
CARACAS – Four explosions near the Venezuelan legislature triggered panic Tuesday but caused no injuries or damage.
The homemade explosive devices were apparently loaded with pamphlets that were sent flying into the air with propaganda purportedly written by a radical group loyal to late leftist president Hugo Chavez, whose party recently lost the legislature to the opposition.
The pamphlets – signed by a group called the Bolivarian Liberation Forces (FBL) – criticized the government of Chavez’s hand-picked successor, Nicolas Maduro, and called for a more radical response to the socialist party’s rout in the December legislative polls. “It is time for the revolution’s base to take the government,” said the message.
“Social conflict is what guarantees the continuity of the process of change launched by Comandante Chavez.” Three of the devices were detonated outside a shopping mall and the fourth on a street corner where the legislature’s administrative offices are located, said the attorney general’s office.
Witnesses said the explosions were nearly simultaneous and sent crowds of people running.