Venezuela threatens OAS pullout after criticism

CARACAS, (Reuters) – Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez  threatened on Saturday to withdraw from the Organization of  American States, which he has accused of being dominated by  Washington, after it criticized his government’s human rights  record.

The leftist Chavez and U.S. President Barack Obama shook  hands in a much-publicized encounter at the organization’s  summit in Trinidad last month, the first sign of warming  bilateral relations following a decade-long war of words.

“We have to ask why the OAS is relevant,” Chavez said  during a televised speech. “Venezuela could withdraw from the  OAS and call on other peoples of the continent to free  ourselves of those old institutions.”

The OAS, which includes all countries in the Americas  except communist-ruled Cuba, included Venezuela this week in a  list of countries it said needed to do more to defend human  rights.

Chavez, who accused the organization of backing a brief  2002 coup against him, told the OAS human rights commission to  “go straight to hell.”
He reaffirmed a proposal for Latin American nations to  withdraw en masse from the organization and create a new group  free of what he calls the imperialist influence of the United  States.

Governments allied with Chavez have in the past offered  rhetorical support for the proposal but have taken few concrete  steps toward creating a new diplomatic body to represent the  Western Hemisphere.