correo del orinoco | no. 119| year 3

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Friday, July 27, 2012 | 119 | Caracas | www.correodelorinoco.gob.ve Venezuela’s Chavez ramps up campaign, leads polls Tens of thousands are flooding the streets of Venezuelan cities throughout the nation in support of incumbent President Hugo Chavez. His campaign events have picked up momen- tum for the October 7 presidential elections, and Chavez is leading his opponent, Henrique Capriles Radonski, in the polls by over 20%, according to recent figures. Despite under- going extensive treatment for cancer during the past year, Chavez is energized and cam- paigning in full force. page 2 T/ AVN V enezuela’s exit from the International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes, or ICSID came into effect today, after the coun- try made its withdrawal of- ficial before the World Bank last January 25. The six-month period re- quired to carry out the with- drawal is stipulated in article 71 of the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States (the ICSID Convention), endorsed on behalf of Venezuela by the provisional government of Ramon J. Velasquez in 1993. Venezuela’s Foreign Min- istry said early this year that the ICSID Convention was signed by a government which “lacked popular legit- imacy” and under the pres- sure of “transnational eco- nomic sectors which helped to dismantle Venezuela’s na- tional sovereignty”. According to article 72 of the ICSID Convention, Ven- ezuela’s exit does not imply that it won’t comply with previous rulings imposed on the country, which add up to five billion dollars. The latest lawsuit filed by a transnational company against Venezuela was sub- mitted on June 18. It was filed by Europe’s Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics, whose subsidiary Norpro was na- tionalized in Venezuela in 2010. ICSID’s bias towards inter- national capital has been con- firmed not only in 22 lawsuits filed against the Venezuelan State, but also since its cre- ation, “it has ruled 232 times in favor of transnational in- terests, out of 234 lawsuits received throughout its his- tory”, stated released by Ven- ezuela’s Foreign Ministry in January, 2012. Recreating Simon Bolivar This year on the celebration of independence hero Simon Bolivar’s birth, July 24, the Venezuelan government revealed a 3D digital image of the Latin American liberator. The lifelike photographic image, which was developed based on the facial bones contained in his tomb, is the first ever seen of Bolivar, who to date has only been visualized in portraits. page 3 Integration Venezuela rejects court’s bias An Inter-American Court’s decision in favor of a Venezuelan terrorist provoked a serious response. page 4 Analysis Human Rights Watch abusive A report by the organization shows clear prejudice against Venezuela. page 5 Media BBC takes sides The British media outlet plays favortism in Venezuelan politics. page 6 Venezuelan jockey a winner Venezuelan-born joc- key Ramon Dominguez made history last Sun- day by becoming the se- cond rider ever to win 6 races in one day at the Saratoga Race Course in New York State. John Velazquez of Puerto Rico was the first to do so in 2001. ”I am very excited. Coming into today, I looked at the program and was very excited about my chances. We all know luck is a big factor. Everything clic- ked into place. I am very happy to win six races. At Saratoga, it’s anybody’s dream. This is a place you want to do it, for sure”, Domínguez said. Dominguez took six out of 10 races on Sun- day with the winning horses Paper Plane, Summer Front, Rigby, Temper in Command, Reach for a Peach and Wet One. Venezuela leaves international dispute group Interview Discussing democracy: US voices on the 2012 elections page 7 Opinion Guns, cinema and politics page 8 P/ Reuters

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Friday, July 27, 2012 | Nº 119 | Caracas | www.correodelorinoco.gob.ve

Venezuela’s Chavez ramps up campaign, leads polls

Tens of thousands are flooding the streets of Venezuelan cities throughout the nation in support of incumbent President Hugo Chavez. His campaign events have picked up momen-tum for the October 7 presidential elections, and Chavez is leading his opponent, Henrique Capriles Radonski, in the polls by over 20%, according to recent figures. Despite under-going extensive treatment for cancer during the past year, Chavez is energized and cam-paigning in full force. page 2

T/ AVN

Venezuela’s exit from the International Center for

Settlement of Investment Disputes, or ICSID came into effect today, after the coun-try made its withdrawal of-ficial before the World Bank last January 25.

The six-month period re-quired to carry out the with-drawal is stipulated in article 71 of the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of Other States (the ICSID Convention), endorsed

on behalf of Venezuela by the provisional government of Ramon J. Velasquez in 1993.

Venezuela’s Foreign Min-istry said early this year that the ICSID Convention was signed by a government which “lacked popular legit-imacy” and under the pres-sure of “transnational eco-nomic sectors which helped to dismantle Venezuela’s na-tional sovereignty”.

According to article 72 of the ICSID Convention, Ven-ezuela’s exit does not imply that it won’t comply with previous rulings imposed on

the country, which add up to five billion dollars.

The latest lawsuit filed by a transnational company against Venezuela was sub-mitted on June 18. It was filed by Europe’s Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics, whose subsidiary Norpro was na-tionalized in Venezuela in 2010.

ICSID’s bias towards inter-national capital has been con-firmed not only in 22 lawsuits filed against the Venezuelan State, but also since its cre-ation, “it has ruled 232 times in favor of transnational in-terests, out of 234 lawsuits received throughout its his-tory”, stated released by Ven-ezuela’s Foreign Ministry in January, 2012.

RecreatingSimon BolivarThis year on the celebration of independence hero Simon Bolivar’s birth, July 24, the Venezuelan government revealed a 3D digital image of the Latin American liberator. The lifelike photographic image, which was developed based on the facial bones contained in his tomb, is the first ever seen of Bolivar, who to date has only been visualized in portraits. page 3

Integration

Venezuela rejectscourt’s biasAn Inter-American Court’s decision in favor of a Venezuelan terrorist provoked a serious response. page 4

Analysis

Human RightsWatch abusiveA report by the organization shows clear prejudice against Venezuela. page 5

Media

BBC takes sidesThe British media outlet plays favortism in Venezuelan politics. page 6

Venezuelan jockey a winner

Venezuelan-born joc-key Ramon Dominguez made history last Sun-day by becoming the se-cond rider ever to win 6 races in one day at the Saratoga Race Course in New York State. John Velazquez of Puerto Rico was the first to do so in 2001.

”I am very excited. Coming into today, I looked at the program and was very excited about my chances. We all know luck is a big factor. Everything clic-ked into place. I am very happy to win six races. At Saratoga, it’s anybody’s dream. This is a place you want to do it, for sure”, Domínguez said.

Dominguez took six out of 10 races on Sun-day with the winning horses Paper Plane, Summer Front, Rigby, Temper in Command, Reach for a Peach and Wet One.

Venezuela leavesinternational dispute group

Interview

Discussing democracy: USvoices on the 2012 elections page 7

Opinion

Guns, cinemaand politics page 8

P/ Reuters

The artillery of ideas2 Impact | Friday, July 27, 2012

Venezuela’s Chavez rallies supporters,inaugurates factories & development projectsT/ COIP/ Presidential Press

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez spent last weekend in the Western state of Zu-

lia where he inaugurated a pet-rochemical plant, presided over the delivery of new subsidized homes, and urged his support-ers to work towards electoral victory in October.

On Saturday, the candidate of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) headed a campaign rally in the city of Maracaibo where thousands of backers turned out to show their support of the nation’s Bolivar-ian Revolution led by the two-term incumbent head of state.

“My heart is with you and your heroic people, my dear Zulia”, Chavez declared dur-ing the festive rally, which saw dancing, singing and musical performances from local acts.

The demonstration in West-ern Venezuela’s most populous and economically significant city was visited by a large youth contingent that expressed its support for the revolutionary principles and social programs that the government has enact-ed over the past 13 years.

“I came today to see my Co-mandante up close. The youth of Zulia are with him because he has included us in educa-

tional programs”, 18-year old Jose Nunez said at the rally.

During his speech, Chavez made a call to win the October 7 elections by a landslide and thereby preempt allegations from the nation’s right-wing re-garding electoral fraud.

“If we win by two or three per-cent, these people have their vio-lent plans”, Chavez said of pos-sible destabilization attempts in the wake of a socialist victory.

According to a new poll re-leased by the Venezuelan Insti-tute of Data Analysis, Chavez maintains a lead of 20.3 points over his conservative challenger Henrique Capriles Radonski.

INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT While in Zulia on Sunday,

Chavez inaugurated the Pet-rochemical Complex Ana Ma-ria Campos in Los Puertos de Altagracia and referred to the initiative as part of Venezuela’s move towards greatness.

“The historic destiny of Ven-ezuela is greatness. We’re inau-gurating this brand new plant...because the Bolivarian Revolu-tion has arrived here and has recovered, after 200 years, our independence”, he said.

Chavez reported that the new industrial complex would have the capacity to save the nation $30 million in imports of bu-tylene while producing some

900,000 tons of polyethylene plastic by 2017.

“In 2012, we will have pro-duced 300,000 metric tons of polyethylene. In 1998, 200,000 tons were produced. In 2017, we’re going to pass 600,000 in route to producing 900,000 tons. This is a 200 percent growth in just 4 years”, Chavez said.

Plastic products such as bags, glasses, and electric fans were on display by the workers and managers of the plant on Sunday as Chavez and his Oil Minister, Rafael Ramirez, toured the facil-ities of the industrial complex.

The increased domestic pro-duction of plastic derived from

the oil sector, according to Chavez, will also provide an important boost for national in-dustries and assist the private sector in its continued econom-ic growth.

A good part of the plastic production “is going towards the private sector and will be further developed in their in-dustries and businesses for domestic consumption and the international market”, the Ven-ezuelan head of state informed.

As such, industrial invest-ments in public enterprises, Chavez noted, are benefiting all of Venezuelan society, includ-ing the country’s middle class.

The former lieutenant colo-nel made reference to previ-ous Venezuelan governments which allowed the middle class “to sink” in the 1980s and 1990s as a consequence of the coun-try’s neoliberal policies.

“Only the Bolivarian Revolu-tion could save the true Vene-zuelan middle class from bank-ruptcy and disaster”, he said of the social and economic crises that plagued the nation in the decades leading to his first elec-toral victory in 1998.

HOMES & ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE

During the broadcast on Sun-day, Chavez oversaw, via satel-lite, the delivery of 94 new homes to residents of San Rafael Mojan in the municipality of Mora. The homes form part of the govern-ment’s expansive public pro-gram, Mission Housing Venezue-la, which seeks to build 3 million new residences by 2019.

The Venezuelan President also participated via satellite in the inauguration of the thermo-electric plant Bajo Grande in the municipality of Tablazo.

Electric Energy Minister, Hector Navarro, informed that the new facility has the capac-ity to generate 100 megawatts of power and that a further 400 megawatts will be incorporated as a result of new wind power initiatives.

Jesus Longo, Internal Director of the state oil company, PDVSA, referred to the energy measures as a way for the resource-rich state of Zulia to create its own power sources for the petroleum industry while providing for the needs of residents.

“The old PDVSA...never gen-erated its own energy. Now, we’re building this plant which with free up large blocks of en-ergy for the people”, Longo said of the facility which will supply more than 26,000 residents in the area with electricity.

The PDVSA manager under-scored the fact that Venezuela’s largest public company is cur-rently developing another 28 power-generating projects, 19 of which are designed to further the self-supply of energy for the oil industry.

President Chavez described the advances in local energy autonomy as an important part of his government’s strat-egy to ensure that localities are equipped with the tools neces-sary to satisfy the needs of busi-ness and of residents.

“These projects have as their goal to give the Western part of the country its own energy gen-eration which is so necessary for life and economic-industrial development”, he said.

The artillery of ideasFriday, July 27, 2012 | Politics 3

Venezuela’s Chavez unveils 3D image of hero Bolivar

Venezuela’s electoralcommission ramps upsecurity measures

T/ Daniel Wallis – ReutersP/ Presidential Press

Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez unveiled a 3D image of South America’s 19th cen-

tury independence hero Simon Bolivar on Tuesday, based on bones the President ordered exhumed two years ago to test his theory that Bolivar was murdered.

In a ceremony to mark the 229th anniversary of Bolivar’s birth, senior government offi-cials and military commanders clapped as Chavez and a group of school children unveiled the new image, which was based on scans of Bolivar’s skull.

The socialist leader reveres Bolivar - he renamed the coun-try the “Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela” - and has wrapped his leftist “revolution” in the imagery and language of the region’s battle to break free of colonial power Spain.

“He was a true giant of the human cause, the human battle ... this is his face”, Chavez said, sitting below two giant prints of a life-like depiction of a distin-guished-looking Bolivar boast-ing a gold-braided uniform and prominent sideburns.

“Now we know with precision and receive with infinite inten-sity the luminous presence of this gaze, this living face”.

The President, who is seeking a new six-year term in an Octo-ber 7 election, also tweeted a link to the image from a mobile phone on his @chavezcandanga account.

Chavez, in his fight against the “Yankee imperialism” of the United States, repeatedly invokes Bolivar, who is second only to Jesus as a figure of reverence in parts of South America.

Chavez normally gives tele-vised speeches in front of large paintings of Bolivar, a brilliant Venezuelan soldier and mili-tary tactician who freed much of South America from centu-ries of Spanish rule. Chavez or-dered a striking new mausole-um built for Bolivar’s remains, which will be finished soon.

On Tuesday, he also held aloft two ornate antique pistols for the cameras, saying they had belonged to his hero.

‘FIGHT FOR THE FATHERLAND’Chavez cites Bolivar as the

inspiration for his leftist poli-cies. He has long suggested Bo-livar was poisoned by enemies

in Colombia, rejecting the more common version cited by histo-rians that he died of tuberculo-sis there in 1830.

Two years ago, amid unusual scenes of a military honor guard in white biohazard suits and face masks exhuming the remains during a pre-dawn ceremony at the National Pantheon, the Pres-ident assigned a team to investi-gate Bolivar’s death.

A year ago, it reported back that “the Liberator” may have died of accidental poisoning - probably as a result of taking toxic medicines that were wide-ly used at the time. They did not rule out tuberculosis.

After the scientist heading the 3D image project explained on Tuesday how it had been cre-ated using multiple scans and the latest forensic facial recon-struction methods, Chavez said Venezuelans were jubilant to see Bolivar’s “real face” at last.

“And not just in Venezuela, but in all the countries of Latin America, the Caribbean and further afield”, he said.

“I believe Bolivar is born again every day in every one of us, in these people, in these children ... in the fight for the fatherland which never ends”.

T/ COIP/ Agencies

With just over 10 weeks be-fore the realization of the

country’s presidential elec-tions, Venezuela’s National Electoral Commission (CNE) is tightening its preparations for October 7 through height-ened security measures and high-tech anti-fraud initia-tives.

On Sunday, the CNE closed enrollment for the initiative known as “Make Your Mark” which obliges enlisted voters to register their thumbprint with the electoral authority in order to ensure the integ-rity and veracity of the elec-tronic ballots cast at polling stations around the country.

The measure began on June 22 and has successfully updated the prints of more than 3 million people through the deployment of over 3,000 registration machines made available to residents in 1,600 enrollment points through-out the country.

The month long campaign was intended to rectify more than 1.8 million faulty prints that had been made available to the CNE through the gov-ernment’s Identification and Immigration Administration (SAIME).

CNE President, Tibisay Lucena, has informed that while the “Make Your Mark” initiative is meant to avoid voting fraud, citizens will not be prevented from exercising their suffrage rights in the case of not having previously registered their print with the agency.

Venezuela’s polling sys-tem is comprised of highly-advanced digital voting machines which leave con-stituents with a paper receipt and has been praised by inter-national organizations for its transparency and integrity.

Venezuelan opposition can-didate Henrique Capriles, however, initially refused to sign on to an accord which commits all presidential aspi-rants to respect the outcome of the vote as administered by the CNE on October 7.

The document, which vows that the candidates must

concede to principles of non-violence and deference to the CNE as the arbiter of the elec-toral contest, was signed by the current incumbent, Hugo Chavez on July 17.

Capriles, whose campaign subsequently decided to ca-pitulate to the pact, has cited the electoral commission’s unwillingness to regulate government broadcasts as his motive for not immediately signing the accord.

But the use of “cadenas”, which oblige national media outlets on the public airwaves to transmit programs related to government policies and initiatives, was defended by President Hugo Chavez last Sunday.

The socialist head of state described the transmissions as necessary to inform citi-zens on important govern-ment issues that are often ig-nored by opposition-aligned private broadcast media sta-tions.

“Part of the strategy of the bourgeoisie is to put a lid on the good things that the revo-lution is doing”, Chavez said during the inauguration of a plastics factory in the state of Zulia last Sunday.

“The bourgeois television stations don’t broadcast our events, nor do the radios or newspapers say anything”, he added.

For its part, the CNE has expressed its unwillingness to regulate the government broadcasts as the content of the programs are not related to the campaign activity of any given party.

“The topic of the cadenas does not belong to the CNE as some politicians insist. This is a topic that is outside the scope of the agency”, said Socorro Hernandez, Rector of the electoral commission on Monday.

The artillery of ideas4 Integration | Friday, July 27, 2012

Venezuela, Argentina build South American energy integrationT/ COIP/ Presidential Press

Venezuela President Hugo Chavez met with Argen-tine Planning Minister

Julio De Vido last Monday in Caracas for discussions that saw the head of the Caribbean nation invite his South Ameri-can allies to join in the oil ex-ploitation of the largest crude reserves in the world.

The conversations focused on cooperation between the Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA and the recently re-na-tionalized Argentine firm YPF to explore and drill in the Ori-noco Belt, home to nearly 300 billion barrels of crude.

“We are pleased to receive [the Argentine delegation] in the oil business... not just in the exploration and production of oil, but also in any other area that we may agree upon”, said Hugo Chavez during a press conference held outside the presidential palace of Mira-flores.

YPF, originally an Argen-tine state energy company, was privatized in 1998 under pres-sure from the International Monetary Fund and sold to the Spanish firm Repsol.

Earlier this year, President Cristina Fernandez ordered the nationalization of the coun-try’s largest energy company

due to Repsol’s low production quotas and failure to maintain adequate reserves.

The new partnership be-tween YPF and PDVSA, as ex-plained by Chavez on Monday, would consist in the Argen-tine firm’s participation in the exploitation of mature fields in the Orinoco belt as well as PDVSA’s collaboration with

T/ Agencies

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said on Tuesday

the South American nation is withdrawing from a regional human rights court that Latin America’s progressive leaders have increasingly criticized as a pawn of Washington.

Allies of Venezuela includ-ing Bolivia, Ecuador and Ni-caragua have accused the Inter-American Court of Hu-man Rights of improperly weighing in on disputes still

Venezuela: “Inter-American Court protects terrorists”

being heard in domestic courts and working to undermine left-ist governments.

“Venezuela is withdrawing from the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, out of digni-ty, and we accuse them before the world of being unfit to call themselves a human rights de-fender”, Chavez announced.

The move came on the heels of a ruling by the court say-ing Venezuela had violated the rights of a man convicted of bombing diplomatic offices of Spain and Colombia in Ca-

racas, arguing jail conditions were deplorable.

The man in question, Raul Diaz Peña, was sentenced to nine years in prison but fled to the United States after win-ning a conditional release, the foreign ministry said in a state-ment. Diaz Peña was received with open arms by the Ven-ezuelan and Cuban expat com-munity in Miami, known as a safehouse for Latin American dictators, terrorists and fugi-tives. He is considered a fugi-tive terrorist by the Venezuelan government, which requested

his extradition from the United States shortly after his escape. The US State Department has not yet responded. Mean-while, Diaz Peña received sup-port from Miami Republican congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a known supporter of terrorists such as Orlando Bo-sch and Luis Posada Carriles, who masterminded bombings against Cuba and assassination attempts against Fidel Castro for decades.

Earlier this year, Chavez tasked a council of state made up of allies to study whether or not Venezuela should remain in the group.

The Costa Rica-based tribu-nal, part of the Washington-based Organization of Ameri-can States, or OAS, has heard a series of cases accusing the Chavez government of authori-

energy projects in Argentine territory.

Venezuela signed a similar agreement with the public Ar-gentine company Enarsa in January that establishes the production of 100,000 barrels of crude daily from the Orinoco Belt.

“Now we want YPF, with all of its force, potential and ex-

perience to participate in the Orinoco Oil Belt and oil fields that are already producing”, the head of the United Social-ist Party of Venezuela said on Monday.

MERCOSUR: A NEW HORIZONDuring the press conference,

Chavez took the opportunity to hail the entrance of Venezuela

into the Common Market of the South (MERCOSUR) trade al-liance that will take place on July 31.

The arrival of the Caribbean nation as a full member of MER-COSUR was decided after Para-guay, the only country object-ing to Venezuela’s admittance to the bloc, was suspended from the organization following the “institutional coup” that de-posed President Fernando Lugo last month.

Venezuela’s participation in the regional alliance, which currently includes Uruguay, Argentina, and Brazil, will, ac-cording to President Chavez, “open a new horizon of pos-sibilities for the growth and aggrandizement of the South American Homeland”.

As such, the head of state reported that his country will create a $500 million fund to grant credits to private and public sector Venezuelan firms to facilitate their participation in trade deals with MERCO-SUR associates.

A presidential commission has also been established to stimulate and streamline the OPEC member’s insertion in the bloc.

“We’re going to create a MER-COSUR fund and I want to take the opportunity to invite produc-tive Venezuelan businesses from the private sector to come to the convocation of the [Presidential Commission]. A list of business-es is being made whose firms have the potential to be impor-tant exporters”, Chavez said.

The two-time incumbent President informed that Ven-ezuela expects to add 240,000 new jobs as a result of its admit-tance to MERCOSUR.

tarianism and rights abuses during his 13-year rule. Before Chavez was elected in 1998, the court accepted less than a handful of cases against Ven-ezuela, despite widespread hu-man rights abuses and mass killings by state authorities that occurred in Venezuela from 1960-1998.

The court’s sister organiza-tion, the Inter-American Com-mission on Human Rights, has also been criticized for meddling in the affairs of its member nations. Brazil last year upbraided the group for urging a halt to the construc-tion of a hydroelectric dam along a tributary to the Ama-zon River.

The OAS in June postponed the issue of reforming the hu-man rights commission for six months.

The artillery of ideasFriday, Jul 27, 2012 | Analysis 5

Abusing the facts: Human RightsWatch’s latest Venezuela reportT/ Rachael BoothroydF/ Agencies

In 2008, Human Rights Watch (HRW) released a report on the state of human rights in

Venezuela under the Chavez government. Entitled “A Decade Under Chávez: Political Intoler-ance and Lost Opportunities for Advancing Human Rights in Venezuela”, the report was lambasted by over 100 academ-ics, specialists and journalists on Latin America, who cited the report as not meeting even the “most minimal standards of scholarship, impartiality, ac-curacy, or credibility”.

Four years later and it would appear that HRW has decided to totally bypass these com-plaints, because the report’s sequel “Tightening the Grip: Concentration and Abuse of Power in Chávez’s Venezuela”, released on July 17, is equally full of bias, omissions and sensationalism, while lacking facts, context, and even a trans-parent methodology.

According to the writers of the report, since HRW officials were expelled from the country in 2008, “the human rights situ-ation in Venezuela has become even more precarious” and the government has increasingly censored media, silenced its crit-ics and “packed” the Supreme Court full of its supporters.

While the HRW report was seized on unquestioningly by the private national and inter-national press as irrefutable proof that the Chavez admin-istration had indeed “trampled human rights”, in Venezuela it was dismissed by the Attorney General of the Republic, Luisa Ortega Diaz, as hypocritical, given that the organization has consistently “remained mute” in the face of some of the most flagrant human rights viola-tions of the 21st century. These human rights violations in-clude a coup d’état against the democratically elected govern-ment of Hugo Chavez in 2002, which HRW failed to denounce, despite the fact that the new and unelected government killed around 100 unarmed protesters in the space of two days.

Ortega is not wrong on the or-ganization’s hypocrisy, and de-spite the New York-based agen-cy’s keen interest in the internal

political situation of other coun-tries, its website boasts a paltry section on human rights issues in the US, with no mention of the US population’s access to healthcare and housing, Repub-lican gerrymandering, political lobbying, or of Obama’s now in-famous “drone attacks”, which led former Democrat President, Jimmy Carter, to denounce the current government last month for its “widespread abuse of hu-man rights”.

This is unsurprising given the political nature of HRW’s inception. Born out of organiza-tions such as “Helsinki Watch” which sought to “shine a light on” human rights abuses in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, HRW has never been able to claim political neutral-ity or even impartiality, and its conception of human rights is strictly limited to liberal demo-cratic notions of human rights, and their emphasis on civil and polical rights.

This is perhaps one of the reasons that Venezuela’s sig-nificant advances in social rights, including access to housing, substantial increases in school and university enrol-ment, access to healthcare and improved women’s rights and political representation are not mentioned at any point in the

139 page report. Equally, there is no mention of some of Vene-zuela’s substantial gains in the arena of democratic freedoms, including the right to vote, re-flected in increased voter turn-out and registration, the right to politically organize, or gov-ernmental investigations and legislation aimed at providing justice for the families of those who were murdered as a result of political repression from 1958-1998.

In reference to Venezuela’s courts, HRW infers that the country’s Supreme Court Jus-tice (TSJ) has been “packed” full of Chavez supporters in an autocratic move by the national government, without mention-ing that members of the TSJ must be elected by the National Assembly, which is itself a body that is legitimately elected by the Venezuelan people.

HRW’s report also makes no attempts to deal with the prob-lems currently facing the Ven-ezuelan judicial system, which in spite of government efforts at reform, continues to be marred by a historical legacy of corrup-tion and elitism and is current-ly inadequate for delivering justice in cases where the most powerful in society are pitted against the most vulnerable. Nowhere is this more obvious

than in the persecution of labor and peasant activists, hundreds of which have been collectively murdered at the hands of cor-porations such as Mitsubishi, where 2 worker activists have been killed and 300 dismissed, or by wealthy landowners op-posing the government’s land reform policies; details which are scandalously absent from the “human rights report”.

However, it is in its section on the media in Venezuela where the report’s authors evidently lose all grip on reality and any remaining claim to political neutrality.

Despite the fact that the major-ity of the Venezuelan media is currently in private hands and the fact that ownership of the media is central to any debate surrounding the functioning of democracy, HRW’s report tries to argue that the Chavez gov-ernment is increasingly using its “power” to silence criticism in the media. A charge that is being repeatedly levelled at the government by the international corporate press in the run-up to the October elections.

Just a few weeks ago, Venezu-ela’s political opposition submit-ted a proposal to the country’s National Electoral Committee (CNE) demanding that Chavez should not be allowed to use any

state media for any form of “self promotion” until after the elec-tions. Their request, however, did not include any such demand for regulation of the private me-dia, despite the fact that a quick review of the owners and editors of Venezuela’s private media reads like a “who’s who” of the country’s political opposition and business elite.

In fact, the family of current opposition candidate for the presidential elections, Hen-rique Capriles Radonski, just happen to be the owner of “Ul-timas Noticias,” one of the most widely read newspapers in the country, selling 210,000 cop-ies on average daily. Another prominent newspaper, Talcual, is edited by Teodoro Petkoff, a staunch anti-Chavez political figure who oversaw the imple-mentation of a series of neo-liberal economic reforms as Planning Minister under the government of Rafael Caldera in the mid 1990s. The Commit-tee on Hemispheric Affairs stated in 2009 that “nine out of ten newspapers, including El Nacional and El Universal, are staunchly anti-Chavista” and Wikileaks has since revealed that privately funded newspa-pers such as El Nacional, which sells around 80,000 copies a day, saw fit to directly solicit the US government for financial sup-port, and received it.

Televised media, Venezuela’s most popular source of news, is equally stacked against the government. The Venevision channel is owned by billionaire media mogul and businessman Gustavo Cisneros, who, as the New York Times coined it, is one of Latin America’s “most powerful figures”. He also hap-pens to be one of the world’s richest men and is estimated to be worth over $4 billion.

Another powerful figure on the Venezuelan media scene is millionaire businessman Guillermo Zuloaga, the major-ity shareholder of Venezuela’s answer to Fox news, Globo-vision. Zuloaga has been ex-tremely vocal in his opposi-tion to Chavez, and has even labelled the President a “threat to the United States” in the in-ternational press.

Given the wealth, breadth, circulation and concentration of Venezuela’s private media, the report’s assertion that gov-ernment persecution has left Globovision as the “only major channel that remains critical of President Chávez” is not just misleading, but it is a downright lie. Yet downright lies and distor-tions appear to be the only way for HRW to make its case against the Chavez government.

La artillería del pensamiento6 Media | Friday, July 27, 2012

T/ News Unspun

In the upcoming Venezuelan presidential elections, to be held in October of this year, the

electorate will choose between current President Hugo Chavez and opposition candidate Hen-rique Capriles Radonski, former governor of Miranda state.

BBC coverage of the run-up to the presidential elections to date has depicted a situation in which one ‘youthful’, ‘energetic’ candidate who ‘likes to stay in touch with voters, visiting shan-tytowns, often on his motorbike, to supervise projects and play basketball with the locals’ has preached ‘a message of inclu-sivity and unity’ while ‘criss-crossing Venezuela on a “house to house” tour’. The current gov-ernment’s candidate, however, is ‘seeking a third term at the age of 57 but physically weakened after a battle with cancer’ and has been accused of ‘planning to hang on to power by force if Mr Chavez loses the election’ by un-named opposition sources.

It’s not hard to get the impres-sion (however misrepresenta-tive) from this portrayal of a battle between the ideas of a fresh, hopeful government and old, tired, political stagnation. That this is far from the reality of the situation, and it doesn’t an-

swer the question of why Chavez is leading in the polls, which is seemingly irrelevant to BBC re-porters.

This battle, it seems, is one of ideology: our news can’t see a problem with a pro-business and pro-market candidate, yet it will happily disgrace candidates who reject this ideology. In Europe recently, democratically elected heads of government were re-placed with unelected leaders. Their pro-free-market creden-tials, earned them the label ‘technocrats’ in the news media, which fretted little about this degradation of democracy.

There is a plain and simple ex-planation for the starting point to the bad press surrounding Hugo Chavez’s government: Western governments do not appreciate heads-of-state whose policies are unaccommodating to the inter-ests of international business. The debate of course becomes far more complicated beyond this starting point, but this should be kept in mind when reading news reports on Venezuelan politics.

One of the central themes re-cently propagated is that Hugo Chavez should be afraid of a challenger. In September last year, when Leopoldo Lopez was running to stand for the opposi-tion, he asked at a rally: “Is it true what they are saying all

over Venezuela, that you are afraid of me?” BBC News obe-diently emphasized this, run-ning with the subtitle “Afraid?” within their report.

In the last few months, numer-ous references have been made to the ‘strong challenge’ that Capriles presents. The idea that Chavez should be afraid, coupled with the accusations that he would ‘hang on to power’ if he loses the election, invokes the idea of a power-hungry leader that needs to fear democracy. Interestingly, Hugo Chavez has promised the opposition that he would respect the result of the election (though this story was spun and presented by the BBC as some sort of fascinating rev-elation – Hugo Chavez in respect for democracy shocker – at the time), but the opposition parties have not yet promised the same.

That news about Venezuela may not always revolve around Chavez seems an unknown idea in British news. Chavez is presented as a central figure to stories with which he often has nothing to do. A clear example appeared last month when tele-vision station Globovision paid a fine for its coverage of the El Ro-deo prison riots. The media regu-lator CONATEL fined the chan-nel for ‘replaying interviews of distraught prisoners’ mothers

269 times over four days and adding the sound of gunfire to reports.’ All in all, the story had nothing to do with Hugo Chavez. Yet the BBC headline referred to the station as the ‘Anti-Chavez Venezuelan TV Globovision’, opening the article by pointing out that the station is ‘highly crit-ical of President Hugo Chavez’. That the story had nothing to do with Hugo Chavez only later be-came apparent, potentially leav-ing readers with the implied con-nection from the start that the station was fined because it was critical of Hugo Chavez.

In terms of coverage for the op-position, we generally see only positive news about Capriles. So that we can sympathize with his plight, we are told of ‘state media, where Mr Capriles is normally mentioned only in insults’. The audience share of state television in Venezuela grew from 2% to 5.5% between 2000 and 2010, yet we are told in a BBC article that ‘state-owned media has expanded dramati-cally since Mr Chavez took office in 1999’. In the UK, incidentally, ‘state media’ has a 36% share of the market, according to figures from the Broadcasters Audience Research Board.

There is a case to be made that present-day Venezuela is an ex-ample of a healthy democracy

which has made huge social progress. This social progress is something that the opposi-tion parties can no longer deny, and Capriles is promising to continue some of these social reforms if he wins the elec-tion. The BBC will happily tell us that Chavez has a two-digit lead over Capriles in the polls, but will not explain why, as it continues to relay praise for Capriles. What is apparent is that those gathering news are spending a lot of time listening to opposition politicians and the representatives of business – who will of course be critical of a government that refuses to let markets run the country – and very little time listening to those who actually choose between the candidates.

In a previous study, we have found that the BBC has used terms such as ‘dictator’, ‘au-tocrat’, etc. in descriptions of Chavez more often than it stated that Hugo Chavez was demo-cratically elected. Now we see overwhelming favor for the op-position candidate. This isn’t balanced reporting, this is an assault on a form of sovereign governance dressed up as a love of democracy. And when some-one rejects ‘our’ ideology and gains the popular vote, our news struggles to tell us the full story.

Choosing sides: The BBC’s coverageof the venezuelan election r ace

The artillery of ideasFriday, July 27, 2012 | Interview 7

Discussing democracy: U.S.voices on the 2012 elections

T/ COI

Correo del Orinoco Inter-national is pleased to bring our readers this ex-

clusive interview with Gayle McLaughlin, Mayor of Rich-mond, California. A lifelong activist in US movements for peace, justice, and civil rights, McLaughlin has worked tire-lessly as Mayor of Richmond to force oil giant Chevron to pay its “fair share” to the city and its residents. McLaughlin provides important insight on corporate control of US politics and the leadership role played by the Bolivarian Revolution in the global movement for social justice.

What are your thoughts on the upcoming presidential elections to be held in the United States?

While President Obama’s election in 2008 was an his-torical achievement in that the people of the US elected our first African-American president, he has shown by his policies that he is not willing to challenge the injustices of the system. He has embraced the system that has taken him to the highest political office in the country. As a Democrat, he is tied into the duopoly that politically runs this country. Both Democrats and Republi-cans are corporate-controlled parties, are dependent on cor-porations for their massive campaign funding, and as such are beholden to corporations in their policy-making.

During the Obama adminis-tration years thus far, my city, the City of Richmond, has suf-fered greatly. Our unemploy-ment rate rose at one point to 19 percent and lingers at 17 per-cent; the home foreclosure cri-sis hit Richmond harder than most cities, leaving thousands, who previously were home-owners, without homes; devel-opment has slowed to a crawl, and our immigrant population continues to struggle without a comprehensive humane im-migration policy. As a largely low-income urban community, we face all the problems of such communities – including problems of health, education, and crime. We, on the local level, have been forced to work harder to make changes for ourselves.

What are your thoughts on the Bolivarian Revolution, on President Hugo Chavez?

The values promoted by the Bolivarian Revolution, cham-pioned by Hugo Chavez, are values that I hold dear as well, including self-determination and economic independence,

equitable distribution of rev-enues, and putting working people first and above private corporate greed.

The election of Hugo Chavez was a magnificent achieve-ment of the Venezuelan people and it has roots in centuries of struggle by many in Latin America. Chavez’s anti-impe-rialist stance and opposition to neoliberal capitalism, along with his solidarity with other Latin American countries, in-cluding Cuba, has courageous-ly and profoundly challenged US foreign policy has wielded enormous political influence in the world.

I believe the use of revenues from their vast oil wealth to invest in social, economic and cultural development is an example of how self-determi-nation works. Unlike major oil giants, like Chevron and Exxon, Venezuela is skillfully using its country’s natural re-sources to benefit the people and build a more equitable society (rather than reaping massive profits for the benefit of corporate executives and wealthy stockholders). While

we all must do our part to end our addiction to oil to reverse global warming, it is both pow-erful and significant that Ven-ezuela is finding a way to use its oil resources to bring ben-efit to its people rather than have the oil companies rape them of their own natural re-sources, as sadly is happening in too many other countries.

What impact has oil giant Chevron had in Richmond?

The Chevron Richmond Re-finery has operated in the City of Richmond for over 100 years. The neighborhoods around the refinery, predominately people of color, have among the high-est rates of asthma, heart dis-ease and cancer in the state of California. The health of people in Richmond has suf-fered for decades as a result of pollutants emitted daily by this oil giant. On March 25, 1999, for example, an explosion sent 18,000 pounds of corrosive airborne sulfur dioxide over the Triangle Court neighbor-hood. The smoke killed trees, burned the fur off squirrels, and sent hundreds of tem-porarily blinded, vomiting

residents to hospitals. Every Wednesday we hear the sound of a siren, which is a test of the County warning system. This is a constant reminder to us all of the danger that exists living side by side with a major oil re-fining operation that we know puts its billion dollar profits before all else.

With the full weight of its money and influence, Chevron has resisted the proposals of the Richmond Progressive Al-liance (RPA) that have called for it to pay its fair share of tax-es to the people of Richmond. They fight us by funding can-didates who stand with them. They also put their big money into play opposing voter initia-tives that call for fair taxation. Millions of dollars are contrib-uted by Chevron every election season attempting to defeat our RPA candidates and our ini-tiatives. Still they fail. In the last election (2010), all of Chev-ron’s candidates lost. Chevron has been forced to deal with our progressive movement in many ways, including agree-ing to provide an additional 114 million dollars of taxes to

the people of Richmond over a 15-year period. We have made great progress in getting out from under the corporate in-fluence of this behemoth, but of course we still live in a cor-porate dominated society, and it takes all our efforts to con-tinue to push the envelope and gain more ground in order to continue to address the needs of our community.

Our strength is based on knowing that justice is on our side and rooted in our dedica-tion to continuing the struggle.

What are your thoughts on the struggle for social and economic justice in the Americas - both North and South?

The struggle for social and economic justice in the Ameri-cas is tied in with the global struggle for justice everywhere. An injustice to one is an injus-tice to all. Latin America has been in the forefront of much of this struggle, and I am proud to be among those who stand in solidarity with the progressive movements of Latin American countries. We have all gained much from the revolutionary movements of countries like Cuba and Venezuela. First and foremost, we have gained great motivation and inspira-tion from the spirit that fuels these movements, but we have also gained much insight and knowledge from their concrete accomplishments.

The people of the United States have a major role to play in the struggle for a progressive future. The people of the US are not un-like the people of countries that have suffered profoundly from imperialist policies of domina-tion, although we have unique characteristics of our own struggle. We are inundated daily with the mentality of the world oppressors, and yet millions of ordinary North Americans have rejected and continue to reject this mentality.

The role of the people of Ven-ezuela is a role that only Ven-ezuelans can truly define and implement. From afar, how-ever, it would seem that their role is to continue showing, as no other country has, that an effective anti-imperialist and anti-capitalist struggle can be waged and won in the 21st Century! They carry the torch, along with Cuba, of self-deter-mination for all the nations and all people struggling under the yoke of imperialism. And, as I stated earlier, they provide great inspiration and insight to those of us living in the belly of the beast, here in the US, resist-ing and building strength until we emancipate ourselves.

Editor-in-Chief Graphic Design Aimara Aguiilera

Friday, July 27, 2012 | Nº 119 | Caracas | www.correodelorinoco.gob.ve

Guns, cinema and politics

T/ Paul Dobson

Sometimes life just comes up and slaps you in the face with irony doesn’t it?

Unfortunately this week that slap reverberated around a Colorado cinema at about mid-night, where, tragically, a lone gunman opened fire on an un-suspecting audience watching the latest Batman film. Where is the irony in this incredibly regrettable event, I hear you scream? Well, let me explain.

The neoliberal governments never tire of telling the world how dangerous Venezuela is. Be it through their mouthpiec-es in the Human Watch Com-mittees, the UN, the capital-ist press, or directly through Hilary Clinton, Alvaro Uribe, or Mitt Romney. The British neoliberal government even warns off tourists in their “ad-vice to travelers” in their For-eign Office website, which uses the words “drug traffickers”, “illegal armed groups” “risk of kidnapping” and “criminal activity” all in just the first bullet point.

This political propaganda, which is not without its own, particular, destabilizing motive, is repeated and sensationalized by their puppets here in Vene-zuela: by Capriles, Globovision, or El Nacional newspaper. Like magicians producing rabbits from their imperialist top hats, they show off unproven statis-tics to the world, of murders, rapes, express kidnappings, prison riots, and robberies, of how you are more likely to be shot here than in Afghanistan or Palestine or Iraq. At their lo-cal meetings all they talk about is “so and so” who knew “so and so” who maybe knew “so and so” who saw a man get shot. It is implanted into their minds. Isn’t Venezuela so very danger-ous! It must be Chavez’s fault, they conclude.

Violent crime is something which has been openly and pub-lically recognized by the self-critical Chavez and his govern-ment as a problem which is yet to be solved. Without conceding that the problem is as big as the opposition’s myths and spin makes it seem, Chavez has rec-

ognized it in its cultural and his-torical context. After providing comprehensive solutions to the health, education, university, economic, alimentary, produc-tive, and agricultural problems faced by the country in 1998, the Revolution has failed, for now, to resolve the gun crime prob-lem, which has elevated itself to be a key issue in the upcoming elections. This is why we have seen such dramatic changes in the last year on this issue.

Venezuela is well on its way to completely disarming the entire civilian population. A recent disarmament law closed all commercial gun shops, and centralized military and police gun contracts under the Inte-rior Ministry’s control. Since 2003, 280,725 guns have been decommissioned or destroyed, and high profile actors and sportspersons are being used to promote educational cam-paigns against gun ownership, which can be seen on all the TV channels and in numerous pub-lic places, such as on the Metro of Caracas. This is complement-ed by reform of the prisons, of

the police forces, and the judi-cial system. It is only a matter of time before arms which are still held with a valid permit are de-clared illegal too, as the social-ist government pushes towards a society where law enforcers are the only ones armed.

In the US, which is yet again mourning the victims of a seemingly random shooting in a public place, gun ownership is not just legal, but considered a fundamental right, especially in the south, and is enshrined in the Constitution. Apart from a police background check, there are very few checks done, and the sale of guns is often instantaneous. Forty-nine of the 50 states have some sort of law allowing concealed weap-ons to be carried in public. In 2007 there were 31,224 firearm related deaths, and 75,684 non-fatal gunshot injures reported in 2000.

Eleven armed assassination attempts on US Presidents, and recent tragedies such as the Columbine School massa-cre (1999, 13 dead, 24 injured), the Beltway Sniper attacks

on a highway (2002, 10 dead, 3 wounded), the Virginia Massa-cre in a technological institute (2007, 32 dead 17 wounded), and the Tucson shootings in a parking lot (2011, 6 dead, 13 injured) only go to prove the problems of such a liberal gun policy in such a violent coun-try. In Colorado State, gun controls have amazingly been loosened since the tragedy of Columbine.

However, gun controls alone don’t eradicate violent crime. A gun doesn’t fire itself. It is a point which is recognized by Freddy Bernal, President of the Presidential Mixed Com-mission For Arms and Muni-tions Controls in Venezuela: “the new (disarmament) law won’t resolve on its own the problem of the criminality and violence”. He went on to state that “a law isn’t a magic wand, but that the complex problem of criminality and violence is being taken on by important forces in government”.

Social exclusion, paranoia, desperation, a bunker mental-ity, a “dog eat dog” society, and the inability to solve personal issues, are all complemented by the promotion and glorifi-cation of violence in the me-dia, soap operas, music, video games, hunting, and other cul-tural aspects more commonly associated with capitalist rather than socialist societies. As Rod Dreher, senior editor at The American Conservative puts it: “Evil or insane people will always find a way around the laws. The idea that stron-ger anti-gun laws would mean-ingfully discourage thugs in the US inner cities from ac-quiring and using weapons is risible”.

Mr Dreher goes on to ex-plain how “guns are inextrica-bly woven into the American psyche”, which leads us back to the irony. It is wretchedly ironic that US authorities, con-sistently criticizing Venezuela for its gun crime levels, are un-able to address their own gun crime problems which have been painfully highlighted this week. The inability of neolib-erals to recognize the huge ad-vances being made against gun crime in Venezuela are ironic, and they only show their lack of commitment to do the same and protect their citizens in their countries.

Yet again, Venezuela is pos-ing a dangerous threat to the USA, the threat of setting a good example.