Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Caracas Marches..... nobody listens?


Journalists and different media workers called for a march to protest against discrimination and the lack of freedom of expression in Venezuela.

Students, workers, journalists and different political parties took the streets of Caracas in what turned out to be one of the largest peaceful protests in the last 9 years. Students also protested in Puerto la Cruz and a few other cities in the country.

Meanwhile.. Chavez is visiting Russia, Bielorussia and Iran.


A few images are worth a thousand words:




























































































































































































A video of the concentration:

Monday, June 25, 2007

Copa America, if we could only enjoy it....






For the first time in history Venezuela has been appointed by the FIFA to host the oldest soccer tournament in history: Copa America (America Cup). The goverment has spent over a Billion dollars preparing for this event... sounds great... if we could only enjoy it.

Over a Billion dollars were spent and yet, we have unfinished stadiums... However, I do not want to deviate from the idea behind this article and bash the goverment efforts to host the Copa America (Just look at the stadiums and judge for yourself (http://fotos-gbastidas.blogspot.com/). The idea behind this post on my blog, is to voice out the corruption and how the goverment has made it impossible for anyone not affiliated to the goverment to get a ticket to see a game.

The truth is, the goverment cannot afford to let the international media and opinion show what goes on every night at the different local stadiums or at the latest concerts....


"its going down, its going down.. this goverment is going down!".
**This takes place in soccer matches, baseball matches, concerts, basketaball matches... etc

Copa America is more than the oldest soccer tournament in history to the Venezuelan goverment. It is the new tool to gain support and lose all the protests and negativity the illegal closure of Venezuela's oldest TV station RCTV has brought. (Hence how TVES, the new goverment channel is the official channel of the Copa America)

While corruption has made it impossible for the 9 stadiums to be finished completely, they are all in their final stages and meet the requirements for the tournament to be played.

TV Adds, Albums, Outdoors Ads, songs, videos, etc... the goverment has gone as far as to build walls around bad looking neighborhoods around the stadiums to make sure everything goes as planned.

The distribution and handling of tickets for the Copa America has been given to an unknown company: "The Lujo Productions". Nobody knows who was behind this scheme (it will eventually come to light), but trough The Lujo Productions someone (affiliated to the goverment) is getting very very rich. Over 80% of tickets have been purchased by the state and state owned companies, this tickets are given out or sold to members of the PSUV or known supporters of the Revolution. Chavez wants to be sure that there will be no anti-goverment propaganda in the stadium... everything needs to be very very RED.

For the same reason, Caracas, the most important city in the country; the city that has been home to non-stop protests by thousands of students will only host but ONE game. The match for 3rd place. Once again, the goverment cant risk having students protest with their peace signs and white hands outside the stadiums.

So now I ask.. while everyone seems very happy about the Copa America.. should we Venezuelans be happy?.

I have dreamed about the Copa happening in my country since I was an 8 year old kid playing soccer. Now that the dream has come true, there is no way I will be able to see a game because I voted against Chavez, because I am in the Maisanta list and because I REFUSE to sign up for his stupid political party..

I will not be watching the Copa America. and If I do, it will have to be trough Direct TV (or at a local bar) because the only other option is the newly created TV channel (TVES) that the goverment is forcing us to watch...

Thursday, June 21, 2007

A Summary of the Revolution: Corruption, Consumption, Coertion

Bernd Debusmann, a special correspondent from Reuters, recently spent some time in Venezuela with the intention of figuring out what the revolution of Hugo Chavez was all about.

This isnt your average reporter, Bernd has spent years visiting countries in turmoil and revolutions. This is what he had to say:

Reuters
In Venezuela, obstacles to 21st Century socialism
Tue Jun 19, 2007 7:25PM EDT
By Bernd Debusmann, Special Correspondent

CARACAS (Reuters) - President Hugo Chavez's ambitious project to bring "21st Century socialism" to Venezuela is running into obstacles -- easy cash, corruption and an expanding class of citizens who are growing rich by exploiting economic distortions.

Chavez promised a revolution when he won his first election in 1998. Since his third election victory in December, he has pledged to accelerate Venezuela's transformation into a society where a "new man" is free of selfish urges and devoted to the common good.

But nine years into Chavez's rule, some analysts say the idea of creating a "new man" and a classless society has even less chance of success in Venezuela than past attempts in other countries, from Russia to Nicaragua and Cuba.

"Venezuelans are individualists," said Luis Pedro Espana, director of the Economic and Social Research Institute at Venezuela's Andres Bello Catholic University. "They are not inclined to work for the community. They are very consumerist, even the (Chavez) faithful."
The popular perception in Latin America of Venezuelans as happy-go-lucky, live-for-the-moment people draws few denials from either side of the deep divide between Chavez followers and opponents.

A few snapshots of life in Venezuela help explain skepticism over the emergence of the "new man."

Standing in front of a poster that says "The Informal Economy is Forbidden," a woman in a prim white blouse whispers "dollars, dollars, dollars," offering them at twice the official exchange rate. A pair of bored-looking policemen watch.

At a luxury hotel in the center of Caracas, a guest in a pinstripe suit pays his bill with wads of cash the size of bricks.

At a bustling supermarket, the shelves are stacked with imported whiskey but bare of meat and eggs.

In a small town in the Andes, police drive around in a shiny new Hummer that barely fits through the narrow streets.

"VIRUSES" IN SOCIETY
Venezuela's currency black market stems from rigid currency controls. Shortages of basic goods result from price controls. And wads of cash and luxury cars originate from an oil boom and public spending that have contributed to the fastest economic growth and highest inflation in Latin America.

All this combines to create petri dish conditions to perpetuate what Chavez describes as the viruses that have infected successive generations of citizens in his oil-rich country.
"While these viruses exist in abundance in our society, it is impossible to build a fatherland and even less socialism," he said in a recent speech. Quoting Karl Marx, he added: "Each new society is born infected by the old society."

At least one of the old infections -- corruption -- appears to have worsened since Chavez took office in 1998 with the support of the poor majority of Venezuela's 26 million people.
According to Transparency International, a Berlin-based anti-corruption group, Venezuela has steadily slipped towards the bottom of an index measuring corruption in 163 countries and now ranks 138th, the worst in Latin America.

"There is no socialism in our country," said Teodore Petkoff, a former left-wing guerrilla who became minister of economic planning in the government that preceded Chavez. "This is the same country as ever. There has been no revolution."
Chavez has used a bonanza from oil -- global oil prices have quintupled since he began his first term -- to spend billions of dollars on social welfare, infrastructure projects and direct cash subsidies for the poorest.

Government statistics show that the percentage of Venezuelans living in poverty shrank from 42.8 percent to 30.4 percent under Chavez. Poverty researchers at the Catholic University outside Caracas put the present rate at around 45 percent, below what they measured in 1999.

NEW CLASS - THE BOLIBURGESIA
But while poverty has declined, the country's class divisions have remained and a new class sprung up -- the boliburgesia. The phrase is a contraction of the words Bolivar, Latin America's liberator, and bourgeoisie -- a play on the "Bolivarian Revolution" Chavez declared in 1999.
To hear critics of the government tell it, the boliburgesia includes Venezuelans active in the black and grey markets, government bureaucrats who impose "surcharges" on routine services, middlemen in oil deals, money launderers, and drug trafficking organizations.

"This new class will stand more in the way of Chavez's 21st Century socialism than the old aristocracy ever did," said a Caracas businessman. "They have become part of the establishment."

Chavez has acknowledged that his revolution is far from complete, despite far-reaching land reforms and a campaign to nationalize strategic industries.
His present term runs through 2012, but he has begun to talk about a new target date years in the future.

"If in just 140 days so many things have happened, imagine what will happen in the 5,134 days from today to June 24, 2021," he said on June 2, marking 140 days since the start of his third term. "5,134 days of revolutionary acceleration."

June 24, 2021, has nothing to do with Venezuela's six-year presidential terms -- it is the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Carabobo, when Simon Bolivar led South American independence fighters to a victory over Spanish forces.

By 2021, Venezuelans born when Chavez began his first presidential term will be 22 years old, and Chavez will have been in power for a whole generation.


© Reuters 2006. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.

Monday, June 18, 2007

This is something I forgot to post about....

After the students marched to the National Assembly and placed a request to reply to accusations made by members of this goverment entity; the goverment replied by offering a televised "debate" on the National Assembly against students that "follow" the revolution.

A committee of 10 students that represent every university (selected by the members of each school) in the country accepted the offer from the goverment. While a debate was not what they were looking for, this was a chance to use their constitutional right to reply to the accusations made by members of the Naional Assembly a couple weeks before.

As they walked in everyone in the audience was dressed in red, as expected. What the audience did not expect was that THEY TOO WERE DRESSED IN RED.

After a short introduction, the students were given a chance to speak. The whole event was televised in what the Venezuelan goverment calls a "Chain" (every TV and Radio station must broadcast whatever the goverment wants). I guess the goverment planned on shutting down the student goverment by destroying their credibility.. the plan backfired.

Douglas Barrios, a young colleague from the Universidad Metropolitana took the stand and gave a speech that will last in the memories of Venezuelans for centuries to come.

After giving his speech he took of his red shirt (and so did every other one of the students in the committee) and said "We dream about a country where we can be validated without having to wear an uniform". Then he stepped down and allowed the pro-goverment students to reply, afterwards they thanked their audience and left with their head up high.

"We did not ask for a debate in the National Assembly, we are not going to put on a show for the goverment. The debate will happen, in the Universities, in the streets, in the schools.. where it is supposed to happen."

Julia, from "The end of Venezuela as we know it" has translated the speec h in english. (its worth a read)

"We, the university students, did not come today to this public arena to debate. The student movement's agenda is only defined by the student movement. We came here today to vindicate our civil rights. Make no mistake: the debate between and of the university students for the country will, without question, be carried out. The debate between the university students must be done in the universities, in the streets, in the slums ("barrios"), and in the towns of the country."


"We say; ¡Enough of this discrimination! We demand and promote national reconciliation. Let us express and demonstrate in a free way. Consider our propositions on issues of national interest because it will be our generation that will have to face the consequences. Do not criminalize the protest from the start. Do not underestimate and insult the student initiative, and free and give respect to those who have been unfairly persecuted and publicly humiliated as in the case of the student Nixon Moreno and the more than 200 detainees since the last protests; under these auspices we demand the immediate revocation of our court presentation orders."


"That right to choose whatever we consider best for us is what makes the man truly a man, truly free. And a life without elections, a life without decisions, has little freedom, little humanity, little life. That would be an robotic, singular existence, it would be, in the end, meaningless."

Douglas Barrios
Caracas, 2007.

We will protest until we are heard... we have rights!


This week there were several protests.

Caracas 14/06/2007

Students from every university marched to Downtown Caracas to protest against discrimination and freedom of expression.
However the police and the National Guard set up a fence of officers with anti-riot equipment trough all the streets that led to downtown with orders to not allow the students to march trough.

The students protested for hours and peacefully retreated to avoid conflicts with the authorities.

We are protesting peacefully, there is no need for this. You cannot silence us by ignoring us. We are the youth of the nation.



The students of UDO and USM in Puerto La Cruz also protested against goverment repression and abuse.

Discrimination....

I found 2 excellent pieces of information in Megaresistencia.

The following image is from a study that identifies the difference in salary between a professional (University Degree) and the Boss or President the major state-run companies in the SOCIALIST goverment of Hugo Chavez Frias.

In a "socialist environment" we should all be treated as equals. However the president of PDVSA makes over 10 times as much as an average engineer. The president of the Seniat (Tax) makes close to 10 times the amount an executive makes.

Socialist who?



This image below is a scan from a newspaper in Venezuela for jobs in the Venezuelan goverment. The underlined sentence reads:

Requirements:
- "Applicant must have knowledge about socialist concepts. The applicant must also identify and accept the revolutionary process of the country".



Basically Venezuelans are not supposed to think anymore. You cant have your own views or ideas. The goverment wants to think for us.

However, according to the Organization of American States Venezuela is perfect.

Discrimination
1.an act or instance of discriminating.
2.treatment or consideration of, or making a distinction in favor of or against, a person or thing based on the group, class, or category to which that person or thing belongs rather than on individual merit: racial and religious intolerance and discrimination.
3.the power of making fine distinctions; discriminating judgment: She chose the colors with great discrimination.
4.Archaic. something that serves to differentiate.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

USB Marches for Autonomy




The students of the Universidad Simon Bolivar, a well-known school with a high reputation in scientific and engineering careers, decided to march to the "Board of Supreme Education" (the goverment entity that regulates universities) to demand that the university's autonomous status be recognized. (an status every university in Venezuela enjoys).

Funded in 1967 as an experimental school, today the USB is one of the most advanced and successful houses of high education in Latin America. However, it has not been granted "autonomy" by the goverment.

Students also protested for those students that have been victims of goverment aggression and for those that have been detained for protesting against the ilegal close of RCTV. The fourth and last demand made by the students was for Freedom of Speech, they asked the goverment to give them space in the goverment controlled TV channels and allied channels so they can voice their concerns and opinions.

RCTV Rocks the Net




Chavez has taken RCTV off the air; however RCTV has taken off online. The Internet TV service WorldTV has reported that over 100,000 users from over 100 different countries have logged on to watch "El Observador", which is the news program and the only one that RCTV offers online trough their service.

When WorldNews heard of RCTV's ilegal closing, they offered their online service so RCTV could transmit some of their programming online.
Check it out: http://www.worldtv.com/rctv.

You can also see a lot of RCTV online at www.YouTube.com

Monday, June 11, 2007

We Protest, We Want Change!!


Protest: an expression or declaration of objection, disapproval, or dissent, often in opposition to something a person is powerless to prevent or avoid.


Another day, another protest. Students took "Playa la Caracola" in Margarita and wrote "SOS Freedom of Expression" with their bodies.

The students have changed the tone of their protests to more pacific and academic declarations of disapproval. Many agree on the change, many disagree. The truth is, there is no way we can fight a violent battle against the goverment. However, we will win. Our weapons are our minds, our hearths and our will to work for a better future.

We will get where the goverment will never be able to. We will show our fellow Venezuelans that IF we want to we can make things can change for the better.

You can insult us, you can ignore us, you can close our channels of communication and place cops in our halls. But you wont shut us up, we will be heard.

Caracas - Womens March For Freedom





Saturday: Students Protest Inside of the largest shopping center in Caracas.







Isla Margarita - S.O.S Freedom of Expression



Zulia - Students Burn the Ball of the "America Cup" and chant "We want freedom, down with Chavez, Long live the Universities"


We will be heard.
We wont back down.
We have no political agenda.
We want a better Venezuela.