Government officials are at this time at TV station Globovision, an all
day news station, removing all of their microave equipment which they
use for live transmissions. There is little information but the official
leading this says that the transmission frequency is not approved.
Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category
October 3, 2003
October 3, 2003
Government officials are at this time at TV station Globovision, an all
day news station, removing all of their microave equipment which they
use for live transmissions. There is little information but the official
leading this says that the transmission frequency is not approved.
October 3, 2003
Government officials are at this time at TV station Globovision, an all
day news station, removing all of their microave equipment which they
use for live transmissions. There is little information but the official
leading this says that the transmission frequency is not approved.
October 3, 2003
Government officials are at this time at TV station Globovision, an all
day news station, removing all of their microave equipment which they
use for live transmissions. There is little information but the official
leading this says that the transmission frequency is not approved.
Four bits of oil
September 20, 2003-Venezuela has suspended supplying the Dominican Republic with oil under the San Jose accord. According to the Minister of Energy and Mines: “We will not allow our oil to finance terrorism, as is happening right here in Venezuela”. This all refers to the “plot” to overthrow Chavez by former President Carlos Andres Perrez with the collaboration of the President of the Dominican Republic, something for which we have seen no evidence. But I wonder if our esteemed Minister of Energy Ramirez has mush for a brain and forgot that we provide Cuba with 2.5% of the country’s daily oil production, financed at a 4% rate for fifteen years. Is he also going to cut that off? Or is he so stupid that he can not distinguish from any terrorism and what Fidel Castro does every day here, there and in his own country?
-The Venezuelan Government announced that it will not recognize the Iraqi representative at the upcoming OPEC meeting. All Arab countries will recognize it, which goes to show what I have always said: Why are we members of OPEC? We do not understand our partners, they are our competitors and they really limit the sovereignty of our country.
-The Minister of Energy and Mines announced that the oil field Tomoporo will be opened for bids from foreign companies to operate it. This field is the most promising discovered in decades and is expected to produce half a million barrels of oil a day by 2010. Clearly this “nationalistic” Government has the idea of running an oil industry under the “toll booth” concept in which the Government charges a tax and foreigners run the operation. How nationalistic, no?
-Oil production Figures: The Government says we are producing 3.2 million barrels of oil a day, above the OPEC quota of 2.95 barrels of oil per day. However, other sources say:
OPEC: 2.57 million barrels of oil a day.
International Energy Agency: 2.25 million barrels of oil a day.
Energy Information Administration: 2.35 millions of barrels of oil a day
Gente del Petroleo: 2.61 millions of barrels of oil a day
Interesting how those fired from the oil industry provide the most optimistic picture, no?
Four bits of oil
September 20, 2003-Venezuela has suspended supplying the Dominican Republic with oil under the San Jose accord. According to the Minister of Energy and Mines: “We will not allow our oil to finance terrorism, as is happening right here in Venezuela”. This all refers to the “plot” to overthrow Chavez by former President Carlos Andres Perrez with the collaboration of the President of the Dominican Republic, something for which we have seen no evidence. But I wonder if our esteemed Minister of Energy Ramirez has mush for a brain and forgot that we provide Cuba with 2.5% of the country’s daily oil production, financed at a 4% rate for fifteen years. Is he also going to cut that off? Or is he so stupid that he can not distinguish from any terrorism and what Fidel Castro does every day here, there and in his own country?
-The Venezuelan Government announced that it will not recognize the Iraqi representative at the upcoming OPEC meeting. All Arab countries will recognize it, which goes to show what I have always said: Why are we members of OPEC? We do not understand our partners, they are our competitors and they really limit the sovereignty of our country.
-The Minister of Energy and Mines announced that the oil field Tomoporo will be opened for bids from foreign companies to operate it. This field is the most promising discovered in decades and is expected to produce half a million barrels of oil a day by 2010. Clearly this “nationalistic” Government has the idea of running an oil industry under the “toll booth” concept in which the Government charges a tax and foreigners run the operation. How nationalistic, no?
-Oil production Figures: The Government says we are producing 3.2 million barrels of oil a day, above the OPEC quota of 2.95 barrels of oil per day. However, other sources say:
OPEC: 2.57 million barrels of oil a day.
International Energy Agency: 2.25 million barrels of oil a day.
Energy Information Administration: 2.35 millions of barrels of oil a day
Gente del Petroleo: 2.61 millions of barrels of oil a day
Interesting how those fired from the oil industry provide the most optimistic picture, no?
Letter on Cuba by Vaclac Havel, Arpad Goncz and Lech Walesa
September 20, 2003Thanks to Scott’s Burtonterrace I read the letter/opinion in the Washington Post also in the UK’s Daily Telegraph as linked by the Instapundit also, which is written by Vaclav Havel, Former President of the Czech Republic, Arpad Göncz, Former President of Hungary, Lech Walesa, Former President of Poland, I wonder if someone will disqualify them as rightwingers for writing this:
Earlier this year, Fidel Castro’s regime imprisoned 75 representatives of the Cuban opposition. More than 40 co-ordinators of the Varela project – which draws on the current Cuban constitution and calls for the holding of a referendum on the freedom of speech and assembly, the release of political prisoners, free enterprise and free elections – and more than 20 journalists, together with other representatives of various pro-democracy movements, were sentenced in mock trials to prison terms ranging from six to 28 years, merely for daring to express an opinion other than the official one.
Yet the voice of free-thinking Cubans is growing louder, and that is precisely what Castro and his government are justifiably worried about. Despite the omnipresent secret police and government propaganda, thousands of Cubans have already demonstrated their courage by signing project Varela. The regime’s response to project Varela, and similar initiatives, is at best disregard and at worst persecution.
The latest wave of confrontations, accompanied by anti-European diatribes from the Cuban political leadership, is an expression of weakness and desperation. The regime is running short of breath, just as the party rulers in the Iron Curtain countries did at the end of the 1980s.
Internal opposition is growing in strength; even the police raids in March failed to bring it to its knees. The times are changing, the revolution is ageing with its leaders, the regime is nervous. Castro knows only too well that there will come a day when his revolution will perish with himself.
No one knows exactly what will happen then, but it is clear in Brussels, Washington, Mexico, among the exiles as well as Cuban residents themselves, that freedom, democracy and prosperity in Cuba depend on support for Cuban dissidents, and that such support will increase the chances of Cuba’s peaceful transition to democracy.
Today, it is the responsibility of the democratic world to support representatives of the Cuban opposition, irrespective of how long the Cuban Stalinists manage to cling to power. The Cuban opposition must enjoy the same international support as political dissidents did in divided Europe.
It cannot be claimed that the American embargo of Cuba has brought about the desired result. Neither can this be said of the European policy, which has so far been considerably more forthcoming towards the Cuban regime.
It is time to put aside transatlantic disputes about the embargo of Cuba and to concentrate on direct support for Cuban dissidents, prisoners of conscience and their families.
Europe ought to make it unambiguously clear that Castro is a dictator, and that for democratic countries a dictatorship cannot become a partner until it commences a process of political liberalisation.
At the same time, European countries should establish a “Cuban Democracy Fund” to support the emergence of a civil society in Cuba. Such a fund would be ready for instant use in the case of political changes on the island.
Europe’s peaceful transitions from dictatorship to democracy, first in Spain and later in the East, have been an inspiration for the Cuban opposition, so Europe should not hesitate now. Its own history obliges it to act.
Ten new fish and one new shrimp species discovered in Venezuela
August 31, 2003Over a year ago, when I began writing this blog, I wrote an article about the discovery of a new orchid species in Peru and how amazing it was that such discoveries could still be made in this planet. Well, through the wonders of blogging, I learned today in one of my favorite blogs, Secular Blasphemy, written by a Norwegian named Jan, that in the Caura river in the South West of Venezuela a recent expedition found ten new fish species and one new shrimp species. One of the new fish is a fuit eating pirnaha. All in a single river! Amazing isn’t it! Here is a picture of one of them named Aphyocharax yekwanae in honor of the indian tribe that lives in the area:

It’s a pity the local media has not picked this up, but blogs may help disseminate the news. (It turns out the news is all over the place, besides Jan’s Secular Blasphemy, Salon itself covered it. MSNBC also covered it via Reuters, with a better picture of the fish)
Another picture, of our reality, our marches and Chavez’.
August 25, 2003
I said that Chavez march on Saturday was large, but certainly smaller than the opposition march. I did not want to say much more than that since, at this point, I think that all that really matters is that we have a referendum and count each other. Obviously, if Chavez were as popular as he thinks, it would be to his advantage to have the referendum take place. By winning it, he could truly say, for once, that he had a mandate for his revolution. But he knows he does not. He never has. When people voted for him in 1998, they were voting for a change, not a revolution. He promised to eradicate corruption, reduce crime and improve the lot of the poor. He has done neither. Instead he set the country in a path of hate and his fake revolution, without any content, where holding on to political life and protecting your corrupt friends is now the main objective. That is why opposition marches are larger. Proof is above. This is a picture of one of the six opposition marches on Wednesday of last week. This was not the largest of the six. You can see how big it was. If you look carefully way back at your right there are still people there flowing in from the right. This march lasted more than two hours very much just like that. But what is interesting is that in the newspaper pictures you can see that Chavez’ rally thinned out once you got beyond the Museum of Science. The picture above, static like that, has more people than in Chavez’ rally. But this is irrelevant anyway, let’s have a referendum and let’s see where the millions of Chavistas are. If they win, we shut up, if we win, the revolution is dead. That is the problem, Chavez does not want his personal dream to be over, but his personal dream is a nightmare to over 80% of the Venezuela population. Unfortunately for him, for the other 20%, close to five years later is still only a hope and nothing tangible yet, despite billions of dollars in oil income, despite controlling the whole economic and the whole political system (Except the Central Bank and the opposition). As simple as that.
Another picture, of our reality, our marches and Chavez’.
August 25, 2003
I said that Chavez march on Saturday was large, but certainly smaller than the opposition march. I did not want to say much more than that since, at this point, I think that all that really matters is that we have a referendum and count each other. Obviously, if Chavez were as popular as he thinks, it would be to his advantage to have the referendum take place. By winning it, he could truly say, for once, that he had a mandate for his revolution. But he knows he does not. He never has. When people voted for him in 1998, they were voting for a change, not a revolution. He promised to eradicate corruption, reduce crime and improve the lot of the poor. He has done neither. Instead he set the country in a path of hate and his fake revolution, without any content, where holding on to political life and protecting your corrupt friends is now the main objective. That is why opposition marches are larger. Proof is above. This is a picture of one of the six opposition marches on Wednesday of last week. This was not the largest of the six. You can see how big it was. If you look carefully way back at your right there are still people there flowing in from the right. This march lasted more than two hours very much just like that. But what is interesting is that in the newspaper pictures you can see that Chavez’ rally thinned out once you got beyond the Museum of Science. The picture above, static like that, has more people than in Chavez’ rally. But this is irrelevant anyway, let’s have a referendum and let’s see where the millions of Chavistas are. If they win, we shut up, if we win, the revolution is dead. That is the problem, Chavez does not want his personal dream to be over, but his personal dream is a nightmare to over 80% of the Venezuela population. Unfortunately for him, for the other 20%, close to five years later is still only a hope and nothing tangible yet, despite billions of dollars in oil income, despite controlling the whole economic and the whole political system (Except the Central Bank and the opposition). As simple as that.
