Venezuelan president backs Palestinian statehood bid, accuses Israel of 'Palestinian genocide'
Chavez said in the letter to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the UN General Assembly that Venezuela supports "Palestine's right to become a free, sovereign and independent state."
"This represents an act of historic justice toward a people who carry with them, from time immemorial, all the pain and suffering of the world," Chavez wrote in the letter, dated September 17.
Chavez is in Cuba this week for cancer treatment and has said he will closely be following the UN debate on the Palestinian issue and also the conflict in Libya.
Chavez said "conflict resolution in the Middle East must, necessarily, bring justice to the Palestinian people."
He condemned what he called the "Palestinian genocide," blaming "Zionism" as well as the US role in the Middle East.
"It is upsetting and painful that the same people who suffered one of the worst examples of genocide in history have become the executioners of the Palestinian people," Chavez said. "It is one thing to denounce anti-Semitism, and an entirely different thing to passively accept that Zionistic barbarism enforces an apartheid regime against the Palestinian people."
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