Major opposition rally ahead of Venezuela election

Bitter run-up to post-Chavez poll intensifies with personal attacks and dirty tricks claims

Venezuela's opposition leader and presidential candidate Henrique Capriles speaks to supporters during a campaign rally in Caracas on Sunday. Photograph: Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters
Venezuela's opposition leader and presidential candidate Henrique Capriles speaks to supporters during a campaign rally in Caracas on Sunday. Photograph: Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters

Hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan opposition supporters rallied in a staunchly pro-government part of the capital on Sunday, answering a call by their candidate Henrique Capriles and showing strength a week before the presidential election.

"Today the streets of Caracas are full of happiness and hope, confirming what will happen next Sunday," Mr Capriles, the 40-year-old governor of Miranda state, told the crowd.

He faces acting president Nicolas Maduro, who has vowed to continue the hardline socialism of his late boss, Hugo Chavez, if he wins the April 14th election. Maduro held a huge rally on Sunday in rural Apure state, on the Colombian border.

More often seen filled with the red flags and T-shirts of Mr Chavez's loyal supporters, the capital's historic Bolivar Avenue was packed with opposition supporters decked out in the blue, yellow and red of Mr Capriles's campaign.

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"We're winning this process," Mr Capriles said, perspiring under the hot sun in a burgundy-colored shirt, rosary beads around his neck and a baseball cap in the colours of Venezuela's flag.

He said the day after his election victory would be one of peace and reconciliation among all Venezuelans, and addressed supporters of Mr Maduro's government directly.

"Those who put on a red shirt today, I just ask you: open your eyes! I'll work hard, I'll shed skin, to win your trust."

Despite the opposition leader's optimism, opinion polls give Mr Maduro a lead of more than 10 percentage points.

Opposition supporters marched from different parts of the city to converge on the avenue, where they waved flags, cheered and sang.

Around the edges of the rally, groups of red-clad "Chavista" pro-government supporters chanted in favor of Mr Maduro.

Both candidates are touring the South American country during a lightning 10-day campaign ahead of this Sunday's vote, triggered by Mr Chavez's death from cancer on March 5th.

It has been a bitter run-up to the election, with deeply personal attacks and accusations of dirty tricks by both sides.

Surreal turn

The race took a somewhat surreal turn on Saturday when Mr Maduro said a centuries-old curse would fall on the heads of those who do not vote for him.

Mr Maduro (50), was a bus driver and union leader who rose to become Mr Chavez's foreign minister and then vice-president.

At his rallies, he frequently refers to Mr Chavez in adoring terms and plays a video from December where the former president endorsed Mr Maduro as his successor.

"He taught us the supreme value of loyalty. With loyalty, everything is possible. Betrayal only brings defeats and curses," Mr Maduro told cheering supporters on Sunday.

Mr Maduro again accused the opposition of hatching a plot to assassinate him.

He has also accused the US government of planning to kill Mr Capriles and blame it on his government in order to spark unrest before the election. Washington has denied this.

Mr Capriles has ridiculed Mr Maduro's claims and likened them to Mr Chavez's frequent denunciations of "imperialist" assassination plots during his 14-year rule.

The opposition says the assassination claims are designed to distract voters from daily problems such as violent crime, high prices and creaking public services.

Mr Capriles, who is predicting a late pro-opposition surge as sympathy wears off after Mr Chavez's death, is vowing to install a Brazilian-style administration of free-market economics with strong social welfare policies.

Mr Capriles mocks Mr Maduro as a bad copy of Mr Chavez, and says his decisions as acting president have caused a currency devaluation and price spikes that have been disastrous for Venezuelans.

Gisela Quijada, a 68-year-old nurse attending the opposition rally in Caracas, said the country was broken.

"I like Capriles ... the other one is immature. He just wants to be a copy of Chavez," she said.

"Chavez was a leader for them. I can't deny it. But he [Maduro] has nothing in his head. If Capriles doesn't win, we'll keep on fighting for him. But we're sure he's going to win!"

The election will decide the future of "Chavismo" socialism and control of the world's biggest oil reserves and economic aid to left-leaning nations across Latin America and the Caribbean.

Reuters