King of Spain to shut up! at president Hugo Chavez

sara1981

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2004
Messages
7,870
Reaction score
72
Spanish king tells Chavez to 'shut up'
Spanish king tells Chavez to 'shut up' - Yahoo! News

SANTIAGO, Chile - The king of Spain told Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez to "shut up" Saturday during a heated exchange that soured the end of a summit of leaders from Latin America, Spain and Portugal.

Chavez, who called President Bush the "devil" on the floor of the United Nations last year, triggered the exchange by repeatedly referring to former Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar as a "fascist."

Aznar, a conservative who was an ally of Bush as prime minister, "is a fascist," Chavez said in a speech at the Ibero-American summit in Santiago, Chile. "Fascists are not human. A snake is more human."

Spain's current socialist prime minister, Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, responded during his own allotted time by urging Chavez to be more diplomatic in his words and respect other leaders despite political differences.

"Former President Aznar was democratically elected by the Spanish people and was a legitimate representative of the Spanish people," he said, eliciting applause from the gathered heads of state.

Chavez repeatedly tried to interrupt, but his microphone was off.

Spanish King Juan Carlos, seated next to Zapatero, angrily turned to Chavez and said, "Why don't you shut up?"

The Venezuelan leader did not immediately respond, but later used time ceded to him by his close ally Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega to answer Zapatero's speech.

"I do not offend by telling the truth," he said. "The Venezuelan government reserves the right to respond to any aggression, anywhere, in any space and in any manner."

In his speech to 18 heads of state gathered in Santiago, Chavez claimed that Aznar in 2000 asked him to distance Venezuela from Cuba and join "the club." Chavez, a close ally of Cuban leader Fidel Castro, said he'd refused.

Saturday's exchange between Chavez, Zapatero, and Spain's king overshadowed the conclusion of the three-day summit.

Leaders pledged to fight poverty and increase regional cooperation. They signed a landmark accord that will allow nearly 6 million migrant workers in Latin America, Spain and Portugal to transfer social security benefits between their nations. The leaders also vowed to fight "all forms of terrorism" and called on the U.S. to end its economic embargo against Cuba.

its so nationalwide on television!
 
I second that. It is not nice to say bad names to other leaders. It is okay to express how you feel but not that kind of names. He does not know better to realize that he have to be very careful on what he is using the names or namecalling. tsk!!
 
Viewpoints: Chavez and King row
BBC NEWS | Have Your Say | Viewpoints: Chavez and King row

Spain and Venezuela are in the middle of a diplomatic crisis after King Juan Carlos of Spain told Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez to "shut up".
The spat began at the Ibero-American Summit in Chile's capital, Santiago, when Mr Chavez called former Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar a fascist.

When current Spanish PM Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero defended Aznar, Chavez repeatedly tried to interrupt, until the king leaned forward and said: "Why don't you shut up?" before storming out - although he returned later.

The row has escalated during the week. In Venezuela, Chavez has called the king "arrogant" while some of the protesters against his government have adopted the 'why don't you shut up?' as their slogan. Meanwhile, in Spain some defend the king's action, while others accuse him of jeopardising the trade relations between the two countries.

These are the views from six of our readers in Spain and Venezuela:
 
Chavez demands apology from Spain's king
Chavez demands apology from Spain's king - Yahoo! News

CARACAS (AFP) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez demanded Friday that Spain's King Juan Carlos apologize for telling him to "shut up" during a summit in Chile last week.

Chavez said Juan Carlos should "offer some type of apology."

A diplomatic row erupted at the Ibero-American Summit last Saturday when the king told Chavez to "shut up" when the leftist Venezuelan leader called former Spanish prime minister Jose Maria Aznar a "fascist."

"The least I'm entitled to as head of state is that the King of Spain -- who is not the king of Latin America -- offer some type of apology for attacking me," Chavez told state-run television VTV.

Chavez claims he neither saw nor heard the king, as he (Chavez) was addressing Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero at the Ibero-American summit.

"If I had heard him ... I would have stared him down like an Indian, because I am an Indian and a little bit black and white," he said.

Zapatero on Thursday said the king was merely defending him when he intervened at the summit -- Chavez interrupted Zapatero's speech several times before the king told him "why don't you just shut up."

The Spanish prime minister said the incident "took on great significance" because television cameras picked it up.

The populist and virulently anti-American Chavez made his comments during the television interview on the eve of a foreign visit that begins on Saturday with the OPEC summit in Riyadh, followed by a trip to Tehran and a visit to Paris for his first meeting with French President Nicolas Sarkozy.
 
100,000 march against Hugo Chavez reforms

More than 100,000 marchers flooded the streets of Caracas yesterday to protest against proposed constitutional changes that would dramatically widen the powers of President Hugo Chavez.

As polls predicted an agonisingly close result in Sunday’s referendum, legions of protesters stormed along the Venezuelan capital’s central avenue, blowing whistles, waving placards and shouting “Not like this!”

Some taunted "Shut up!" echoing a outburst by King Juan Carlos of Spain at a recent summit, which has become a popular ring tone among students....
100,000 march against Hugo Chavez reforms - Times Online
 
Back
Top