Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Hugo Chavez - Venezuela
various LINKS to articles | April 14, 2002

Posted on 04/14/2002 4:01:40 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife

click here to read article


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 661-680681-700701-720 ... 1,301 next last
To: All
Photos with LINKS - Venezuela - Colombian consulate and Spain's Embassy hit by blasts*** Venezuelan policemen inspect the area in front of Colombia`s consulate after a blast in Caracas February 25, 2003. Explosions hit a Spanish Embassy building and the Colombian consulate just a day after President Hugo Chavez, whose self-styled 'Bolivarian Revolution' aims to help the poor, accused the United States and Spain of siding with his enemies and warned Colombia he might break off diplomatic relations. There were no immediate reports of casualties. REUTERS/Jorge Silva

Venezuelan policemen inspect the area in front of Spanish embassy after a blast in Caracas February 25, 2003. Explosions hit a Spanish Embassy building and the Colombian consulate just a day after President Hugo Chavez, whose self-styled 'Bolivarian Revolution' aims to help the poor, accused the United States and Spain of siding with his enemies and warned Colombia he might break off diplomatic relations. There were no immediate reports of casualties. REUTERS/Jorge Silva***

681 posted on 02/25/2003 6:40:39 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 680 | View Replies]

To: All
Blasts Hit Spanish, Colombian Missions in Venezuela *** CARACAS, Venezuela (Reuters) - Two suspected bombs blasted Spanish and Colombian diplomatic buildings in Caracas on Tuesday, injuring five people less than two days after Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez accused the two nations of meddling in his country's crisis. Three people, including a 4-year-old girl, were slightly injured at the Colombian consulate, where shards of glass and concrete from the badly damaged facade lay scattered across the street after the blast, at around 2:15 a.m.

Fragments from the explosion at the Spanish embassy cooperation office, about 15 minutes earlier, hurt two people, officials said. Chavez, whose self-styled "Bolivarian Revolution" promises to ease poverty, accused Spain and the United States on Sunday of siding with his enemies and warned Colombia he might break off diplomatic ties.

Police were still investigating what caused the two explosions. But an official from the DISIP state security police told local radio that a powerful plastic explosive had been placed at the Colombian consulate. No group immediately claimed responsibility for the blasts, but leaflets scattered at both sites were signed by the "Bolivarian Liberation Force -- the Coordinadora Simon Bolivar urban militias." The Coordinadora Simon Bolivar is a known radical Pro-Chavez group. "Our revolution will not be negotiated, only deepened," one leaflet read. ***

682 posted on 02/25/2003 9:03:49 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 681 | View Replies]

To: All
Venezuela PdVSA Boss, Oil Min Travels to US - Dynamite expert who blew up pipelines*** CARACAS (Dow Jones)--Venezuela's Oil Minister and the company president of state-owned oil monopoly Petroleos de Venezuela SA are due to travel to Washington Tuesday and are likely to meet U.S. Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham (news - web sites) Wednesday, a spokesman of state-owned oil monopoly Petroleos de Venezuela said Tuesday.

Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez and PdVSA President Ali Rodriguez want to make clear to the U.S. government that the oil sector is returning to normal and that the country can play a role if an oil supply shortage were to occur due to a war between the U.S. and Iraq, the spokesman added. A definite meeting with Abraham for Wednesday hasn't been set yet, the spokesman said. An official at the Venezuelan Embassy in Washington said the Venezuelan ambassador Bernardo Alvarez is still working on the final agenda.

__________________________________________________________

*** Gustavo Coronel, former PDVSA Board member, wrote the following in a January 28, 2003 article: "With the collapse of PDVSA, we are witnessing the collapse of the country . . . when the time comes, if I am still around, I hope to be a witness for the prosecution. Why? Because when I was building pipelines for a better PDVSA, Ali Rodriguez, the current President of the "revolutionary" PDVSA, was blowing them up, as the main dynamite expert of the Cuban-supported guerrillas which failed in Venezuela during the 1960s." (VHeadline.com)

It is Ali Rodriguez who now has complete control of PDVSA: financially and contractually. Ali Rodriguez Araque not only fires and hires, moves PDVSA funds around, but also can sign contracts like the one with Pepex.com (Herb Goodman, CEO) to take over PDVSA's oil trading. There is no longer any transparency. Those who work for PDVSA now work for Petroleos de Chavez, the fully credentialed People of Petroleum having been replaced by the mediocre, and now led by an "Oil Commander-in-Chief" (Chavez), with no auditing, or transparency.

Venezuelans are living in a war economy - in an internal war - a civil war, which could last a long time. Over 12,000 commercial establishments have closed, and 5,000 businesses are bankrupted. The Chavez government is now using currency controls and price controls to attack the only remaining productive sector remaining.***

683 posted on 02/25/2003 12:57:42 PM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 682 | View Replies]

To: All
Bomb blasts in Venezuela aimed at Colombia, Spain follow Chávez's criticism of those countries*** ''The consulate is completely devastated,'' said Leopoldo López, mayor of the Chacao municipality, where more than 80 percent of Caracas' diplomatic buildings are located. ''We haven't seen this type of attack in Venezuela before,'' the mayor noted after inspecting the building's interior. Police sources said the blasts had probably been detonated by remote control using C-4 plastic explosives.

They came just 36 hours after President Hugo Chávez bitterly criticized the Colombian and Spanish governments for expressing concern over the arrest of a leading member of the opposition whose detention was widely seen as part of a political crackdown by Chávez.

The president also denounced the United States and the Organization of American States' secretary-general, César Gaviria. The Bush administration linked this week's ''sharp verbal attacks'' by Chávez to the upsurge in violence, suggesting that the Venezuelan leader was reneging on a Feb. 18 pledge to curb fiery remarks likely to incite violence.***

684 posted on 02/26/2003 1:42:05 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 683 | View Replies]

To: All
Dictatorship by the Numbers in Venezuela ***Note that these extralegal armed groups are the ones attacking TV stations and foreign embassies. This is a lesson Chavez seems to have learned from his ally Yasser Arafat. The lesson is to use terror-but to keep it at arms length so you can deny direct involvement. Arafat's little dictatorship has a three-tiered structure: there is the official quasi-government, the Palestinian Authority; then the Tanzim, a militia loyal to Arafat and his Fatah faction; then there are groups like the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, a terrorist cell used to do the really dirty work. Chavez has the national guard, the main military group under his control; then he has his street militias, the Bolivarian Circles; and now he has the Coordinadora Simon Bolivar, which claimed credit for today's bombings.***
685 posted on 02/26/2003 8:38:45 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 684 | View Replies]

To: All
Venezuela's Lifeblood Ebbs Even as It Flows *** Venezuela may also unload foreign assets, like refineries in the United States that operate under the Citgo chain, which is wholly owned by Petróleos de Venezuela, and other installations in Europe and the Caribbean. Publicly, officials deny the companies are for sale. But Mr. Mommer said Citgo remained overly expensive while providing scant returns.

"The sophisticated part of our business, refining, that's not our business," Mr. Mommer said. "Exploration and production, that is where the big money is." Such a sale would "dismember" the company, warned José Toro Hardy, an influential former board member, because Citgo refineries are specially outfitted to process Venezuela's particularly gummy brand of heavy crude. "There are few refineries in the world that can refine" this crude, Mr. Toro Hardy explained. "Without Citgo, Venezuela's heavy oil would lose value."

Oil analysts also warn that the company will be debilitated for years from the loss of experienced workers. Executives, office workers, engineers and highly trained technicians joined the walkout and, in some cases, damaged computers and software and stole files to hinder reactivation efforts. Mr. Chávez, who has referred to the employees as traitors and fascists, has promised that they will not be rehired. But already, oil analysts say, the shortage of experienced workers is being felt in every corner of the company. In the patents and technology department, which develops technology for exploration and refining, 800 were fired. The department that trains executives has lost hundreds, as has the crucial commercialization department, which contracts with oil purchasers.

"Even if you replace the bodies, you don't replace institutional memories," said Larry Goldstein, president of the Petroleum Industry Research Foundation, an industry-supported analysis group in ***

686 posted on 02/26/2003 1:02:27 PM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 685 | View Replies]

To: All
Venezuela: Chavez's key backers***President Hugo Chavez relies on a group of staunch supporters outside the cabinet to help defend his government. Many hold senior positions within the armed forces, the ruling Fifth Republic Movement (MVR), community organisations and local government. Several are linked to the so-called Bolivarian Circles, described by the government as civil action groups which give a voice to the poorest sectors of Venezuelan society.

Named after the national hero, Liberator Simon Bolivar, about 70,000 of these community groups - which lobby the government directly for funds - have been set up across the country to fight for the rights of the marginalised and "defend the revolution". But critics argue that what they refer to as the "Circles of Terror" have become a sort of underground armed militia.***

687 posted on 02/26/2003 2:21:50 PM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 686 | View Replies]

To: All
Thousands of Venezuelans march; talks halted; U.S. Embassy security tighter after threats *** CARACAS, Venezuela -- A march by thousands of anti-government protesters forced the suspension of talks aimed at ending Venezuela's political turmoil Wednesday, while the U.S. Embassy beefed up security following "credible" threats. Marching just days after the arrest of a leader of a crippling two-month strike, the demonstrators dared President Hugo Chavez's government to jail them, waving placards reading "Chavez, your mask is off, dictator!" and "Put us all in prison!"

…… Authorities were also seeking to arrest seven people who were fired from executive positions with the state-run oil company for participating in the work stoppage. A judge issued the warrants Wednesday night. Juan Echeverria, an attorney representing the executives, said he had reports that they would be charged with interrupting and "damaging the means used to supply" fuel, which carries a sentence of up to six years upon conviction.

Meanwhile, the U.S. Embassy closed Wednesday after receiving "credible information of a threat to its security," a statement said. The closure came a day after two bombs ravaged Colombian and Spanish diplomatic missions, injuring four people and generating fears that the nation's political crisis was entering a more violent phase. ***

688 posted on 02/27/2003 1:09:29 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 687 | View Replies]

To: All
A Venezuelan police state? *** The timing of the bombings, which injured five persons, was not lost on the White House. "We note that these bombings followed the sharp verbal attacks by President Chavez on the international community as well as Venezuelans," said State Department deputy spokesman Philip Reeker. Any of these recent incidents is worrisome enough. Collectively, they suggest that the current Venezuelan government is not merely a left-wing populist regime, but may be evolving into a police state. If Mr. Chavez does not pull back into constitutional government, it will be a tragedy for the Venezuelan people and the beginning of a substantial foreign-policy danger for the hemisphere.***
689 posted on 02/27/2003 2:30:25 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 688 | View Replies]

To: All
U.S. says Venezuela now an unreliable oil supplier *** WASHINGTON - Top State Department officials told a delegation of Venezuelans that political disruptions have created serious doubts about the country's reliability as an oil supplier, an administration official said. They called on the Venezuelan government and the opposition to negotiate a settlement to their differences, Charles Barclay, spokesman for the State Department's Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, said Wednesday. The officials passed the message to Energy and Mines Minister Rafael Ramirez and the president of the Venezuelan state oil company, Ali Rodriguez. The Venezuelan delegation was told that the way for the country to restore its reputation as a reliable oil supplier is for the government and the opposition to reach agreement on a "constitutional, democratic, peaceful and electoral solution," Barclay said. ***
690 posted on 02/27/2003 4:20:49 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 689 | View Replies]

To: All
Government No-Show Strains Venezuela Peace Talks - Refuses to Set Election Date *** CARACAS, Venezuela (Reuters) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's negotiators failed to show up for talks with the opposition on Thursday, and foes accused the leftist leader of resisting efforts to discuss how to end a long-running political conflict. Government negotiators cited security concerns in explaining why they stayed away from a second consecutive day of talks being brokered by Organization of American States Secretary General Cesar Gaviria.

Angry opposition representatives accused the government of deliberately stalling the talks to thrash out an agreement on elections to end the feud between Chavez and his foes in the world's No. 5 oil exporter. "Once again we were left waiting for the government. ... You can see that there isn't much interest," negotiator and anti-Chavez union leader Manuel Cova told Reuters. Chavez, a populist former paratrooper who was first elected in 1998 and survived a coup last year, has been resisting pressure to step down. His opponents accuse him of ruling like a dictator and of trying to install Cuban-style communism in oil-rich Venezuela. ***

691 posted on 02/28/2003 1:23:55 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 690 | View Replies]

To: All
Families of 1989 riot victims accuse Chavez government of politicizing anniversary [Full Text] CARACAS, Venezuela - Relatives of hundreds of people killed in bloody riots 14 years ago accused President Hugo Chavez is using the tragedy to promote his political agenda.

Leaders of Chavez's ruling party planned a march Thursday to commemorate the Feb. 27, 1989, riots that broke out after then-President Carlos Andres Perez passed an austere economic development plan and increased domestic gasoline prices. Soldiers brutally suppressed the riots. Official figures said more than 300 people died, but victims' families say more than 2,000 were killed in the violence.

"They used us. They used us soldiers as though we were an army invading our own country to massacre a poor, cheated population," Chavez said in a speech at a military parade Thursday. "During the whole of the twentieth century they stole from the people, they forgot about them, and then on top of that, in February 1989, they wanted to apply the IMF's recipe," Chavez said.

The Committee of Families and Victims of the "Caracazo," as the riots are known, said it "rejects any political sector trying to capitalize these events into a political banner." The human rights group called on Chavez's government to compensate victims of the riots and prosecute those responsible. Government allies say the discontent surrounding the 1989 unrest sparked Chavez's own failed coup attempt in 1992 and his subsequent rise to power. [End]

692 posted on 02/28/2003 1:24:18 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 691 | View Replies]

To: All
Venezuela: We Have Suspects in Bombings Fingered - Chavez pulls an Arafat *** CARACAS, Venezuela - The government has identified suspects in this week's bombings that damaged Colombian and Spanish diplomatic missions, President Hugo Chavez said Friday. "We have them fingered. Let them rear their heads and they'll see," Chavez told the state television station, Venezolana de Television, during a visit to an electricity plant in southeastern Venezuela. He did not elaborate. It was the president's first comments on the blasts, which occurred minutes apart Tuesday at the Spanish embassy and the Colombian consulate in Caracas.

The explosions slightly injured four people and damaged nearby buildings. Spain, Colombia, the United States and other nations demanded a swift investigation and warned Venezuela's protracted political crisis may have entered a new, more violent phase. The U.S. Embassy reopened Friday after closing the previous day, citing "credible information of a threat to its security." The government sent more than a dozen federal agents, national guardsmen and municipal police to the mission after U.S. Ambassador Charles Shapiro requested increased security.

The bombings came a day after Chavez lashed out at Colombia and Spain for allegedly interfering in Venezuela's domestic affairs. Colombia and Spain had expressed concern over the arrest of Carlos Fernandez, head of Venezuela's largest business chamber. He faces rebellion and other charges for leading a 63-day general strike. Leaflets supporting Chavez were found near both blasts, prompting opposition leaders to accuse the government. Vice President Jose Vicente Rangel suggested radical Chavez opponents trying to destabilize the country may have been responsible. Federal investigators have not said what type of explosives were used. ***

693 posted on 02/28/2003 11:49:03 PM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 692 | View Replies]

To: All
Families fear search will endanger hostages - Asks U.S. to consider prisoner exchange BOGOTA - Magdalena Rivas watches the news in horror, as hundreds of rifle-toting men dressed in camouflage file past. The soldiers are searching for three American government workers kidnapped by leftist rebels after their plane crashed more than two weeks ago. The same leftist rebels captured her son, a police officer, in the same cloud-capped mountains of Caquetá state. Elkin Hernández Rivas, 26, has been missing four years and 138 days.

Like other relatives of kidnap victims, Rivas feels for the families of the missing Americans, but wants the search to stop. Elkin Hernández is one of 72 Colombian soldiers, police officers and politicians now held by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known as the FARC. Since the three Americans literally fell from the sky and into the FARC's hands, the captives have become part of an international tug-of-war.

The rebels are seeking a broad prisoner exchange and are using the Americans as pawns, saying they will only release the Americans -- and the several dozen Colombian soldiers, police and politicians they are holding -- if the government frees about 3,000 of their jailed leftist allies. Both the United States and Colombia have refused the overture. The search in the mountain highlands continues.***

694 posted on 03/01/2003 12:45:54 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 693 | View Replies]

To: All
FARC - Secret Service tracks mystery of fake fortune - Printed on Iraqi bank notes*** The money reached Orlando about 2:30 a.m. Jan. 26. Held in a black duffel bag, the $952,900 weighed just less than 21 pounds. Armed agents watched as the fortune changed hands outside a 7-Eleven on South Orange Blossom Trail. Screams of "Policia! Policia! Manos arriba! Ponte en el piso!" ended the transaction. A startled Colombian national and an accomplice followed the orders in Spanish, raising their hands, then dropping to the ground.

The bogus $100 bills equaled 10 percent of all the counterfeit currency seized last year in the United States. What's more, many were printed on Iraqi bank notes. Since that night, nearly $20 million of the same counterfeit bills have been seized in Colombia. And the U.S. Secret Service and other intelligence agencies are questioning why a counterfeiting ring protected by Marxist guerrillas had access to bank notes from Iraq……………………… The probe is so secret that the Secret Service routinely declines comment. The agency went as far as persuading the federal Government Accounting Office to delete portions of a 1996 report on counterfeiting that mentioned rumors of a Middle East country printing U.S. dollars to finance terrorism. Unlike the superdollar case, agents know where the Orlando bills were printed. On Feb. 11, Colombian police raided the printing plant on a farm near Cali. The $20 million worth of counterfeit bills was the largest seizure in the country's history, according to the Secret Service. Colombia is the world's largest producer of counterfeit U.S. currency, followed by Bulgaria.

The ringleader, Hector Tabarez, told Colombian police that he had regularly paid the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, Latin America's oldest revolutionary group known by its Spanish acronym as FARC, to protect the printing presses, agents said. The use of Iraqi bank notes didn't make sense to investigators. "It seems like an odd place to get their paper when they've got Venezuela right across the border," said Agent Kevin Billings, one of the Orlando supervisors. Counterfeiters typically use an inexpensive currency and bleach off the old ink before printing the fakes.

Venezuela's currency, the bolivar, is the usual choice of Colombian counterfeiters. It's almost as inexpensive as the Iraqi note -- worth less than a penny each -- and is printed on paper from the same company in Massachusetts that supplies the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing, Billings said. Currency-grade paper is essential to pass the touch test. Agents say cheap paper makes counterfeit bills feel slick while real ones are rough and durable. The printing plant in Colombia was discovered as the result of a tip to the U.S. Customs Service that about $1 million was about to be smuggled into Florida. The tip was passed to the Secret Service office in Bogota, from whichAgent Rafael Barros followed the ring's courier on a Jan. 25 flight to Miami.***

695 posted on 03/01/2003 1:01:53 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 694 | View Replies]

To: All
Meddle with Mr. Chavez*** Without more meddling, and soon, Venezuela will likely see the collapse of what was once one of Latin America's richest economies and strongest democracies. Mr. Chavez appears to have tired of his half-baked populism; now he seems prepared to destroy what remains of civil society and the private sector. He placed strict controls on foreign currency and has vowed to take away the licenses of private television stations that supported the opposition. He fired 16,000 employees of Venezuela's state oil company -- the country's economic lifeline -- and moved to bring an institution long known for its professionalism under his personal control. Independent economists are forecasting a catastrophic drop in Venezuela's economic output this year; some foresee the virtual disappearance of the private sector. That would bring Venezuela far closer to Cuba, which maybe shouldn't be a surprise: Mr. Castro, who is Mr. Chavez's closest ally, reportedly has dispatched thousands of officials to Venezuela.***
696 posted on 03/02/2003 12:44:19 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 695 | View Replies]

To: All
Nine hurt in car bomb blast*** A CAR bomb has exploded just blocks away from a Chevron office in a Venezuelan oil field, officials said. Local firefighter chief Ali Gil said nine people, among them a local strike leader, were injured in the blast at the Maracaibo field. The car, which was said to be "full of explosives", was parked outside the home of Antonio Melian. He participated in the crippling oil workers' strike designed to oust President Hugo Chavez, and police described him as "a very controversial figure" in the area.***
697 posted on 03/03/2003 2:12:22 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 696 | View Replies]

To: All
FARC rebels maintain bases inside Brazil - A Terrorist Regime Waits in the Wings [Full Text] RIO DE JANEIRO (Agence France-Presse) - The high command of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia has three bases or hide-outs in Brazil, the daily O Estado de Sao Paulo reported during the weekend, quoting Colombian intelligence sources. The report said the largest of the bases is in the southern Brazilian state of Parana, in a region known as Guaira, on land owned by a naturalized Brazilian of Lebanese origin who has been in government custody for seven months. The other two - used as stopover posts for fighters who are sent to Europe - are in Miranda, Mato Grosso do Sul state; and in Boa Vista, Roraima state, according to the report published Saturday.

The 17,000-member Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, is Latin America's largest and most powerful insurgency. On Feb. 24, it announced the capture of three Americans seized after their plane went down in southern Colombia. The guerrillas say they shot down the plane and that the captives are CIA employees. U.S. officials insist the aircraft had mechanical trouble. The bodies of two other passengers, an American and a Colombian, were found near the wreckage of the aircraft, which was pocked with machine-gun and rocket fire. Both men had been shot. [End]

698 posted on 03/04/2003 1:35:36 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 697 | View Replies]

To: All
Drug traffickers pose greater threat than invasion, U.S. general says - BY FRANCES ROBLES frobles@herald.com- - - [Full Text] So-called ''narco-terrorists'' operating in Latin America fuel and fund worldwide terrorist organizations such as Hamas and Hezbollah, said Gen. James T. Hill, the commander of the U.S. Southern Command, on Monday night. Speaking before a regional security conference attended by about 300 academics and military brass in Miami, Hill urged the five nations that border Colombia to increase patrols to ensure that Colombian drug traffickers don't spill into other countries. Today's foreign threat, Hill said, is not a neighbor's invasion, but the narco-trafficker, document forger, international crime boss and money launderer. ''We risk winning the battle with Colombia and losing the war in the region,'' Hill said. ``I'm not pointing the finger at any one nation. I don't have enough fingers for this pervasive force of destruction.''

Hill spoke Monday at a two-day conference sponsored by the University of Miami's North South Center, the U.S. Army War College and the U.S. Southern Command, which oversees American military operations in Latin America. The conference, ''Building Regional Security in the Western Hemisphere,'' addressed how Colombia's conflict could wreak havoc region-wide. Colombia's nearly four-decade war pits illegal right-wing paramilitaries and the armed forces against two leftist insurgencies, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the National Liberation Army. All three illegal groups are financed by the drug trade, making them major suppliers of the 500 tons of cocaine entering the U.S. each year.

The operation, which includes gun running and money laundering, Hill said, provides ''hundreds of millions'' of dollars to other terrorist groups around the world. The United States has provided $2 billion to help Colombia beat not just drugs but the rebels as well. Last month three American defense contractors surveying coca crops were kidnapped by the FARC, and a third was killed. The topic was notably unmentioned by Hill and most other conference participants, including Colombia's ambassador to Washington, Luis Moreno. ''Terrorist groups operating in Colombia are feeling the crunch,'' Moreno said, insisting that the Colombian military is making serious inroads against the groups. ''But we must keep it up,'' he said. ``We must step it up.'' [End]

699 posted on 03/04/2003 2:04:58 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 698 | View Replies]

To: All
Maracaibo Oil Region a Crucial Battleground for Chávez as Venezuelan Conflict Rages*** MARACAIBO, Venezuela, Feb. 28 - In this sun-drenched city built on oil and agriculture, government workers complain of missed paydays and stalled projects. Beyond the high-rises and office towers, impoverished families live in dank, crumbling shanties along bumpy dirt streets. These scenes in the western state of Zulia make the billboard outside the government-run oil company seem like a cruel taunt, particularly given that Venezuela's journey to becoming the world's fifth-largest oil exporter began here in 1914. "Social Investment Fund," the sign proclaims. "Improving the Life of All Zulianos."

Complaints that the central government has exported not just oil from the region, but increasingly its attendant profits as well, have turned many residents against President Hugo Chávez, whom they have accused of withholding $500 million from their state budget over the years. Only one of the state's 21 mayors supports Mr. Chávez, while the governor, Manuel Rosales, has easily rallied tens of thousands of people against him. In Mr. Chávez's struggle to overcome the devastating effects of a two-month nationwide opposition strike, Zulia, the country's most populous state with 3.2 million residents, is a crucial battleground. Mr. Chávez must not only boost oil production, but also his support in this state whose people tend to vote as a bloc.

Two weeks ago, with the strike faltering, he set his sights on removing Mr. Rosales, urging people to demand the kind of recall referendum that his own critics have sought unsuccessfully against him. Yet even among the poor, the very group that Mr. Chávez says benefits most from his Bolivarian Revolution, disenchantment has grown. "The economy is fatal, and since Chávez came to power it has gotten worse, because there is no work," said Addis Atencia, who shares a compound of five shanties with nearly three dozen adults and children. "In a country that produces petroleum, how can you live like this?"***

700 posted on 03/04/2003 12:07:19 PM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 699 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 661-680681-700701-720 ... 1,301 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson