Local October 27, 2011 - 9:50 am

“Populist” remark could have led to cooling Dominican-Venezuela ties

Santo Domingo.- A senior official’s statement Wednesday afternoon that president Leonel Fernandez will not visit Hugo Chavez in Caracas, just hours after the announcement, could be the result of cooling relations between the tow leaders.

Miguel Mejía, a minister without portfolio with close ties to the Venezuelan leader yesterday announced that given Chavez’s “tight agenda” the visit Sunday from his Dominican par had to be postponed. “The Venezuelan government notified that due to a busy agenda, he could not receive the president Sunday as scheduled and in that sense postponed the visit,” but noted it wasn’t due of Chavez’s health.

Nonetheless according to a recent U.S. Embassy cable disclosed by WikiLeaks Fernandez allegedly criticized Chavez’s “populist” measures, in a conversation with U.S. diplomats. In his second term in office (2004 to 2008) Fernandez had also criticized a supposed wave of populism sweeping across Latin America.

Mejia added that Chavez’s agenda is tight because his country faces difficulties in the wake of damages by hurricane Irene.

COVID-19

April 30, 2024 - 10:04 am

SeNaSa hires more than 1,500 doctors

April 26, 2024 - 9:23 am

Pro Consumidor clears rice brands of harmful metals

April 22, 2024 - 1:21 pm

Ney Arias Lora Hospital and CMD appeal ruling

April 15, 2024 - 8:40 am

Cyber attack exposes Covid-19 vaccination records in Dominican Republic

MOST READ

World

Seven countries to contribute mission agents to Haiti

Tourism

Cuba shows interest in exploring opportunities in Dominican tourism

Local

Scientific study reveals oil generation potential in Dominican Republic’s basins

Tourism

Hyatt to add 1,000 rooms in Dominican Republic with two new hotels

MORE NEWS

North Coast

Puerto Plata strengthens its boom in cruise ships: 43 vessels will arrive in May

Tourism

U.S. Consul: “The Dominican Republic is a very safe tourist destination”

Bavaro & Punta Cana

Punta Cana Airport, at the forefront: it will renovate its Terminal A

Economy

Beverage industry provides nearly 60,000 jobs