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Venezuela's Chavez spies on rivals in election game
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-11-18 16:15

CARACAS -- Government wire-tapping of opposition leaders may conjure up images of Soviet-bloc police states, but in the Venezuela of President Hugo Chavez it's the stuff of state TV commercials.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez (L) and United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) candidate to Zulia state governor Gian Carlo Di Martino campaign in Maracaibo November 16, 2008. Venezuelans will go to the polls on November 23 to elect state governors and city mayors. Picture taken November 16, 2008. [Agencies]

The Chavez government has turned a barrage of tapped conversations into tongue-in-cheek advertisements slamming the leftist leader's rivals before tough regional elections on Sunday in which a handful of his allies are likely to lose governorships.

One set of state TV spots features recordings of opposition leader Manuel Rosales discussing campaign finance or the purchase of expensive jewelry along with slapstick sound effects and pictures of rings and a Cartier watch.

Another state TV ad replays a conversation of Rosales negotiating the purchase of cattle to a backdrop of mooing sounds and cartoon pictures of coins.

"They use shameful systems to get information, but that's their problem, I'm relaxed," said Rosales.

Despite the strangely playful twist on spying, Chavez's latest tactic is in keeping with his intimidation of opponents and helps fire up his support base among the majority poor.

Chavez, who calls ex-Cuban leader Fidel Castro his mentor and has supporters controlling Venezuela's courts, Congress and the ubiquitous state oil company, has said he is determined to have "mafia boss" Rosales imprisoned.

Venezuelans are unsurprised by the eavesdropping.

Rosales dismisses Chavez's attacks as an attempt to distract voters' attention from the government's failure to rein in rampant crime or perform basic tasks such as garbage collection.

Pollsters say voters may back the opposition for up to a third of the OPEC nation's governorships as support for Chavez's self-styled socialist revolution has eroded from four years ago when his allies won 20 of 22 states.

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