Psycho Punk
Active Member
All a bit cryptic if you ask me.
Venezuela crossword Chavez assassination plot denied
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-18042494
The crossword has been compared to coded messages used by the French Resistance in WWII
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A Venezuelan crossword writer says he has been questioned by intelligence agents after being accused of hiding a coded assassination message in a puzzle.
Neptali Segovia denies using his crossword in the newspaper Ultimas Noticias to incite the murder of President Hugo Chavez's brother, Adan.
Answers to clues included the words "kill" and "Adan".
The accusation was made by a pro-government television commentator.
Political tension has been rising in Venezuela ahead of October's presidential election and because of uncertainty over the health of President Chavez, who is being treated for cancer.
'Nothing to hide'
Ultimas Noticias said Mr Segovia went voluntarily to the headquarters of Venezuela's intelligence service after agents came looking for him at the newspaper's office in Caracas.
"I went because no-one is more interested in clarifying this than me," the paper quoted him as saying.
"I have nothing to hide because the work I have been doing for 17 years only has a cultural and educational intention," he added.
Mr Segovia said he had denied the accusation and had been treated respectfully.
The accusation against him was made earlier this week by television pundit Miguel Angel Perez Pirela, who presents a programme on the state channel VTV.
He said a team of psychologists and mathematicians had concluded that the Spanish-language crossword contained a coded assassination plot against President Chavez's brother Adan.
"These sorts of messages were used a lot during World War II," he said, comparing it to secret codes used by the French Resistance.
Correspondents say the story has caused widespread amusement, but also highlights an atmosphere of growing political polarisation in Venezuela.
President Chavez and his supporters have frequently accused opposition groups of plotting violence in the run-up to October's presidential election.
The opposition have in turn accused government supporters of planning to hang on to power by force if Mr Chavez loses the election to challenger Henrique Capriles Radonski or is unable to stand because of ill health.
Adan Chavez is governor of Barinas state and has been named as a possible successor to his brother.
Hugo Chavez has said he is determined to beat cancer and win the election, but secrecy about his illness has fuelled persistent rumours that it may be worse than officially admitted.
The Venezuelan president, who has been in power since 1999, has in the past accused his opponents and the US of plotting to assassinate him.