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Venezuela Pays Off Multilateral Loans

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er Rodrigo Cabezas told state TV.

By making early payment on loans expiring in 2012, Venezuela saved US$8 million (euro6 million) in interest payments, Cabezas said.

"We are closing a historic cycle of indebtedness," he added. "We do not have any debts (with them)."

Officials from the World Bank and International Monetary Fund were not immediately available for comment on Saturday.

Chavez, who was elected in 1998 when Venezuela owed a total of US$3.3 billion (euro2.4 billion) to multilateral institutions, has fiercely criticized previous administrations for indebting the country to the International Monetary Fund and accepting macroeconomic policies blamed for high inflation and other problems that touched off deadly protests in 1989.

Shortly after taking power in 1999, Chavez had the government pay off all debts with the IMF, which closed its Venezuela office in late 2006. On Friday, Chavez announced that the country had made its final payment to the World Bank the day before.

Chavez has proposed founding an alternative "Bank of the South" to finance infrastructure and development in Latin America.