Archive for the 'Venezuela' Category

Hugo Chavez’ perverse and undemocratic logic

September 9, 2008

Using his customary perverse and undemocratic logic,
President Hugo Chavez gave proof to the world that he does not believe in
democracy nor does he have respect for the laws. Moreover, if there were Rule
of Law in Venezuela, his words yesterday would be sufficient to overturn many
of the 26 Bills approved in the eve of the deadline for the Enabling Bill,
which allowed him to legislate, by decree for 18 months.

Chavez’ perverse interpretation was that he did not violate
the Constitution, because what he did was to legislate what the voters did not
want to have become part of the Venezuelan Constitution.  He could not be more dense and
autocratic than with this sentence:

“One thing is that it was not approved to include this or
that proposal in the Constitution and another one to do it as part of a Law”

Chavez even said that the vote was by a small minority, as
if democracy required a large majority. What is clear is that Chavez refuses to
respect what the people decided in December 2007 and will continue to do so,
unless people fight it and you can be sure that the November elections will not
be much of a fight.  The voters may
be able to rebel and elect half of the Governors of the country from opposition
candidates and Chavez will find a way to ignore that victory and boycott them.

What am I saying? He does not even need to do that, he can just use one of the 26 Bills and create a regional authority above each elected opposition Governor and short circuit and block them.

Which by the way, was one of the proposals rejected in December…

Absurd? Just wait and see…

Direct Flight to backwardness in Venezuela

September 8, 2008

Today the Homeland Security Department issued a warning about the fact that it has been unable to check security procedures at Venezuelan airports from which flights go to the US. This is due to the lack of cooperation of the Venezuelan Government. I was planning to write about it, but Veneconomy sent this opinion piece this afternoon that simply said it all:

Direct Flight to backwardness by Veneconomy

For many years, Venezuela was given a Category II rating by the US aviation authorities, which meant that
Venezuelan airlines were prevented from flying to the United States.


In 2006, after making many adjustments to meet international standards,
complying with endless technical requirements, and undertaking extensive
modernization in the area of infrastructure, the National Civil Aviation
Institute (INAC) culminated a long process for recertifying Venezuela in
Category I, as a result of which domestic airlines were once again able to fly
their routes to the United States under the Venezuelan flag and with Venezuelan
crews and Venezuelan registered aircraft.


However, this progress seems to be about to suffer a setback.


This weekend, the US Department of Homeland Security reported that it had been
impossible to determine whether or not Venezuelan airports and direct flights
between Venezuela and the United States
complied with the security rules established by the International Civil
Aviation Organization (ICAO). According to press reports, this impediment is
apparently due to the fact that the Venezuelan authorities have refused to
allow the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) to inspect Maracaibo and Valencia airports alleging that,
under international security standards, the only agency entitled to conduct
these inspections is the ICAO, which has a visit scheduled for January 2009.


VenEconomy respects the
INAC’s legal right to reject the visit by representatives of the TSA. But it
costs nothing to be polite, and Venezuela
has always extended this courtesy to US government officials in the past.


However, according to Nelson Bocaranda, the government’s intolerance has reach
such a pitch that the INAC has threatened to eliminate some flights of US airlines
between the US and Venezuela.
VenEconomy considers that an
inspection of this type would be most timely at this moment, when there is a
clear conflict of interests in this area in Venezuela. A single person occupies
the presidency of the INAC, the Executive’s Coordinated Air Transportation
Service (SATA), and the airline Conviasa. In other words, the supervisee is the
same person as the supervisor.


For example, this three-hatted president would have to answer questions from
the US security representatives such as: Why did you allow the Conviasa
aircraft, which crashed a few days ago in Ecuador, to do a night flight when
international standards indicate that, if an aircraft does not meet all air
navigation standards, it should only fly during the daytime? or, Why, if it was
a well-known secret that some pilots took illegal shortcuts when departing from
MéridaAirport, the INAC did not take the necessary measures? Had they done so,
perhaps the accident of the Santa Bárbara Airline, in which so many lives were
lost, could have been prevented.


In short, it seems that the US
transportation security authorities are sending a very important message on the
state of airport security in Venezuela.

A guide for understanding freedom of speech in Venezuela

September 8, 2008


A guide for understanding
freedom of speech in
Venezuela by Teodoro Petkoff in Tal Cual

I don’t know if it is a
coincidence, but what is happening to the Villegas brothers, Vladimir, Mario
and Ernesto is something that should be in Ripley’s. Besides the curious detail
that three members of the same family, reporters all three, have been victims
of measures that if they are not repressive they are quite close, the case of
the three Villegas’ could serve well to the “revolutionary tourists” to
understand well how it is that freedom of speech is handled in Venezuela. These
good souls, like Ignacio Ramonet and Danny Glover, when not the kids from the
Unified Spanish Left, always have on the tip of their tongue the topic of
freedom of speech in Venezuela.
One explains to them that certainly, there is no censorship here and that in
some media outlets you can say all you want against the Government and its owner. One
attempts to clarify that this is due more to the fact that these people do not
allow the Government to intimidate them with its pressures, threats and
blackmail, but that quite a few of these media outlets have been broken and
become “accommodating” to the Government. Then, so that they understand well
how things work, here is the Villegas case. Mario, the oldest, who is not
pro-Chavez, works as a professional at the tax office SENIAT, but because as a
columnist for El Mundo he has spared no effort to criticize and point out things
about the regime, SENIAT sent him to Santa Elena de Uairen in the border with
Brazil. Vladimir, the second oldest, pro-Chavez but not unconditional nor the
type to shut up, has just been fired from the TV Station run by Maripili
Hernandez, precisely because his opinions do not adapt themselves to what “I the
Supreme” expects from his followers. Ernesto, the third one, one of the anchors
of channel 8, who is also pro-Chavez, came out to defend the cameramen
attacked by the top Capo. “Coincidentally” his morning program has been
suspended since then. Do you Sean Penn now understand how things work in
Venezuela?

Electric sector begins to show Chavez’ recipe for disaster

September 6, 2008

Hugo Chavez cut short his visit to South Africa, reportedly to take
charge of the electricity problem after last Monday’s blackout, but the
truth is that he came back early because as Venezuela’s power went on
the blink on Monday, reports came out showing a drop in the
Government’s popularity which was not going to be helped by the
nationwide power shortage.

Then, in an improvised nationwide TV address Chavez tried his old
formula of blaming the past, saying he is in charge and promising that
in three months the whole problem will be solved. Of course, the
deadline is right after the regional elections, just so that nobody can
say he promised and did not deliver before then.

And there is no way he can deliver, because his speech was a potpourri
of lies and incoherent facts, none of which are based on the reality of
the country’s electric grid. In fact, even the simplistic explanation
given by the Government, a sudden fault in one of the trunk lines,
seemed fishy as not everything on this side of the guilty fault
actually lost power.

The reality is that the bombastic energy plan announced in December
2006, has not been able to fulfill its goals for the electric sector in
its first two years, as most projects are still in the drawing board
and they are not even at the stage of ordering equipment.

Meanwhile, there has been little investment and maintainance since
1998. Chavez suggested that there had been no maintenance in the Tacoa
plant since 1981, but this was one of those lies he delivered with a
straight face, which had no foundation, Tacoa was built in 1978 and
suffered a fire in 1982 that required major repairs.

And a similar charge about Guri holds no water (yes, it’s a pun), as
without Guri the problem would be quite severe. Chavez also lied about
Caruache, which he says was in shambles when he arrived in 1998.
Nothing further from the truth, the Caruache plant was on schedule in
1997.

As an example, an engineer formerly in charge of Planning at Edelca,
which runs Guri, said that at the Planta Centro power plant, one unit
stopped working in 2000, another in 2002 and the remainder lines are
functioning at 50% capacity. Chavez suggested that one of the units in
Planta Centro was going on line as if he had bought it and delivered it
as part of investment under him, but the truth is that this unit broke
down and has finally been fixed.

Chavez mentioned projects, which are really not part of the solution.
He spoke of 32 projects but none are major and the one he devoted the
most time about, is a regional project with no direct link to the
national network.

The truth is that Venezuela has daily rationing of power and blackouts
are the daily fare in the interior of Venezuela This was the second
large blackout this year and Caracas, where blackouts were rare before
the nationalization of Electricidad de Caracas, has joined the country
in suffering from regular problems.

Like many other things in the country, the power grid suffers from too
much politics and too little management as military displaced
professional managers in the major electric corporations and
professional teams were disbanded. Add no investment and lack of
maintenance and this was another Chavez recipe for disaster in the
making.

Add a small emergency power plant to the future needs of your home. This problem will not be solved anytime soon.

Inflation and Venezuela’s structurally irresponsible politicians

September 3, 2008

It never ceases to amaze me how politicians seldom seem to assume responsibility for the things they do wrong. But the leaders of this fake revolution have to be the worst ones at never assuming responsibility for the destruction they have brought on this poor country and how they are never critical of the bad job they are doing, even internally.

A couple of weeks ago, Hugo Chavez recognized publicly that his Land Bill has not shown a single success and he is getting impatient. Funny, that Bill is eight years old and among others, his wonderful and genius brother Adam, was in charge of its implementation at one time or another. Same with cooperatives, the one time wet dream of the autocrat, turned into absolute failures, but good money keeps been thrown after bad, just because nobody dares pull the plug on one of the autocrat’s pet projects. Imagine, he might get mad and fire them!

But the ultimate insult to anyone’s intelligence was last week’s press conference by the Minister of Finance Ali Rodriguez, where among other pearls, he suggested that Venezuelan inflation is a structural problem due to speculators and “thieves”.

However, if you look at the CPI over the last ten years, as you can see it looks anything but structural, as it has jumped from 10% to 30% twice in that time after flirting with the 10% level. Thus, if anything, it looks like structural inflation is about 10% and the remainder is due to the incompetent and irresponsible policies of the Chavez Government, no? In fact, it is hard to call the latest rise structural, when it keeps going up and up! (In the plot I have been generous, extrapolating end of the year CPI to 30%, it is likely to be higher 33-35%)

But if that graph looks irresponsible, Venezuela has the highest inflation by far in Latin America, the next graph below shows accumulated inflation since Chavez came to power.

It is an almost 800% rise in these long ten years. I guess this must be part of the revolution. What is amazing, is that people have taken it and Chavez remains popular. Because salaries have not gone up 800% in the last ten years and if I showed food inflation, it would be even worse. But nothing like blaming others for your incompetence.

The worst part is, we haven’t seen anything yet, things are so distorted that something has to give and todays’ inflation will seem low when things unravel in the face of such stupid and irresponsible economic policies.

(Love those Excel Mac graphs!)

The Miami Venezuelan Maletagate trial part II: Duran credentials and Tarek Al Aissami

September 1, 2008


(In Spanish here)

As part of the evidence to prove that Franklin Duran was
acting as a foreign agent in the US, the Prosecutor will introduce as evidence
a Venezuelan Army credential that was on Duran, when he was detained in Miami.
Duran’s defense lawyer will call on a former Venezuelan official whose name is
Daisy Canizales, who will testify that such credentials are honorific and are
very common in Venezuela.

According to the same document introduced by the Defense neither
the Venezuelan Army nor the Venezuelan Intelligence Agency DISIP operate
outside Venezuela or run secret operations outside Venezuela.

Duran’s lawyer, Edward Shohat, wants to make the trial
appear to be a “spectacle trial” to make Hugo Chavez look bad and has gone as
far as asking possible members of the jury whether they sympathize with either
Hugo Chavez or Fidel Castro.

Last Thursday, the Prosecutor provided a picture as
evidence without specifying what it will use it for. All it did was to identify
the man in the picture as Tarek Al Aissami, shown here in another picture:

Who is Al Assiami, none other than the Vice-Minister for Citizen
Security of the Minister of Interior and
Justice
, the Ministry in charge of intelligence and the police in
Venezuela.

It is unclear in what context his name will be used in the
Miami trial

Hugo Chavez speaks like the true autocrat he is

September 1, 2008


Hugo Chavez yesterday in his variety show Alo Presidente:

“What I feel like, is to shove them with 26 more laws”

It says it all, he does what he “feels” like and
democracy has no place in his screwed up brain.

Conviasa plane crashes, Government had been warned of problems…

August 31, 2008

We are sometimes accused of blaming Hugo Chavez for things he
supposedly has no control over, like the viaduct, where he was warned over and
over about the danger of it falling and Chavez said this was a media conspiracy…until
it fell.

Well, today we hear the sad news that a Venezuelan
Conviasa cargo flight crashed in Ecuador
with the all members of the crew
dying.

But on July 3d. Nelson Bocaranda in
his weekly rumor column said
:

CONVIASA. Sólo la bendición divina ha evitado accidentes
CONVIASA. Solo la bendición divina ha evitado accidentes en esta línea del
gobierno donde cualquier denuncia de los pilotos o el resto del personal se
paga con el despido inmediato y el ingreso a la lista de Tascón. Me traen los
documentos con el caso del avión Boeing B737-200 con siglas YV101T…

Which translates as:

CONVIASA: Only a divine blessing has avoided accidents in
CONVIASA this Government airline where any denunciation by the pilots or the
rest of the personnel is paid with an immediate firing and your inclusion in
the Tascon list. They bring me the documents of a Boeing B737-200 with registry
YV101T…

Well, I don’t know if the airplane is the same, but it is a
B737-200 that crashed in Ecuador and the news release says that it was its way
there for “maintenance”, adding another piece to this puzzle.

Recall the Government had to self-intervene Conviasa in May and so far the whole affair of running the airline ha been an expsensive disaster.

Who is responsible? This is another Chavez folly…

Maletagate case to be covered here in Spanish and English

August 30, 2008

I am still amazed at the absence in the local media, other than Noticiero Digital and blogs, of any mention of the document introduced by the Miami Prosecutor in the Maletagate trial. Amazed, because the document compromises two acting Governors who are Chavistas, at least two former Ministers of the Chavez administration as well as one of the most visible candidates in the upcoming regional elections, former Minister of Education Aristobulo Isturiz, the PSUV candidate to the Alcaldia Mayor of Caracas.

Amazed that such a significant case, involving such prominent figures can pass under the table. The amounts mentioned in the document that I linked to in my previous article from the case are simply staggering, not in the millions of dollars, but in the hundreds of millions of dollars. And this is just the tip of the iceberg.

Besides the silence of the press, there is of course no investigation of the charges locally by either the Prosecutor’s office or the National Assembly. Such is the level of immorality and indecency that Venezuelan politics has reached today.

I will be reporting on the case and will attempt, as time allows it, to translate all of the posts into Spanish and place them in the Spanish section of the blog El Excremento del Diablo. I will compile all of the posts in English in this section  and will provide a link in each article to the corresponding post in Spanish.

The Empire of Mediocrity by Elcides Rojas in El Universal

August 29, 2008

The Empire of Mediocrity by Elcides Rojas in
El Universal

For XXIst. Century Socialism, the worse things are, the
better. And it has only been ten years…

It is no only Latin America that will change its name,
according to one of the celestial inspiration of the leader of the
intercontinental revolution. It is, no more nor less, the same trick applied
during the last ten years in that titanic fight that occupies so much time of
the justice seeking military and neoliberal socialists.

For the revolution, as it is well known, it is much easier
to rebaptize than to build from scratch. The endless rant, the sack of insults,
the show, the pose, the colics and the eternal wars against the empire
certainly do not allow the invincible team to settle down and start up the
mission, promised so many times, of converting Venezuelan into a world
superpower.

It is very difficult for a leader of this pleasure seeking
communism to carry out the tidying up of Argentina’s finances, the reduction of
poverty in Haiti, the total literacy of Bolivia, the reduction of infant mortality
in Ecuador, the construction of thousands of housing units in Paraguay, the
improvement of the quality of life in Nicaragua, providing access to cheap fuel
to the poor in the US, and all of that without stopping that God giving task of
attacking with the success which with they do it, the mountain of problems that
drown local socialists.

Parque del Este is now Francisco De Miranda, Ince is now
called Inces, the old ministries of Gomez and Perez Jimenez are now the Popular
Power for whatever. The barrios squashed by garbage are now communal councils. The
small buses and vans are popular transportation units, companies are socialist
production units, and the outpatient units are called Barrio Adentro. The
corrupt are national heroes defamed by the right wing. The old bodegas or local
stores are Pdval or Mercal. The devalued Bolivar, isolated from the world, is
called the strong Bolivar. The military are the soldiers of communism or death.
The high schools built by Betancourt or Leoni are now Bolivarian. The companies
created by Carlos Andres Perez are now socialist enterprises. The buy and sell deals
done by the Government are called nationalizations. The sportsmen went from athletes
in high-level competitions to being moving billboards of  revolutionary improvisation. In Barinas,
nobody likes Bolivars or dollars they die for the oriental Turimiquires or the
Yaracuy Lionzas. The haciendas are now socialist endogenous developments and
they don’t produce mosquitoes, even if they are full of Cuban technicians. The
vans are now large vans, reporters are traitors to the motherland, and
opposition members are lackeys of the Empire. The banks, just imagine, are socialist
banks. The Colombian guerrillas went from allies to old-fashioned terrorists.
The poor are poorer, but organized in cells and communes for the poor.

And, of course, socialist mediocrity is treated as excellence.
The more the failures, the better the awards.