Archive for December, 2004

A silly story: El Avila, Pakea and my sister’s book

December 12, 2004

Today I went up to the town of Galipan in the Avila mountain which separates Caracas from the sea. To those that have never been here, El Avila is a spectacular sight, which is probably what attracted the Spaniards to the valley in which Caracas is. This is what it looks like:



 


 


To add to the perspective, think about the fact that Caracas is 1,000 meters above sea level (3,000 feet). Well, El Avila at it highest peak is like 2,700 meters or 8,000 feet, these mountains are truly majestic. El Avila has been a National park for a long time, converted to a national park by the transition Government in 1958, after the Perez Jimenez Dictatorship was overthrown.


 


When it was declared a National Park, only those that lived there could remain there and improve their homes, but new building within the park was barred. There was a little agricultural town called Galipan up there, whose inhabitants grew flowers and were separated from Caracas by the difficult dirt road that connected it to it. Imagine going up some 6,000 feet in less than five miles, it is steep! And it was only dirt, it was very messy, particularly if it rained.


 


About some twenty years ago, the Government built a road up there and people began going there to visit. A Restaurant opened up, now there are about half a dozen. Many wealthy Venezuelans have purchased homes up there, improved them and use them as vacation homes.  Caracas is typically 10 C warmer than Galipan, it gets chilly up there.


 


Last week my brother invited me to go to Casa Pakea today. Casa Pakea is by far the best Restaurant up in Galipan. It is run by a Basque who reportedly got there after leaving Spain for belonging to a certain separatist organization. The food is wonderful. It is a fixed menu of six dishes for a fairly cheap price of Bs. 48,000 per person, about $19 dollars at the parallel exchange rate. You bring your own wine, which makes it a perfect chance to have a good wine with great food, at a reasonable price.


 


The views are incredible, you are above the clouds, and the mountains change colors as if by magic. Here are two pictures:


 



 


 


To enter the Park, you have to go by a National Guard station, tell them where you are going. Sometime they search your car, but usually you just go straight thru. You have to go up in a four wheel drive vehicle (I guess it is more important on the way down). We went in my sister’s car, a big red thing, Dodge I think it is, that is banged up all over. It is like a four wheel drive van. There are few like that in Venezuela as it was given to her husband as payment for a debt and it was imported from the US. So, it is easily recognizable.


 


This sister of mine is a reporter/writer and just completed her first book “Excess Baggage” which won an important award for books by first time writers.


 


I tell you this as background, because when we entered the park, rather than let us thru, the National Guard told my brother who was driving to please park the car on the side. He approached and asked him where we were going and to get out of the car. Then he asked him what was in the trunk. My brother said he did not know, that the car was my sister’s not his. At that point the Guard asked my sister to get out of the car and go see the Guard that was at the desk in the kiosk where you first stop. That Guard asked my brother if she was his wife and was she a writer.


 


That Guard asked my sister: do you remember me? She said no. Well, it turns out that he had stopped my sister in the same van a few weeks ago and she had no papers for the car (typical!), no identification. She told him she was a writer, was in a rush to get the proofs of her book and they were going to close. He let her go at that time.


 


He told her that van was recognizable anywhere and said: “Do you have papers for the van today” She said yes, but he did not ask her to produce them. Then he asked “And how is your book”. Incredibly, my sister had just given us copies of the book at her home before we left for lunch, so she said: “It is doing very well, it was published this week”. My brother came to the car, got a copy and she ended up dedicating a copy to the National Guardsman. He asked her for her e-mail to send her his opinion about the book when he finished it!


 


After our meal, we went by the same kiosk said hi and he called out “I am already reading the part about the lady, very nice book”. So, my sister now has a fan in the Venezuelan National Guard.


 


It might be a silly story, but it was very nice and fun and we laughed about it all afternoon. By the way, the food was delicious too!!!


 


By the way, driving home, we were stopped by the Caracas police, the van had no plate in the front, which is illegal…she keeps going like this she will know all cops in Caracas soon. Maybe sell a lot of books?

A silly story: El Avila, Pakea and my sister’s book

December 12, 2004

Today I went up to the town of Galipan in the Avila mountain which separates Caracas from the sea. To those that have never been here, El Avila is a spectacular sight, which is probably what attracted the Spaniards to the valley in which Caracas is. This is what it looks like:



 


 


To add to the perspective, think about the fact that Caracas is 1,000 meters above sea level (3,000 feet). Well, El Avila at it highest peak is like 2,700 meters or 8,000 feet, these mountains are truly majestic. El Avila has been a National park for a long time, converted to a national park by the transition Government in 1958, after the Perez Jimenez Dictatorship was overthrown.


 


When it was declared a National Park, only those that lived there could remain there and improve their homes, but new building within the park was barred. There was a little agricultural town called Galipan up there, whose inhabitants grew flowers and were separated from Caracas by the difficult dirt road that connected it to it. Imagine going up some 6,000 feet in less than five miles, it is steep! And it was only dirt, it was very messy, particularly if it rained.


 


About some twenty years ago, the Government built a road up there and people began going there to visit. A Restaurant opened up, now there are about half a dozen. Many wealthy Venezuelans have purchased homes up there, improved them and use them as vacation homes.  Caracas is typically 10 C warmer than Galipan, it gets chilly up there.


 


Last week my brother invited me to go to Casa Pakea today. Casa Pakea is by far the best Restaurant up in Galipan. It is run by a Basque who reportedly got there after leaving Spain for belonging to a certain separatist organization. The food is wonderful. It is a fixed menu of six dishes for a fairly cheap price of Bs. 48,000 per person, about $19 dollars at the parallel exchange rate. You bring your own wine, which makes it a perfect chance to have a good wine with great food, at a reasonable price.


 


The views are incredible, you are above the clouds, and the mountains change colors as if by magic. Here are two pictures:


 



 


 


To enter the Park, you have to go by a National Guard station, tell them where you are going. Sometime they search your car, but usually you just go straight thru. You have to go up in a four wheel drive vehicle (I guess it is more important on the way down). We went in my sister’s car, a big red thing, Dodge I think it is, that is banged up all over. It is like a four wheel drive van. There are few like that in Venezuela as it was given to her husband as payment for a debt and it was imported from the US. So, it is easily recognizable.


 


This sister of mine is a reporter/writer and just completed her first book “Excess Baggage” which won an important award for books by first time writers.


 


I tell you this as background, because when we entered the park, rather than let us thru, the National Guard told my brother who was driving to please park the car on the side. He approached and asked him where we were going and to get out of the car. Then he asked him what was in the trunk. My brother said he did not know, that the car was my sister’s not his. At that point the Guard asked my sister to get out of the car and go see the Guard that was at the desk in the kiosk where you first stop. That Guard asked my brother if she was his wife and was she a writer.


 


That Guard asked my sister: do you remember me? She said no. Well, it turns out that he had stopped my sister in the same van a few weeks ago and she had no papers for the car (typical!), no identification. She told him she was a writer, was in a rush to get the proofs of her book and they were going to close. He let her go at that time.


 


He told her that van was recognizable anywhere and said: “Do you have papers for the van today” She said yes, but he did not ask her to produce them. Then he asked “And how is your book”. Incredibly, my sister had just given us copies of the book at her home before we left for lunch, so she said: “It is doing very well, it was published this week”. My brother came to the car, got a copy and she ended up dedicating a copy to the National Guardsman. He asked her for her e-mail to send her his opinion about the book when he finished it!


 


After our meal, we went by the same kiosk said hi and he called out “I am already reading the part about the lady, very nice book”. So, my sister now has a fan in the Venezuelan National Guard.


 


It might be a silly story, but it was very nice and fun and we laughed about it all afternoon. By the way, the food was delicious too!!!


 


By the way, driving home, we were stopped by the Caracas police, the van had no plate in the front, which is illegal…she keeps going like this she will know all cops in Caracas soon. Maybe sell a lot of books?

Opposition wins student union elections at UCV

December 11, 2004

Incredible that in that bastion of leftwing thinking called Universidad Central de Venezuela the opposition group called 100% Ucevista is beating the Chavista group Bloque de cambio in the elections for student union. Candidate Stalin (!) Gonzalez had obatined last night 7400 votes to the Chavistas 1400. I guess the Chavistas made a big mistake in not having the CNE run the election, they coudld have won easily!


Makes you wonder about a revolution that is not supported by the young.

Boss’ orders

December 11, 2004

Reportedly, the mess between the police and the buhoneros (street vendors) was cause by Chavez himself. The same man that five years ago said the buhoneros should not be touched, told Libertador Mayor Bernal that Caracas was dirty and a mess and he was losing popularity because of it. He then told Metropolitan Area Mayor Juan Barreto that he should stop getting himslef involved with politics and start working at his job. That night Bernal used the police to kicke out all of the streetn vendors who did not ahve a perit, leading to the riots. The riots were ugly, my brother who works downtown since aboyt 12 years ago, says they are the worst he has ever seen. The cops were really repressive and the street vendor sused fireworks and guns to fight the National Guard. Stores were looted, buses, cars and motorscycles were burned. The media really played it low key, according to all the reports I have gathered.


Vice-President Rangel was very critical of how the whole thing was handled and today Bernal fired his Chief of police. That’s the problem when peple like Bernal don’t have a mindof their own. Pass the buck!. Below some pictures of the heavy action, showing the oligarchic streetvendors attacking the cops with fireowrks, stones and sticks, as well as the Chavez peace keeping forces shooting at the rich oligarchs.





 

The Bermudez case gets confusing

December 10, 2004

The case of the former Vice-Minister of Finance Jesus Bermudez becomes more intriguing and confusing, like so much of what happens in this “revolution”.


Bermudez made bail and was given a wireless bracelet to make sure he sticks around. His partner’s wife made bail and he will have a hearing on the 20th. of December according to press reports.


 


Where things get somewhat tricky is that Bermudez told US authorities that the plane in which he was flying belongs to the Corporación Venezolana de Guayana (CVG) of which he is a member of the Board of Directors. However, the Venezuelan Government denies that he holds any position in that company and the company owns no planes.


 


According to press reports the plane is a 1998 Hawker Siddeley that from what I have been able to learn is a two pilot jet, worth some US$ 10 million when new. It is not a small aircraft as initial reports indicated. The jet is in the name of a US company Full Court Aviation, which refused to identify the owner of the jet craft. My sources tell me Bermudez owns the aircraft and visits the US often, always going to the same Opa-Locka airport.


 


Bermudez entered the US with a diplomatic passport and could be facing jail time. As one of the commenters said in this blog, under the Patriot’s Act, Bermudez is considered to be a politically exposed person, which will require him to prove the origin of the funds that he was trying to bring into the US in cash. Moreover, the US Government may ask him to prove the source of funds for any other assets he may have in the US.


 


The Venezuelan Government is trying to distance itself from Bermudez, however, he rose to Vice-Minister with the Giordani-Rojas-Merentes team and actually left the Ministry while Nóbrega was there. He is considered to be part of the Giordani group. The case is being investigated by the Special Committee of the National Assembly which is presided by Deputy Pedro Carreño of Chávez MVR.


 


My feeling is this case may explode in the Government’s face, as Bermudez was a key figure in the Finance Ministry who will not be able to justify having US$ 40,000 for Christmas gifts and will not be able to leave the US that easily. On top of that he has made too many statements that have turned out apparently not to be true, which the judge may not find to speak well for Mr. Bermudez. Stay tuned.

The Bermudez case gets confusing

December 10, 2004

The case of the former Vice-Minister of Finance Jesus Bermudez becomes more intriguing and confusing, like so much of what happens in this “revolution”.


Bermudez made bail and was given a wireless bracelet to make sure he sticks around. His partner’s wife made bail and he will have a hearing on the 20th. of December according to press reports.


 


Where things get somewhat tricky is that Bermudez told US authorities that the plane in which he was flying belongs to the Corporación Venezolana de Guayana (CVG) of which he is a member of the Board of Directors. However, the Venezuelan Government denies that he holds any position in that company and the company owns no planes.


 


According to press reports the plane is a 1998 Hawker Siddeley that from what I have been able to learn is a two pilot jet, worth some US$ 10 million when new. It is not a small aircraft as initial reports indicated. The jet is in the name of a US company Full Court Aviation, which refused to identify the owner of the jet craft. My sources tell me Bermudez owns the aircraft and visits the US often, always going to the same Opa-Locka airport.


 


Bermudez entered the US with a diplomatic passport and could be facing jail time. As one of the commenters said in this blog, under the Patriot’s Act, Bermudez is considered to be a politically exposed person, which will require him to prove the origin of the funds that he was trying to bring into the US in cash. Moreover, the US Government may ask him to prove the source of funds for any other assets he may have in the US.


 


The Venezuelan Government is trying to distance itself from Bermudez, however, he rose to Vice-Minister with the Giordani-Rojas-Merentes team and actually left the Ministry while Nóbrega was there. He is considered to be part of the Giordani group. The case is being investigated by the Special Committee of the National Assembly which is presided by Deputy Pedro Carreño of Chávez MVR.


 


My feeling is this case may explode in the Government’s face, as Bermudez was a key figure in the Finance Ministry who will not be able to justify having US$ 40,000 for Christmas gifts and will not be able to leave the US that easily. On top of that he has made too many statements that have turned out apparently not to be true, which the judge may not find to speak well for Mr. Bermudez. Stay tuned.

The muzzle law is enacted, a brief explanation

December 9, 2004

First of all, let me clarify concepts: There are two instruments that threaten the freedom of the media, the first one is the “gag” or “muzzle” law, otherwise known as the Social Responsibility Bill of radio and TV and there is a quick fix the Chavistas are making to the penal code in order to prohibit or punish many forms of protest and criticism of the Government and members of the Government. The second is not ready yet, but it was approved on the first round and is being rushed to be approved before the end of the year. This is the one that I discussed last night as it penalizes offenses against the President, pot banging, demonstrations and the like.


What was approved this week and came out in the official gazette is the gag law. This law applies to broadcasting concessions in radio and TV and will not apply to newspapers or the Internet. You need to have some form of concession from the Government.


 


The gag bill is absurd in its extent to begin with. It attempts to regulate everything. From the language that may be used or not, to what may be broadcast or not, to what has to be broadcast.


 


The bill defines what is sexually explicit to such an extent that its text is confusing referring once to the “sound of nakedness”.  I tried to listen to my nakedness this morning in the shower, but failed to hear anything other than the water. It also defines violent images and sounds. The law then defines the different hours for broadcasting and when can each type of sexual, violent or whatever image be broadcast.


 


These parts are tricky enough, but then the real treacherous part begins at the end of Article 7:


 


“In the radio and TV services, when messages are broadcast live during the supervised or all users timeslot, images of real may be presented if it is indispensable to the understanding of the information…there can not be emphasis on unnecessary detail”


 


See this is very tricky. Who judges what is or not indispensable? What is unnecessary detail? The regulator, the Government.


 


The law then limits advertising to 15 minutes an hour, prohibits alcohol, tobacco, drug ads (??), gambling and lottery unless the proceeds are for charity (like all Venezuelan lotteries are), 900 numbers without having the cost explicitly, etc, etc.


 


Article 10 grants the Government the right o use all of the media for free.


 


Then it gives viewers some rights and here things get tricky again, when the law grants “independent producers” access to all media. It defines who these people are, who will approve their programs and that they have to be broadcast.


 


Article 14 defines that three hours a day have to be devoted to cultural and educational programs, seven hours of locally produced material of which four have to be independently produced. 50% of musical programs have to be with Venezuelan music evidencing, either geographical genera, languages, cultural values of Venezuela or Venezuelan authorship.


 


The real tough part of the law is in Article 29 where it specifies what the penalties will be, among them:


 


When the messages broadcast promote, apologize for or incite war, alterations of public order, religious intolerance, or are against the security of the Nation or made anonymously.


 


Of course, again the security of the nation is not well defined, making it rather easy to punish any station that promotes any criticism of the Government, the military or the people in the Government. And here my friends are the real danger. The first time as punishment, the station may be suspended for 72 hours, the second for five years. If you owned a successful TV or radio station, you would watch yourself and I think we are seeing evidence of this already.

The muzzle law is enacted, a brief explanation

December 9, 2004

First of all, let me clarify concepts: There are two instruments that threaten the freedom of the media, the first one is the “gag” or “muzzle” law, otherwise known as the Social Responsibility Bill of radio and TV and there is a quick fix the Chavistas are making to the penal code in order to prohibit or punish many forms of protest and criticism of the Government and members of the Government. The second is not ready yet, but it was approved on the first round and is being rushed to be approved before the end of the year. This is the one that I discussed last night as it penalizes offenses against the President, pot banging, demonstrations and the like.


What was approved this week and came out in the official gazette is the gag law. This law applies to broadcasting concessions in radio and TV and will not apply to newspapers or the Internet. You need to have some form of concession from the Government.


 


The gag bill is absurd in its extent to begin with. It attempts to regulate everything. From the language that may be used or not, to what may be broadcast or not, to what has to be broadcast.


 


The bill defines what is sexually explicit to such an extent that its text is confusing referring once to the “sound of nakedness”.  I tried to listen to my nakedness this morning in the shower, but failed to hear anything other than the water. It also defines violent images and sounds. The law then defines the different hours for broadcasting and when can each type of sexual, violent or whatever image be broadcast.


 


These parts are tricky enough, but then the real treacherous part begins at the end of Article 7:


 


“In the radio and TV services, when messages are broadcast live during the supervised or all users timeslot, images of real may be presented if it is indispensable to the understanding of the information…there can not be emphasis on unnecessary detail”


 


See this is very tricky. Who judges what is or not indispensable? What is unnecessary detail? The regulator, the Government.


 


The law then limits advertising to 15 minutes an hour, prohibits alcohol, tobacco, drug ads (??), gambling and lottery unless the proceeds are for charity (like all Venezuelan lotteries are), 900 numbers without having the cost explicitly, etc, etc.


 


Article 10 grants the Government the right o use all of the media for free.


 


Then it gives viewers some rights and here things get tricky again, when the law grants “independent producers” access to all media. It defines who these people are, who will approve their programs and that they have to be broadcast.


 


Article 14 defines that three hours a day have to be devoted to cultural and educational programs, seven hours of locally produced material of which four have to be independently produced. 50% of musical programs have to be with Venezuelan music evidencing, either geographical genera, languages, cultural values of Venezuela or Venezuelan authorship.


 


The real tough part of the law is in Article 29 where it specifies what the penalties will be, among them:


 


When the messages broadcast promote, apologize for or incite war, alterations of public order, religious intolerance, or are against the security of the Nation or made anonymously.


 


Of course, again the security of the nation is not well defined, making it rather easy to punish any station that promotes any criticism of the Government, the military or the people in the Government. And here my friends are the real danger. The first time as punishment, the station may be suspended for 72 hours, the second for five years. If you owned a successful TV or radio station, you would watch yourself and I think we are seeing evidence of this already.

The muzzle law is enacted, a brief explanation

December 9, 2004

First of all, let me clarify concepts: There are two instruments that threaten the freedom of the media, the first one is the “gag” or “muzzle” law, otherwise known as the Social Responsibility Bill of radio and TV and there is a quick fix the Chavistas are making to the penal code in order to prohibit or punish many forms of protest and criticism of the Government and members of the Government. The second is not ready yet, but it was approved on the first round and is being rushed to be approved before the end of the year. This is the one that I discussed last night as it penalizes offenses against the President, pot banging, demonstrations and the like.


What was approved this week and came out in the official gazette is the gag law. This law applies to broadcasting concessions in radio and TV and will not apply to newspapers or the Internet. You need to have some form of concession from the Government.


 


The gag bill is absurd in its extent to begin with. It attempts to regulate everything. From the language that may be used or not, to what may be broadcast or not, to what has to be broadcast.


 


The bill defines what is sexually explicit to such an extent that its text is confusing referring once to the “sound of nakedness”.  I tried to listen to my nakedness this morning in the shower, but failed to hear anything other than the water. It also defines violent images and sounds. The law then defines the different hours for broadcasting and when can each type of sexual, violent or whatever image be broadcast.


 


These parts are tricky enough, but then the real treacherous part begins at the end of Article 7:


 


“In the radio and TV services, when messages are broadcast live during the supervised or all users timeslot, images of real may be presented if it is indispensable to the understanding of the information…there can not be emphasis on unnecessary detail”


 


See this is very tricky. Who judges what is or not indispensable? What is unnecessary detail? The regulator, the Government.


 


The law then limits advertising to 15 minutes an hour, prohibits alcohol, tobacco, drug ads (??), gambling and lottery unless the proceeds are for charity (like all Venezuelan lotteries are), 900 numbers without having the cost explicitly, etc, etc.


 


Article 10 grants the Government the right o use all of the media for free.


 


Then it gives viewers some rights and here things get tricky again, when the law grants “independent producers” access to all media. It defines who these people are, who will approve their programs and that they have to be broadcast.


 


Article 14 defines that three hours a day have to be devoted to cultural and educational programs, seven hours of locally produced material of which four have to be independently produced. 50% of musical programs have to be with Venezuelan music evidencing, either geographical genera, languages, cultural values of Venezuela or Venezuelan authorship.


 


The real tough part of the law is in Article 29 where it specifies what the penalties will be, among them:


 


When the messages broadcast promote, apologize for or incite war, alterations of public order, religious intolerance, or are against the security of the Nation or made anonymously.


 


Of course, again the security of the nation is not well defined, making it rather easy to punish any station that promotes any criticism of the Government, the military or the people in the Government. And here my friends are the real danger. The first time as punishment, the station may be suspended for 72 hours, the second for five years. If you owned a successful TV or radio station, you would watch yourself and I think we are seeing evidence of this already.

Gag law begins to have an effect?

December 8, 2004

For the last few years, when people wanted to know what was happening in Venezuela they turned to Globovision. Today, I was watching Globovision in the office when a relative who works downtown called me on the phone to talk about how he was trapped in a war zone. Huh? What are you talking about?


He then proceeded to describe how the bank where he works, was closed as police and the National Guard where gassing the people demonstrating, how there was shooting and burning of vehicles. Something along these lines:


 




 


 


 


What was going on? The opposition protesting the gag law? Chavistas celebrating the first day of the gag law? No such luck, it was a protest by street vendors who on Tuesday night the police removed those posts which had no permit to spend the night. The riots left one dead and twenty five injured according to the only post on the Globovision site, which did not show one picture. Reuters/CNN did talk about it, they have no local broadcasting.  Union Radio had better coverage on the Internet, but you do not need a permit to post on the Internet. Thus, Globovision appears to be exercising some self-restraint as it barely talked about it.


 


The amazing thing is that the same Mayor Bernal that appeared today on TV calling the buhoneros anarquists, is the same one that ruined the downtown area allowing them to set up shop where ever they wanted, in another populist era. Except now it is difficult to even walk around downtown with all the street vendors. And they decided to protest and got mad when they were mistreated by the police. And that is the problem when you control all of the Government, you can longer blame the other Mayors, when they don’t exist. You have to govern, take charge. So you blame extreme left groups like Bandera Roja or whatever Alianza al Bravo pueblo stands for. Bandera Roja laughs at the charges and ABP says how stupid it is to kick this people out right before Christmas, after six years of neglecting the problem and allowing them to proliferate. These people used to be Chavez’ supporters, these were his constituency. No more.


 


But how do you explain that to a foreigner: Extreme left Bandera Roja party being charged by the Chavistas for inciting the riots. Aren’t the Chavistas the extreme left? Well, this blog has been trying to explain things for over two years and it is not that easy. You see, when there was nobody in the Venezuelan guerillas in 1983, the same Gabriel Puerta that says today his party Bandera Roja was not inciting the riots, was the buddy of current foreign Minister Ali Rodriguez up in the mountains. Go figure!


 


But it really bothers me how low key Globovision was today on these riots. The street vendors were repressed, they became extremely violent, they burned buses, motorcycles, and they attacked the cops, the National Guard. This was big news. But you see, Article 29 of the newly enacted “gag”, “muzzle”,”content” or media law says:


 


Those that provide radio or TV service can be suspended “for up to 72 hours when they broadcast messages that….apologize for or incite alterations of public order”. If it happens again you may lose your license for five years. These were “alterarions of public order”, showing too many may have been construed as inciting more, thus Globovision’s silence.  As simple as that.