[Mb-civic] A Little Fidel in Caracas

Michael Butler michael at michaelbutler.com
Sat Dec 18 10:13:14 PST 2004


http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/editorials/la-ed-chavez18dec18.story

EDITORIAL

A Little Fidel in Caracas

 December 18, 2004

 In 1992, Lt. Col. Hugo Chavez learned the hard way that a military coup was
the wrong way to seize power when his attempt to rule Venezuela fizzled,
landing him in jail. Seven years later, Chavez "converted" to democracy, and
his fortune changed. He won the presidency.

 Since then, Chavez and his cronies have been busy converting Venezuela's
nascent democracy into a dictatorship. While paying lip service to
democratic values, they have gradually been stripping Venezuelans of their
basic rights and freedoms. The protests of other governments and of human
rights organizations, meanwhile, have fallen on deaf ears.

 Before winning an August referendum on his rule, Chavez promised to mend
his authoritarian ways. If anything, his triumph seems to have emboldened
him. Exercising his control over the National Assembly, Chavez is
systematically clamping down on democratic freedoms.

 Revisions to the penal code include longer prison terms for those convicted
of libel and indefensible limitations on the public's right to criticize
public officials. A particularly dodgy measure would make it a criminal act
to bang pots and other kitchen utensils during public protests, a timeless
form of political expression in South America. This week, his operatives in
the National Assembly appointed 17 judges and 32 alternate judges to an
expanded Supreme Court, further solidifying his control over the judicial
branch of the Venezuela government.

 A purge in the armed forces after a failed April 2002 coup attempt has left
the military firmly on Chavez's side. Now, the only independent institutions
in the country are some labor unions, the Catholic Church and the nation's
beleaguered media. Last week, Chavez signed a new "social responsibility"
law that forbade radio and TV stations to air inappropriate sex and violence
between the hours of 5 a.m. and 11 p.m. Ostensibly, the law is intended to
protect children; in reality, it will allow the government to fine and close
down any station it finds objectionable. The law leaves the definition of
violence up to government officials. A station showing news images of a
"violent" protest against Chavez, for example, could be shut down under the
new law.

 The international community has little leverage on Caracas. That's largely
because Chavez exports plenty of oil and anti-American rhetoric, which gives
him considerable power in his dealings with both the developed world and his
Latin American neighbors.

 As increasingly frustrated democratic forces in Venezuela run out of
options, the best way to prevent social unrest in that deeply divided
country is for other left-leaning South American presidents ‹ like Ricardo
Lagos of Chile, Nestor Kirchner of Argentina and Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
of Brazil ‹ to speak up. They need to convince Chavez that mimicking his
buddy Fidel Castro is incompatible with the region's commitment to
democracy. 


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