At least two shot in Venezuela after anti-Chavez march
CARACAS (Reuters) - At least two people were shot at a Venezuelan university on Wednesday after a large student protest against President Hugo Chavez's drive to expand his powers, authorities said.
A handful of people were taken to hospital after violence at the university in Caracas following a march that drew thousands of students protesting Chavez's move to scrap term limits in a December referendum.
The government described the protest, one of several recent student-led demonstrations against the reform, as an opposition effort to destabilize the country in the run-up to the December 2 referendum that pollsters say Chavez is likely to win.
While the exact circumstances of the incident remained unclear, was the first time in the campaign there were serious injuries and came days after Chavez said the opposition wanted to stoke violence to destabilize the country.
The OPEC nation's civil defence chief, Antonio Rivero, told Globovision television station from the scene of the violence, that at least two people were shot and wounded.
The station showed images of hooded men throwing objects into university classes and other people, apparently students, running away.
Witnesses told Globovision, which is openly critical of Chavez and sympathetic to the opposition, that the assailants fired guns and threw tear gas canisters.
A Reuters witness at the scene said bystanders could not tell how the violence erupted.
After the initial violence, apparent Chavez supporters drove through the area on motorbikes and shot into the air, the witness added. Continued...

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