The Plaza Altamira military were a group of initially fourteen Venezuelan military officers, both active and retired who on 22 October 2002 spoke out against the government of Hugo Chávez in the Altamira Square, in eastern Caracas, declaring the square a "liberated zone" and inviting their fellow soldiers to join them with the aim of achieving Chávez's resignation.
[1][2] The group was widely supported by civil society,[3] and during the course of the protest at least 102 more military personnel joined the group, as well as thousands of opposition demonstrators.
[4] On 6 December, waiter João de Gouveia fired into the crowd gathered in the square, killing three people and wounding 25 others.
[5] On 20 February 2003, four other people participating in the rally, including three military personnel, were found dead, after apparently being abducted days earlier in the square.
After several months, the rally lost momentum and failed to achieve its objectives.