CARACAS - Venezuela's Vice President Ramon Carrizalez, who was also defense minister, resigned on Monday citing personal reasons, adding to the political problems and rising unrest facing leftist President Hugo Chavez.
Chavez is facing growing discontent over shortages of electricity and water and a sharp currency devaluation this month as he heads into legislative elections in September that could reduce his tight grip of the OPEC nation's Congress.
One student was killed and nine police officers injured on Monday in the Venezuelan city of Merida in violence linked to protests over the suspension of a TV station opposed to President Hugo Chavez.
Venezuelan cable providers, responding to government orders, stopped showing RCTV Internacional on Sunday. The station is critical of Chavez, who pushed its parent RCTV off free-access television in 2007.
Interior Minister Tareck El Aissami said late on Monday that 15-year-old Josino Jose Carrillo, a pro-Chavez high school student, was killed while participating in a demonstration in the Andean city of Merida.
"Unfortunately several minutes ago a group of students that were protesting peacefully were attacked in a cowardly fashion, and this lamentable incident resulted in the assassination of a 15-year-old youth," said El Aissami in televised comments.
He said nine police officers from the state of Merida were wounded in the student demonstrations, two of them with firearms.
Police used tear gas to disperse thousands of Venezuelan students who took to the streets to protest the government's widely criticized suspension of a TV station opposed to Chavez.
Chavez had named the even-tempered and soft-spoken Carrizalez to the number two job in 2008, and in 2009 tapped him to simultaneously serve as defense minister.
"The President of the Republic ... accepted the resignation that was presented for strictly personal reasons by Vice President Ramon Carrizalez," Communications Minister Blanca Eekhout said in a statement on state television.
State-backed news network Telesur reported that Carrizalez' wife, Environment Minister Yuviri Ortega, also resigned. Carrizalez denied the resignations had to do with differences with the government, Telesur reported.
The close Chavez confidant, who is a former army officer like the president, was seen as one of Chavez's more capable administrators. This month, Chavez fired a recently named electricity minister for botching a Caracas electricity rationing scheme.
He has also changed his finance minister, Ali Rodriguez, who he named electricity minister this month. Left-wing academic Jorge Giordani took over at finance.
Carrizalez previously served as infrastructure minister and housing minister, where he took on some of the nation's thorniest problems including its acute housing shortage and the 2006 collapse of a crucial bridge linking Caracas to the airport and its main port.
Chavez named Carrizalez vice president just after his first-ever ballot box defeat in a constitutional overhaul referendum in 2007, replacing the combative Jorge Rodriguez.
The resignation comes as the nation is increasingly growing tired of Chavez's autocratic policies.
Police used tear gas to disperse thousands of Venezuelan students who took to the streets to protest the government's widely criticized suspension of a TV station opposed to Chavez.
Venezuelan cable providers, responding to government orders, stopped showing RCTV Internacional on Sunday. The station is critical of Chavez, who pushed its parent RCTV off free-access television in 2007.
The new suspension of RCTV, along with some other small stations, was criticized by media freedom groups and the U.S. government.
"Any time the government shuts down an independent network, that is an area of concern," U.S. State Department spokesman Philip Crawley said.
Venezuela said Crowley "lied" when he said the stations had been closed, and that the suspension could be reversed if they comply with a new law requiring them to broadcast some of Chavez's speeches, among other things.
"This is not an attack on the freedom of expression, it is an administrative sanction under the law," Bernardo Alvarez, Venezuela's ambassador to Washington, told Reuters. He said the suspension was not politically motivated.
Students from universities and schools in the capital marched with their hands painted white and tried to reach the offices of the government media regulator.
They were repelled by a small group of Chavez supporters and then chased off by police in riot gear who fired tear gas after a rock was thrown.
In other cities some students were injured in clashes with the police and arrests were made, local media reported.
The students chanted the slogan "1,2,3, Chavez you struck out," in reference to the president's mounting problems in the baseball-mad nation with issues ranging from water and electricity shortages to an unpopular currency devaluation.
"We are here because of the violation of freedom of expression," said 17-year-old medical student Yanuan Pedraza. "This is the second time they have closed RCTV."
Chavez in 2007 denied RCTV a renewal of its broadcast license, accusing the station of participating in a 2002 coup.
During the coup, the network showed nonstop footage of anti-Chavez protests leading up to his brief ouster but turned cameras off when loyalists restored him.
The 2007 move against RCTV triggered large student-led protests that snowballed throughout the year and are widely seen as a factor in Chavez's first-ever ballot box defeat in a referendum on allowing him to run again for office. He later won another referendum on the same issue.
The station soon reappeared on cable and continued its anti-government line and menu of popular soap operas.
"This move, condemned by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, reveals yet again the government's allergic reaction to dissident voices within the country's leading broadcast media," Reporter Without Borders said on Monday.
The Organization of American States' Secretary General Jose Miguel Insulza said he "lamented the situation" regarding the removal from the air of the stations and called on the government to allow the OAS to visit the country.
Chavez has boosted pro-government broadcasting in recent years by creating several state-funded television networks including the Telesur channel, meant to be a Latin American leftist counterpart to CNN.
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