7 Hugo Chávez 7
end of 2007, Chávez lost a referendum on constitutional
changes, including one that would have allowed him to run
for reelection indefinitely. He took the narrow defeat (51 to
49 percent) in stride and continued to promote a socialist
agenda in Venezuela that included modifying the country’s
name, its coat of arms, and its flag, as well as creating a new
currency (the bolívar fuerte) and a new time zone for
Venezuela. In February 2009, Chávez went to the elector-
ate with another constitutional referendum. In a vote to
eliminate term limits for all elected officials, Chavez won,
as more than 54 percent of Venezuelans approved the elim-
ination of all term limits. Chávez characterized the vote as
a mandate for continued revolutionary change, while his
critics saw in it the threat of perpetual rule.
Osama bin Laden
(b. 1957, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia)
O
sama bin Laden is the mastermind of numerous acts
of terrorism against the United States and other
Western powers, including the 1993 bombing of New York
City’s World Trade Center, the 2000 suicide bombing of
the U.S. warship Cole in the Yemeni port of Aden, and the
Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center in New
York City and the Pentagon near Washington, D.C.
Bin Laden was one of more than 50 children of one of
Saudi Arabia’s wealthiest families. He attended King
Abdul Aziz University, where he received a degree in civil
engineering. Shortly after the Soviet Union invaded
Afghanistan in 1979, bin Laden, like thousands of other
Muslims from throughout the world, joined the Afghan
resistance, viewing it as his Muslim duty to repel the occu-
pation. After the Soviet withdrawal in 1989, bin Laden
returned home as a hero, but he was quickly disappointed
with what he perceived as the corruption of the Saudi