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Zuloaga has previously been singled out by authorities. Last May, prosecutors began investigating him for a suspected "environmental crime" related to wild animals he had hunted and mounted in his Caracas home. The following month, prosecutors charged Zuloaga with usury, alleging unlawful markups at two Toyota dealerships that he jointly owns after authorities seized 24 vehicles being stored at a home he owns. Zuloaga's arrest also came three days after opposition politician Oswaldo Alvarez Paz was detained for remarks made on a Globovision talk show March 8. Alvarez Paz has been charged with conspiracy, spreading false information and publicly inciting crime after remarking that Venezuela has turned into a haven for drug traffickers. He also said he backed allegations by a Spanish judge that Venezuela's government has cooperated with the Basque separatist group ETA and Colombian rebels. Chavez has dismissed those accusations as lies. Alvarez Paz stands by his words and denies breaking the law. Human Rights Watch condemned both arrests. "To prosecute someone for speech, which should be protected under any standard of democracy, is a dangerous precedent," Jose Miguel Vivanco, the group's Americas director, said in a statement. "For years, Chavez has been pushing legislation to restrict free speech. ... Now we seem to be entering a darker period in which he is enforcing these draconian laws." Miguel Henrique Otero, editor of the Venezuelan newspaper El Nacional, said Zuloaga's arrest shows Chavez's government is growing more authoritarian and starting to "look more like a traditional dictatorship." He said he thinks the government is acting now because Chavez has been losing popularity and "they're nervous." Chavez remains the country's most popular politician, but his support has dipped as the economy contracts and as Venezuelans cope with inflation, rampant crime and rolling blackouts in parts of the country. Chavez's popularity slipped below 50 percent in polls late last year, and has hovered between 40 percent and 50 percent in recent months, said pollster Luis Vicente Leon of the Caracas-based firm Datanalisis.
[Associated
Press;
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