Venezuela arrests anti-Chavez ex-defense minister

CARACAS, (Reuters) – Venezuela has arrested a  former defence minister who is openly critical of President  Hugo Chavez, an official said yesterday, days after an  opposition leader charged with corruption went into hiding.

Chavez critics have accused the socialist leader of using  the justice system to pursue critics of his government, which  faces a budget crunch this year as the nation’s oil income  shrinks.

Venezuela’s chief military prosecutor said Raul Baduel, who  led an operation to rescue Chavez from a bungled coup attempt  in 2002, was arrested to prevent him from fleeing to avoid  being tried on charges of illicit enrichment.

“Enough elements of proof have appeared … and an arrest  order was requested,” the prosecutor, Ernesto Cedeno, said in  an interview with state television.

Manuel Rosales, the most visible face of the country’s  opposition and mayor of the second city of Maracaibo, went into  hiding this week to avoid political persecution as he faces  charges of illicit enrichment, according to opposition  leaders. While campaigning for allies in elections last year, Chavez  last year called Rosales a thief and a drug trafficker and  said: “I am determined to put Manuel Rosales in jail.” Baduel was a close confidant of Chavez for years but broke  with him in 2007 after Chavez proposed a broad constitutional  overhaul that would have expanded his power. He accused Chavez  of concentrating power and weakening the nation’s democracy.