Category: Hugo Chavez

  • More empty promises from Hugo Chavez

    Venezuela’s strongman socialist leader Hugo Chavez promised a rescue operation for hostages held by the Columbian narco-terrorist group FARC “within hours” back on Wednesday. So how’d that go? From CNN;

    It was not immediately clear when the operation would begin. However, Chavez described Colombia’s agreement as the last step before the operation to free the hostages would begin.

    Yeah, that was on Thursday. The Miami Herald reports this morning;

    Two Venezuelan helicopters sent to Colombia to retrieve three rebel-held hostages sat idle on a runway on Saturday, waiting for the coordinates on the pickup location.

    The information never came.

    Marxist rebels announced last week a deal with Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez to release former vice presidential candidate Clara Rojas, 44, her jungle-born toddler and former congresswoman Consuelo González, 57. The women have been held for more than five years in a portion of the jungle controlled by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC.

    With Colombia’s go-ahead and much fanfare, Chávez organized a mission of high-profile international observers, adorned two Colombia-bound choppers with required Red Cross insignia and had the hostages’ relatives flown to Caracas for the planned reunion. But as of late Saturday, family members and observers were still waiting for the one detail on which the entire mission depends: instructions from the rebels on the hostages’ pick-up spot somewhere in FARC-controlled land, which is about the size of France.

    I suggest the whole thing is an attempt by Chavez to take the focus off of him in regard to the two Maleta-gate cases that are being investigated by the media and US prosecutors.

    Tomas Sancio at Venezuela Politics wonders why a few non-Venezuelans are more important to the Chavez regime than 33 Venezuelans everyday;

    The previous article would probably make us look insensitive if the facts weren’t as grim for the amount of people murdered in Venezuela during 2007. 12,249 people were murdered according to government figures. That’s 33 persons per day. We didn’t use the word “people” because an average of more than one person per hour is killed and this person that is killed every 44 minutes is just as important as the ones being rescued this weekend in Colombia.

    The Interior Minister’s reaction is a typical one. He states that the opposition’s figures are exaggerated. But what can be more exaggerated than 33 people murdered on a daily basis. Is 100 a figure to worry about?

    Well, actually solving Venezuela’s problems is pretty hard, and if it fails, there’s no one to blame. There’s only an upside to getting FARC’s hostages released – and if it goes south, he can blame it on Uribe.

  • Land reform ghosts and FARC’s hostages

    Just as the 49th anniversary of Fidel Castro’s revolution rolls up on us, his legacy is reaching into Hugo Chavez’ Venezuela according to this report from the Miami Herald’s Casto Ocando;

    When Bienvenido Jorajuría could not get into his family’s La Quinta ranch in the fertile region of Yaracuy, in north central Venezuela, the Cuban-born rancher felt a familiar frustration.

    The land was confiscated earlier this year by President Hugo Chávez’s government after armed peasants backed by the national guard invaded it, despite the fact that it was in full production.

    For Jorajuría, it was the second time his family’s land had been expropriated. In 1960, his family’s farm in Matanzas, Cuba, was confiscated by Fidel Castro’s government.

    Funny how most of the US media is skipping right over this story. Just a few months ago, Chavez’ main ally, Islamic Republic’s Mahmoud Ahmidinejad proposed an alliance with the king of land reform – Robert Mugabe (FARS link). The subject of the story recalls the parallels between the seizure of his father’s land in Cuba and his own;

    ”They forced us to provide documents to prove that the property was private as far back as 1850,” said Adivi Ahmad, Bienvenido Jorajuría’s wife, who inherited part of the land in La Quinta, which was purchased by her father in 1947.

    ”Finding these documents was extremely difficult because of Venezuela’s public registry disorder,” Ahmad told El Nuevo Herald.

    Ahmad said it took six months and about $500 to compile and submit the documents, but later those documents ”got lost” in the office in charge of collecting them.

    The Jorajuría story is similar that of other ranch families of Cuban origin in Venezuela.

    Various parts of the story hint at Cuban government involvement in the expropriation particularly of  Cuban expatriots. Dirty pool at it’s dirtiest.

    Chavez’ opponents claim that these “land reform” measures explain much of the shortages of staples in Venezuela;

    ”When Chávez arrived in 1999, we produced 35,000 tons a year of sugar cane,” said Rodríguez, who arrived in Miami in June with his family. He said squatters used death threats to ”expel” him from his own land.

    In 2007, after a series of systematic invasions, Vladimir Rodríguez said he couldn’t harvest anything.

    ”And the ranch was totally lost, unproductive,” said Rodríguez, who is still awaiting a response from the Venezuelan government on the value of his confiscated property. He also is using his Cuban heritage to apply for permanent residency in Miami under the U.S. Cuban Adjustment Act.

    But seein’s how Chavez can’t solve his own domestic problems, he can get his commie buddies at FARC to release their hostages, apparently (AP/Yahoo link);

    President Hugo Chavez said Wednesday that he hopes three hostages will be freed by Colombian rebels within hours, and that Venezuela has planes and helicopters ready to retrieve them.
    Â
    “The only thing we need is the authorization of the Colombian government,” Chavez said at a news conference in the presidential palace. “We are ready to activate the humanitarian operation.”

    Chavez said he hoped it would be completed “in the coming hours.”

    But then, Chavez’ extra-Venezuelan image is much more important to him and his allies than Venezuelans’ views. Who cares if Venezuelans can’t get milk, sugar and meat as long as Chavez can score points with the US Bush-hating Left. More on the hostage release press conference at Kate’s hogar.

  • Shame on you, JOE-4-OIL

    My television has been inundated with those Joe Kennedy ads announcing free Venezuelan heating oil for “poor” Americans. He just took a load from benevolent Hugo Chavez this last week (The Patriot Ledger): (more…)

  • Meet Argentine Hillary

    Photo from Associated Press

    Cristina Fernandez (it’s funny, but until today her name was Cristina Kirschner), the new President of Argentina, spent her second day in office doing an impression of poor victimized Hillary Clinton. (AP)

    (more…)

  • Feds nab four Venezuelan agents in Maleta-gate I

    Wall Street Journal’s Evan Perez, Jose De Cordoba and Matt Moffett report that the feds arrested four Venezuelan agents of the Chavez regime in Miami who were planning to silence the main witness in the Maleta-gate I case I mentioned briefly Tuesday and Kate kindly left a comment to Spanish language Noticias24 last night;

    (more…)

  • Otra mas maleta-gate?

    Back in August, the Venezuelan government was busted cold smuggling oil money to then-Argentinian-presidential candidate Christina Kirschner. (New York Times) (more…)

  • A Cartoon Even Jonn will Like

     

    Ha!

     

    Jonn added: Yes, I do like it. And here’s some New York Times BDS from Newsbusters to go with it (h/t Ace of Spades)

  • Los Tres Chiflados of Socialism

    Hugo Chavez suffered a humiliating defeat Sunday in Venezuela when he lost his bid to rewrite the Constitution in his favor – but it ain’t over, yet. Chavez has promised to return time and again and he got moral support from his Tio Fidel;

    “Don’t feel sad,” he told his supporters, pointing out the razor-thin margin by which they were defeated.

    He said he recognized his plans to enshrine his vision of a socialist economy in Venezuela’s charter had been thwarted “for now” — but stressed he would not give up.

    The opposition had won a “Pyrrhic victory,” he claimed, adding that he would not “change one comma” of his plan.

    The result was disappointing for ailing Cuban leader Fidel Castro and his regime, which views Chavez as a close ally and relies heavily on Venezuelan oil shipments.

    But Castro praised Chavez for how he faced up to defeat.

    “Dear Hugo: I send you revolutionary congratulations for your speech today, which was a ‘Veni, vidi, vici’ of dignity and ethics,” Castro said in a message relayed by state television, referring to the Latin phrase uttered by a victorious Julius Ceasar — “I came, I saw, I conquered.”

    Bloomberg reports that privately Chavez blames the Legislature for the failure of his proposals;

    Chavez, who met government advisors and military commanders outside Caracas to wait for the results, said congress hindered the plan’s passage by splitting it into two blocks, the Caracas- based daily reported, citing the unidentified witnesses. Chavez also said his Venezuelan Unified Socialist Party lacked leadership, Nacional reported.  

    Wall Street Journal’s John Lyons and Jose de Cordoba write that Chavez’ defeat will have far-reaching consequences;

    Mr. Chávez’s defeat will ripple across Latin America, hurting allies in countries like Bolivia and Ecuador and boosting moderates in Brazil and Chile. For the U.S. and Europe, a weaker Mr. Chávez is welcome news. The former military officer has been increasingly hostile to Western interests in the past few years, nationalizing key areas of the economy like the oil industry, telecommunications and utilities.

    Bolivia’s Evo Morales has mandated that the Assembly write a new constitution for Bolivia (New America Media);

    Evo Morales, the first Indian president of the country, is forcing a showdown with the oligarchy and the right wing political parties that have stymied efforts to draft a new constitution to transform the nation. He declares, “Dead or alive I will have a new constitution for the country by December 14,” the mandated date for the specially elected Constituent Assembly to present a constitution for the country to vote on by popular referendum.

    Morales’ opposition in Boliva hopes that Chavez’ defeat portends the defeat of socialist Morales’ own plans;

    The opposition to the left-wing populist government in Bolivia on Monday celebrated the rejection of a referendum on constitutional reform in Venezuela. Several leaders, including Bolivian President Evo Morales and Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa, appear to be following some of the steps that Chavez took since gaining power. Efforts to draft new constitutions are in place in both Bolivia and Ecuador.

    “The defeat of Hugo Chavez is a sign in the sense that authoritarianism will not prevail in Venezuela, and neither will it prevail in Bolivia,” said opposition Senator Fernando Rodriguez.

    Spanish Pundit writes that some Bolivians are staging a hunger strike against Morales’ constitutional proposals;

    Prefects and political leaders of Civic Commitees who are against President Evo Morales, began yesterday their announced hunger strike to reject the law which was passed by the oficialist supporters, cutting off their revenues and against the Constitution project, irregularly passed by the Constituent Assembly.

    In an atmosphere of growing tension, the prefects (gobernators) and civic leaders of the departments of Santa Cruz, Beni, Tarija and Pando ratified their measure of civil resistence announced the past week against the Government. 

    The third stooge, Rafael Correa, in Equador, has turned over control of the state-run oil company to his Navy (Bloomberg);

    Ecuador appointed Navy officers to lead the state-owned oil company’s three biggest divisions, deepening the armed forces’ control of PetroEcuador.

    Patricio Goyes will run the production unit, Carlos Albuja will head refining, and Marco Salinas will oversee sales of oil and other fuels, the company said today in an e-mailed statement.

    The personnel moves come after President Rafael Correa last week named a Navy admiral to run the company, which produces about half of the Andean country’s roughly 500,000 barrels in daily output. He handed control to the military after a week of protests in the Amazon region shut some output.

    Pretty smart – it makes the military more loyal to Correa and makes Correa less dependant on popular will.

    Chavez’ defeat Sunday may be the beginning of the end of the socialist movement in South America – but its a long row to hoe.Â