Venezuela's Chavez comes through with cheap heating oil.
"Our government is now giving Americans help while Venezuelans continue living in poverty, it's not fair," said Rafael Alvarez, a 33-year-old office worker opposed to Chavez."
(AP) STAMFORD, Conn. - The throbbing pain in Alan Francis' broken wrist worsened earlier this month when he ran out of oil to heat his home in frigid Maine.
But the 42-year-old ironworker was among a growing number of struggling Americans grateful to receive discounted heating oil from Venezuela, a country led by a man Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has likened to Hitler.
"It felt like Christmas," said Francis, who had been blasting his oven to try to stay warm. "This extra 53 gallons was awesome."
Venezuela, the fifth-largest foreign supplier of oil to the U.S., has been supplying millions of gallons of heating oil at a 40 percent discount to poor Americans and free heating fuel to homeless shelters. Venezuela's leftist, pro-Castro president, Hugo Chavez, is a fierce critic of the Bush administration.
Chavez's detractors say he is trying to embarrass President Bush and build support for himself in the U.S. through the discounted oil program, which has been spreading quickly over the past three months. Delaware agreed earlier this month to participate, joining most of New England and parts of Pennsylvania and New York City.
"He's a brutal Marxist dictator," said Michael Heath, executive director of the Christian Civic League of Maine. "He's teamed up with Fidel Castro. He's trying to split our nation."
Still, Chavez is clearly getting political mileage out of the oil.
"We'd love it if other oil companies would make similar generous donations," said Beth Nagusky, who directs Maine's program and receives calls from residents who have run out of fuel. "Washington is failing us and failing the people."
She said that because of high home heating costs, one elderly couple scrounged for wood in the garbage and another sat in front of a clothes dryer to stay warm.
The program is getting a mixed reaction in Venezuela.
"Our government is now giving Americans help while Venezuelans continue living in poverty, it's not fair," said Rafael Alvarez, a 33-year-old office worker opposed to Chavez.
But Wendi Padron, a Chavez supporter who hawks cookware on a street corner in Caracas, said: "Chavez is showing the people of the United States that we care, that we aren't against Americans, just the U.S. government. Chavez cares about poor people, no matter where they are."
Citgo Petroleum Corp., a subsidiary of Venezuela's state-run oil company, runs the program.
Feathers: What a charade, Chavez helping Americans whose income might be aprox. around US $ 15,000-20,000, a salary which would be middle class in Venezuela. Hello? Not that I am oppose for him helping others AFTER he help Venezuelans first. As you can see, he knows that he needs a good international opinion since he is dead among Venezuelans. He has learned well from his master Fidel.
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