesters chanted. 'Long live the university! Out with the military boot!'
The students had planned to march to the National Assembly but were turned back. Later, hundreds of students managed to continue the march through Caracas on another route, shouting: 'People, listen! This is a dictatorship!' Some businesses closed their doors as they approached, fearing more violence.
'We came out to protest against this unconstitutional law, and as is customary under totalitarian governments, they didn't let us leave,' said Diego Scharifker, student federation president at the university.
Anti-Chavez protesters say the law gives too much power to the government's higher education minister and also seeks to promote socialist ideology in the universities.
Scharifker said the law 'imposes socialism as the sole ideology, does away with university autonomy because it concentrates all powers in the higher education minister.'
The law is the latest in a series of controversial measures enacted in the final days of a solidly pro-Chavez National Assembly before a new legislature takes office Jan. 5 with a bigger opposition contingent capable of hindering some types of laws.
University rector Cecilia Arocha said two of those hurt during the protest included Chavez opponent Antonio Rivero, a retired general who was injured in the back with plastic bullets; and a professor from another university who was hit in the head with an object.
Two students also were briefly detained, then released.
'We don't agree with the way they passed this law without consultation,' said Ivan Gomez, a 17-year-old political science student who said he was grabbed and taken away by two National Guardsmen, then later released. His clothes were soaked from the water cannon.
University autonomy has been an emotional issue in many nations, especially in Latin America, where students and professors long struggled to maintain some independence from dictatorial conservative regimes—seeing the school as an island where critical thought is allowed. The concept usually involves allowing universities to choose their own administrators and forbidding outside police or troops from entering campuses.
Chavez's government has defended the law saying it seeks to make the universities more inclusive and democratic.
Earlier this week, pro-Chavez lawmakers also pushed through a law barring foreign funding for nongovernmental organizations and political parties, adding to a series of measures that critics say aim to stifle dissent.
Other newly approved laws boost the government's powers to intervene in the banking sector, expand regulation of Internet messages, make it easier to revoke the licenses of TV or radio stations and give the president power to enact laws by decree for 18 months.
Newly elected opposition lawmakers said in a joint statement Wednesday that the laws are dismantling democracy and represent a 'coup d'etat by the state.' They called the laws unconstitutional.
Chavez defends the decree powers as necessary to speed relief after recent floods and mudslides as well as to accelerate his government's socialist-oriented policies.
The decree powers will allow Chavez to pass laws without consulting lawmakers in a range of areas after the new National Assembly takes office next month.
Another law passed this week allows for the suspension of lawmakers who abandon their political party while in office— move meant to block the kind of defections that saw a dozen legislators break with Chavez during the current session.
Lawmakers have also rewritten parliamentary rules shortening the times allowed for debates and giving more power to the National Assembly president and Chavez's party, which will have a majority with 98 of the 165 seats.
Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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