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Venezuela plotted to kill Colombia president, Spain judge says

A Spanish judge on Monday charged that Venezuela plotted to kill Colombia President 脕lvaro Uribe, collaborating with rebel groups ETA and FARC to kill other political officials as well.

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Miraflores Press Office/AP/File
Colombia's president, 脕lvaro Uribe (l.), shook hands with Venezuela's president, Hugo Ch谩vez (r.), as the Dominican Republic's president, Leonel Fernandez, looked on during the Rio Group Summit in Santo Domingo, in this March 2008 file photo.

A daily summary of global reports on security issues.

A diplomatic row has erupted between Spain and Venezuela after a Spanish judge accused officials in Caracas of plotting with rebel groups to kill Colombian President 脕lvaro Uribe and other political officials.

Spanish National Court Judge Eloy Velasco charged on Monday that the government of Hugo Ch谩vez had been working as an intermediary between the Basque separatist group ETA and the Colombian guerrilla group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). The groups were allegedly plotting against prominent political figures living in or traveling through Spain. Venezuelan officials have dismissed these allegations as 鈥渂iased and unfounded.鈥

Spanish officials ordered that 12 supposed members of ETA and FARC for conspiracy to commit murder and conduct terrorist acts, reports The Wall Street Journal.

"There is evidence 鈥 showing the cooperation of the Venezuelan government in the illegal collaboration between FARC and ETA," according to the indictment....

The indictments also bring fresh attention to Spain's National Court, whose judges act on their own investigations and are independent from Spain's executive and legislative branches. Some judges have gained international attention, and criticism, for their handling of global cases involving other governments, including an investigation into allegations of US torture at Guantanamo Bay.

Although Mr. Ch谩vez has yet to comment on the allegations, throughout Caracas the charges have been met with widespread . 鈥淲e do not house guerrillas, nor do we have a pact with guerrillas,鈥 said Venezuelan Congressman Hayden Pirela in an article by Iran鈥檚 Press TV.

According to Judge Velasco鈥檚 26-page report, however, up to six ETA members to Venezuela to train FARC members how to use C4 explosives in cellphone bombs, reports The Guardian. In at least one instance, members from the Venezuelan military may have been present for the demolitions training. The report also says that ETA members may have traveled through Venezuela en route to FARC training camps in Colombia.

A Venezuelan agriculture ministry official, identified as Arturo Cubillas Font谩n, is alleged to be the ETA's ringleader in Latin America and the link man with FARC.

Government officials in Caracas counter that many of the accusations in the report come from information that was obtained from a computer that used to belong to , FARC鈥檚 former No. 2, who was killed by the Colombian military in March 2008, reports the Latin American Herald Tribune.

In its communique, the Venezuelan government calls it 鈥渟urprising that the judge resuscitates the worn-out farce of the computer, which has already become a part of Colombian political folklore.鈥

The dispute is likely to strain leaders in Venezuela, Spain, and Colombia. Venezuela鈥檚 ailing economy and electricity shortages have already dealt a serious blow to Ch谩vez鈥檚 popularity. In Spain and Colombia, it will test the diplomatic work of leaders who鈥檝e been working to build stronger ties with Venezuela.

Although Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Zapatero has demanded an immediate explanation of the alleged terrorist links from Venezuela, the Spanish leader says he is still awaiting a response. The Olive Press, an online Spanish newspaper, reports that Mr. Zapatero said: 鈥淭he government of Spain will decide what to do when it receives that .鈥

Spain's foreign minister said Tuesday morning that Venezuela had pledged to with the Spanish court and investigate the matter, the Associated Press reported.

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