(Kagan McCloud for The National)The coverage of the past week's ugly clashes in Caracas, Venezuela, has characteristically reinforced the image of a tyrannical Hugo Chavez, bent on
controlling the country's broadcast media.
Hundreds of students have protested, again, over the closure of RCTV -
one of Venezuela's media channels that have vehemently opposed the
president while supporting the oligarchy that he replaced. Mainstream
media has offered little explanation of Chavez's seemingly draconian
actions, save for citing his apparent and plausible desire to silence
criticism of his leadership. Nor have they attempted to detail the
presence of pro-Chavez supporters, including students, who have clashed
with the protesters (the two youths killed in the clashes were both pro-chavez supporters).
The
reports coming out of Venezuela have focused on the ruling United
Socialist Party of Venezuela's (PSUV) insistence that the country's
media adhere to government-imposed broadcasts that are now law, including speeches from
President Chavez.
"The new regulations have been roundly
criticized by Chavez opponents, the Roman
Catholic Church and media organizations", crooned
AP's Fabiola Sanchez, echoing the sentiments of the international
press.
She continues: "Jose Miguel Vivanco, Americas director of Human
Rights Watch,
accused the president of cracking down on independent media that don't
share his socialist policies.
'Chavez has sought to intimidate and punish broadcasters who
criticise
his government," Vivanco said in a statement. "Now he's also going after
those who refuse to promote his own political agenda.'"
This would all seem rather convincing and conclusive to most,
compounded by the reality of Venezuela's double digit inflation, and,
somewhat paradoxically for a major energy supplier, an electricity
crisis. It would appear that Chavez is losing his grip on power and is
acting increasingly egotistical and draconian in order to compensate for
his lack of popular support.
To report that the media is being attacked after
independent and objectively criticising the government's socialist
agenda, however, is misleading. Since his inauguration Chavez has aggressively redistributed
wealth and introduced free health care and free education for all ages, creating near 100 per cent
literacy in the nation with a history of poverty and a huge rich-poor divide.
A couple of documentaries shed some light on the direction the
country has taken, namely John Pilger's War on Democracy. Pilger's piece
in the Guardian and a subsequent interview with
the award-winning journalist provide an alternative depiction of
events to the mainstream media's.
Pilger's
documentary showed footage from the country's media depicting Chavez as
a fascist and a Nazi, with caricatures of him portrayed as Adolf
Hitler. Pilger's interviews with the upper classes found that their
financial situation hadn't changed, and that in fact capitalism was
booming (pre-recession), but that politically, they had lost their
political clout.
To understand Chavez' opposition to the country's media, one must
take a look at the last decade. RCTV and other privately-owned channels
Venevisión, Globovisión and Televen vocally supported the illegal
military coup attempt against Chavez in 2002. At the time Chavez was
kidnapped and taken to a military base while RCTV reported that he had
resigned from power, and heralded the change as a victory for democracy.
After the coup,
hundreds of thousands of the country's poor came down from the barrios
(slums) and, supported by elements of the military, demanded the return
of their elected president.
Footage from an Irish documentary The Revolution Will Not be
Televised showed a coup leader thanking Venevision and RCTV for their
assistance and referred to the media as a "secret weapon".
So
while Chavez continues to become increasingly unpopular with the West,
which he has effectively kicked out of his country, he remains popular
with the country's poor and has built ties with Russia and Iran.
Pilger concludes that: "he [Chavez] offers the threat of an alternative way of developing a decent
society. In other words, the threat of a good example in a continent
where the majority of humanity has long suffered a Washington-designed
peonage."
It
is becoming apparent, however, that while fighting the partisan media,
Chavez's militant enforcers are overstepping the mark, and warrant
accusations of stifling freedom of speech.
Dr Jairo Lugo, a journalism lecturer at Stirling University and an active journalist, has come to that conclusion.
He reported that: "The national prosecutor, Luisa Ortega Diaz, has proposed a "Law of Media
Crimes" to regulate all content of all media outlets. Journalists who
give an opinion based on "wrong facts" - including crime reporting -
will be deemed criminals and jailed for up to six years.
A friend of Dr Lugo's suffered this very fate, and he added in his article that: "Gustavo shares the fate of more than two dozen journalists who are
in jail, have had to leave the country, or were made to resign from
their jobs because of political pressure"
It
remains to be seen whether Chavez, whose party won ten elections in
eight years, will be able to retain popular support and resist leaning
towards a system of government that his critics have already likened to
Fidel Castro's Cuba.
Click here to read a Reuters article and interview with the leader of the student opposition at
Caracas Central University.
Venezuela has the highest crime and murder rate in South America.... 27% inflation the most corrupt government after Haiti in latin america. Chavez has undercover national guardsmen attacking protesters and opposition.
He is heading a repressive state.... e has soldiers in supermarkets taken over by the government while he criticizes the US soldiers saving lives in Haiti...
The media may be against him... but once he controls it.. the people will continue to suffer.
They passed a law that all stations MUST carry his speaches, another one prohibiting criticism of the goverment. He is a Tyrant
I live in Venezuela and this is not at all about the closing of a TV station, which should be able to say almost anything under freedome of speech. Venezuela has been ROCKED by voilence, 35 deaths last week in Caracas alone and your telling me everything is just fine!!!! Power outages, water shortages, my savings account devalued, are not the reason why people are protesting.
The closing of RCTV is just icing on the cake.
Paul, we both live and work in another country that is a major energy supplier but faces an electricity crisis: the UAE.
After covering the energy industry for many years, I no longer consider this an anomaly. Here is a list of OPEC members caught in this precise pickle:
Saudi Arabia, Iran, Kuwait, the UAE, Iraq, Venezuela, Nigeria, Angola.
That's eight of the twelve OPEC countries, including the group's top four oil exporters.
A few years back, Alberta, the Canadian oil producing province that exports about half of its crude output to the US, also faced electricity shortages because it had bungled privatisation of its power sector.
Perhaps there's something about making large amounts money from selling energy to others that makes oil exporters take their eyes off the ball when it comes to their domestic energy requirements.
Well writtenarticle