RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Hugo Chávez’

Sheikh Hasina, Sonia Gandhi pay tributes to Basu

Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, former president H.M. Ershad and many political leaders from that country and United Progressive Alliance (UPA) chairperson Sonia Gandhi were among the dignitaries who paid their last respects to Marxist patriarch Jyoti Basu on his last journey here Tuesday.
Escorted by West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, Hasina came along with [...]

Chavez to rename world’s highest waterfall

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez wants to rename the world’s highest waterfall, the Angel Falls in the Venezuelan state of Bolivar, national media reported. “How could we accept this idea that the falls were discovered by a guy who came from the United States in a plane?” Hugo Chavez said on his radio and TV-show “Hello Mr. President.”

Chavez says UN smells more of hope than sulfur

In an hour-long speech at the UN Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez said that the “smell of sulfur” had been replaced by “hope.” It came in a sign of approval for U.S. President Barack Obama’s policies, Latin American media said.

Friends in low places

Hugo Chavez dreams of forging a new world order

THE mountains and jungles of South America are not ideal terrain for tank warfare. So it is hard to envisage what role Venezuela’s president, Hugo Chavez, has in mind for the dozens of Russian tanks on his latest military shopping list. The strategic purpose of a recent tour that took him to some of the world’s least salubrious regimes is, however, easier to discern. And it led America’s State Department to give warning on Monday September 14th of a “serious challenge to stability” in the region.

Venezuela’s increasingly autocratic leader returned on Friday from a trip that took him to Libya, Iran, Algeria, Syria, Turkmenistan, Belarus and Russia, though he also found time for a visit Spain and the Venice film festival. On his jaunt he was decorated by Libya’s leader, Muammar Qaddafi, and embraced by Aleksandr Lukashenko, president of Belarus. …

Libya marks Gaddafi anniversary

An aerial acrobatic team are seen flying above Tripoli, Libya, Aug 31

Libya is beginning a week of celebrations to mark 40 years since the coup that brought Colonel Muammar Gaddafi to power.

Many African leaders are already in Libya for an African Union summit that was held on Monday.

They will attend a big military parade and festivities to mark the occasion.

But most Western leaders are staying away, amid a political storm over the release and return to Libya of the only man jailed for the Lockerbie bombing.

Scottish authorities freed Abdel Ali Mohammed al-Megrahi on 20 August after he had served eight years of a life sentence for the 1988 bombing of Pan Am flight 103, in which 270 people died.

His subsequent hero’s welcome in Tripoli generated anger in the US and UK. The British government has also been forced to deny reports that his release was linked to an oil deal.

As Libya marks its anniversary, British authorities say they will publish all correspondence with Scottish ministers over his release.

Celebrations

Huge crowds are expected in Tripoli’s Green Park as the country marks Revolution Day.

Profile: Muammar Gaddafi

Libyans contemplate celebrations

Country profile: Libya

Muammar Gaddafi

Hundreds of dancers and musicians will take part in a show charting 12,000 years of the land’s history.

After the show comes a fireworks display, with pyrotechnics launched from ships off the coast of Tripoli. Celebrations will last for a total of six days.

Among the dignitaries at the anniversary celebrations will be several African heads of state who were attending Monday’s African Union summit in Tripoli.

The one-day meeting focused on the continent’s main trouble spots, including Sudan’s Darfur and Somalia.

But it ended without any concrete proposals on the conflicts, with the leaders merely adopting a "Tripoli Declaration" and plan of action "to find urgent solutions to crises and conflicts" in Africa.

World leaders attending include Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez, but Western leaders will be largely absent.

Col Gaddafi took power on 1 September 1969 after a bloodless coup against the king.

A small group of military officers led by the then unknown 27-year-old army officer staged a coup against King Idris, who was exiled to Egypt.

The new regime, headed by the Revolutionary Command Council, subsequently banned political parties.

For years, Libya was ostracised by Western democracies who accused it of fostering terrorism abroad and displaying nuclear ambitions.

But relations improved after Col Gaddafi renounced his pursuit of nuclear weapons in 2003.

Libya also paid hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation to victims of the Lockerbie bombing.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Chavez slams Colombia ‘incursion’

Hugo Chavez on Alo Presidente (9 August 2009)

The Venezuelan President, Hugo Chavez, has accused Colombia of carrying out a military incursion into Venezuela.

Mr Chavez said Colombian soldiers had recently been seen crossing the Orinoco river, which forms part of the border, and entering Venezuelan territory.

He said the alleged incursion was a "provocation" by Colombia’s government.

The accusations came shortly before a summit of South American leaders is due to discuss a Colombian proposal to allow US troops access to its bases.

Mr Chavez has been embroiled in a diplomatic row with his Colombian counterpart, Alvaro Uribe, ever since news of the plan emerged.

‘Growing threat’

During his weekly TV show on Sunday, President Chavez ordered his troops to get on a war footing along the border with Colombia.

"The Yankees have started to command Colombian military forces"

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

Colombia’s rocky regional relations

Uribe tours region over US pact

"The threat against us is growing," he said. "I call on the people and the armed forces – let’s go, ready for combat!"

He said Colombian soldiers had "crossed the Orinoco River in a boat and entered Venezuelan territory" and that when Venezuelan troops arrived, they had gone.

"This is a provocation by the government of Uribe," he said. "The Yankees have started to command Colombian military forces."

Venezuela’s foreign ministry would file a formal complaint, he added, warning that its military would "respond if there’s an attack".

Mr Chavez said he would use this week’s summit of the Union of South American Nations (Unasur) in Ecuador, to urge his allies in the region to pressure President Uribe to reconsider plans to increase the US military presence.

So far, only Bolivia and Ecuador have condemned the plan, while other countries like Chile and Brazil have said they will respect whatever decision Colombia takes.

Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa, who has already announced he would not be renewing the lease of the current US base in Ecuador, said he was concerned about an increase in military activity across the border his country shares with Colombia.

Map

Mr Correa broke off relations with Colombia in March last year when Colombian troops hunting down members of the left-wing Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) killed 19 of them in Ecuadorian territory.

"We cannot ignore this threat," Mr Chavez said.

The Venezuelan leader has said he is concerned that the seven Colombian bases could become a new Guantanamo, or an enclave of US influence, like Israel.

Mr Uribe has said the increased US military presence will help Colombia in the fight against drugs trafficking and left-wing rebel groups. He also says US law would only permit a maximum of 1,400 troops and civilian contractors to be based there.

Correspondents say this is not the first time tensions have risen between the Venezuela and Colombian presidents.

Last year, a war of words culminated in the Venezuelans despatching tanks and heavy armour to the border.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

The week ahead

A summit in South America, and other news

• A MEETING of the fledgling Union of South American Nations in Quito, Ecuador’s capital, on Monday August 10th, will be unusually lively, demonstrating the disunity that exists within the regional block. Alvaro Uribe, Colombia’s president, has said that he will not attend after a wave of criticism over his decision to allow American troops to use military bases in his country to pursue the battle against drug trafficking. He got a mixed response from his counterparts on a recent whirlwind tour of South America. Bolivia’s Evo Morales and Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez both blasted the plan as the first stage of widespread American military operations in the region.

See article …

Venezuela seizes coffee companies

Government inspectors check rice packaging inside the private plant of Polar industries in Calabozo, Venezuela - file photo

The Venezuelan government has seized temporary control of the processing plants of two of the country’s biggest coffee companies.

Officials said the measure was designed to guarantee supply to consumers.

They said the plants, Fama de America and Cafe Madrid, would be audited for any irregularities and could face nationalisation if these were proved.

In March, the government set quotas for 12 basic foods, including coffee, to be produced at regulated prices.

Venezuelan Agriculture Minister Elias Jaua said that the government would take control of the coffee plants for three months to allow an audit.

"If at the end of the audit, we can show there has been smuggling, hoarding, disloyal and monopolistic practices, we could consider nationalising the companies," he said.

The companies had said they would be forced to close because they were running low on supplies of coffee to be processed.

Earlier this year, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez ordered the expropriation of a rice mill, owned by a subsidiary of US food giant Cargill, accusing the company of not distributing rice at government-set prices. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Chavez accused of gagging media

Demonstrators protest against the closure of the CNB radio station in Caracas, 1 August 2009

Venezuelan opposition groups have protested against a decision to take 34 radio stations off the air, calling it an attack on freedom of speech.

As the stations stopped broadcasting on Saturday, staff said the move was aimed at giving more space to media that support President Hugo Chavez.

More than 200 other radio stations are expected to close in coming weeks.

The government says the stations are in breach of the rules for failing to hand in their registration papers on time.

The move to close the stations comes as the arguments over control of the media in Venezuela are becoming increasingly bitter, the BBC’s Will Grant reports from the Venezuelan capital Caracas.

This week a tough new media law was proposed under which journalists could be imprisoned for publishing "harmful" material.

The opposition mayor of Caracas, Antonio Ledezma, said the closure of the stations showed the government was "scared of freedom of expression".

Opposition politician Juan Carlos Caldera said the government had "turned into a mutilator of rights".

But Diosdado Cabello, head of the national regulator and public works minister, said there was no evidence that the closures were against the law, adding that they were part of efforts to make the media more democratic.

"When we – the national government, the revolutionary government – took the decision to democratise the radio-electrical spectrum… we were speaking seriously," he said.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Venezuelan election law approved

Deputies in Venezuela's National Assembly voting, 31 July 2009

Venezuela’s National Assembly has passed an election law that critics say will favour the party of President Hugo Chavez in polls next year.

The law passed easily in the National Congress, which is dominated by supporters of Mr Chavez.

It allows the National Election Council to redraw voting district boundaries.

Meanwhile, Venezuela’s media regulator ordered the closure of 34 radio stations amid a growing feud between the government and the private media.

Diosdado Cabello, the head of the national regulatory agency, said the stations would have to stop transmissions once they were notified of the ruling.

Some 240 radio stations in Venezuela are at risk of being closed for allegedly failing to hand their registration papers into the government ahead of a deadline last month.

The move comes after public prosecutor Luisa Ortega Diaz proposed a tough new media law under which journalists could be imprisoned for publishing "harmful" material.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Chavez freezes ties with Colombia

President Chavez points to a map of the Venezuelan and Colombian border during a TV appearance, 28 July 2009

Venezuela is withdrawing its ambassador from neighbouring Colombia and freezing relations, following a dispute over weapons supplied to Colombian rebels.

President Hugo Chavez, who announced the move on Venezuelan TV, also said he was halting trade deals with Colombia.

The announcement came a day after the Colombia government said weapons bought by Venezuela from Sweden had made their way to left-wing Farc guerrillas.

Mr Chavez denied this and accused Colombia of acting "irresponsibly".

"I’ve ordered to withdraw our ambassador from Bogota," the Venezuelan leader said on Tuesday. "We will freeze relations with Colombia," he added.

Mr Chavez said Venezuela would substitute imports from Colombia with goods from other countries, notably Brazil and Ecuador.

On Monday the Colombian government said its troops had recovered Swedish anti-tank weapons in a raid on a Farc camp. The Caracas government denied supplying them.

The Swedish authorities have launched an inquiry into how the Farc had acquired the weapons.

The Marxist rebels have been fighting the Bogota government since the 1960s.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Exiled Honduran President Sets Up Camp “With Water And Food” On Border

LAS MANOS, Nicaragua — Deposed President Manuel Zelaya returned to the Honduran border on Saturday and announced he would set up camp there, despite foreign leaders urging him not to force a confrontation with the government that ousted …

Regional battle

Honduras has been in crisis ever since President Manuel Zelaya was ousted by opponents who objected to his proposals for constitutional change.

The conflict reflects the battle between left and right that is raging throughout Latin America, argues George Philip, Professor of Comparative and Latin American Politics at the London School of Economics.

Ousted Honduras President Manuel Zelaya and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

In Latin America, as elsewhere, constitutional conflicts tend to reflect battles for power.

The crisis in Honduras, triggered when Mr Zelaya sought to amend the constitution to allow presidential re-election, also appears to follow this pattern.

For some people, most prominently Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, the conflict in Honduras is a battle between left and right.

According to this interpretation, the left, led by Mr Zelaya, is seeking a strong presidency able to lead a process of political and social transformation, while conservatives, like Roberto Micheletti, the interim president of Honduras, want a weaker executive, amply checked by the congress and the courts.

The conflict over presidential term limits, though not the only factor in making or inhibiting a strong presidency, at least partially reflects this difference of viewpoint.

The United States has a somewhat different perspective.

President Barack Obama is trying to show that his government is committed to democratic governance in Latin America whoever is involved.

He has pointedly been refusing to engage in a duel with Hugo Chavez, whether over Honduras or anything else.

For Mr Obama, the key issue is legitimation. He wants the US government to lose its historical reputation as a regional bully.

But Mr Obama wants to be a non-interventionist and a promoter of democracy as well as a good neighbour. Institutional conflicts within Latin America may make this more difficult.

Second terms

The issue of presidential re-election has recently become salient across the region.

Although all countries’ stories are different, there have already been a number of votes relating directly or indirectly to this issue.

"The slogan of the Mexican Revolution – ‘sufragio efectivo, no re-eleccion’ (an effective vote and no re-election) – was seen as democratising"

Historically, the idea of no re-election was intended to limit the advantages of presidential incumbency in countries where other forms of political accountability were weak.

Originally, presidents could do pretty much what they liked so long as they kept sufficient support within the military.

The slogan of the Mexican Revolution – ‘sufragio efectivo, no re-eleccion’ (an effective vote and no re-election) – was seen as democratising.

When democracy once again started to take root in Latin America in the 1980s, most national constitutions forbade immediate re-election, with second terms not permitted until after a waiting period, if at all.

The 1980s were a bad economic decade for Latin America and few incumbents had any prospect of re-election. The issue therefore tended to be put on hold.

In the 1990s, though, when the regional economy started to pick up, it returned with a vengeance.

Popular votes

Peru’s President Alberto Fujimori closed the national congress in 1992, organised elections for a new constituent assembly and had the new constitution approved by national plebiscite.

This new constitution, unlike the old, permitted a second consecutive election and Mr Fujimori stood again for election in 1995 and won.

His attempt to run for a third time, however, ended in disaster.

Constitutional changes during the 1990s also permitted a second consecutive presidential term in both Argentina and Brazil.

Argentine President Carlos Menem, once re-elected, considered running for a third term but then drew back.

Former Argentinian President Juan Peron

In Colombia, the constitution has recently been changed to allow a second consecutive term and there are suggestions that President Alvaro Uribe is considering asking to be allowed to run yet again.

The issue of re-election became more politically polarising once Hugo Chavez was elected in Venezuela.

Mr Chavez used a series of plebiscites to bypass the existing congress and change the constitution.

The new constitution extended the presidential term from five years to six and permitted a single re-election.

Things changed further after Mr Chavez was successfully re-elected in 2006. He then called for a plebiscite on permitting a third presidential term.

He lost the initial vote in 2007 but then called a fresh vote on basically the same issue (there were a few differences) earlier this year, which he won.

The pattern of an incumbent president calling for a new constitution to strengthen the power of the presidency and permit a second term (or more) has also been adopted by Mr Chavez’s main South American allies – Evo Morales in Bolivia and Rafael Correa in Ecuador.

Now we have the crisis in Honduras, and Nicaragua’s President Daniel Ortega has also just recently called for a change in the national constitution to permit presidential re-election.

It may seem anomalous that the re-election issue is so widely seen as important within Latin America.

There are, after all, ways of bypassing it. One is to use presidential relatives.

Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner was elected to the presidency of Argentina in 2007, following on immediately from her husband’s term.

Argentina’s Juan Peron was replaced as president by his wife Isabel upon his death in 1974, though her term was brief and disastrous.

However, Honduras’s particular conflict, while it has an institutional aspect, can also be seen as a further round in the conflict between Mr Chavez (and his supporters) and the region’s conservatives. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Eric Ehrmann: Honduras… The Big Backstory

The White House denounced the action in Honduras as “illegal.” But that call requires Washington to cut off all but humanitarian aid and could jeopardize the big Soto Cano base outside Tegucigalpa.

Honduras Talks Break Down Over Zelaya’s Return

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica — Talks on resolving Honduras’ leadership crisis broke off Sunday after the interim government rejected a proposed compromise, saying a provision calling for ousted President Manuel Zelaya to serve out his term was “…

Former Venezuela minister charged

By Will Grant
BBC News, Caracas

Map

Venezuela’s former defence minister is facing charges over his alleged role in violent clashes between police and protesters in Caracas in 1989.

Italo del Valle Alliegro is accused of having played a role in ordering the violent repression of the protest.

The protests, sparked by a series of economic restructuring measures which included price rises on fuel and public transport, left hundreds dead.

The retired general denies all the charges against him.

The street riots of February 1989 in the Venezuelan capital are known as the Caracazo.

Government-imposed price rises, particularly on the cost of fuel, provoked several days of looting and clashes with the military which left an official figure of 274 people dead.

Some groups say as many as 3,000 people were killed.

Very few public figures were put on trial over the violence and it has stained Venezuela’s reputation ever since.

Since coming to power, Hugo Chavez – who was a lieutenant in the army at the time – has described the event as a massacre by the state, and ordered a tribunal to investigate the Caracazo.

Now, charges have been brought against the then-defence minister, Mr del Valle Alliegro, one of the highest members of the government of former President Carlos Andres Perez to be charged in relation to the violence to date.

The retired general is facing charges of alleged complicity in homicide and breaking international human rights accords. He denies the charges.

Mr Chavez often cites the Caracazo as one of the key events which led him to attempt a coup against Mr Perez a few years later, in a failed effort to remove him from power.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Honduras Talks Fail To Reach Agreement

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica — Delegates representing the ousted and interim governments of Honduras failed to forge an agreement during a second day of talks and no fixed date was set for future negotiations.

The only consensus reached between…

Honduras talks end without accord

Milton Jimenez, from the delegation of deposed Honduras President Manuel Zelaya, and Costa Rica President Oscar Arias in San Jose, Costa Rica (10 July 2009)

Two days of talks in Costa Rica aimed at ending the political crisis in Honduras have ended without agreement.

Mediators from the host country said the two sides had agreed to resume talks shortly but some regional leaders said they saw little sign of progress.

Ousted President Manuel Zelaya and interim leader Roberto Micheletti had refused to meet but held separate talks with Costa Rican President Oscar Arias.

Correspondents say the former allies’ positions remain far apart.

Mr Zelaya, who was removed from Honduras at gun point in a coup last month, continues to describe Mr Micheletti as a criminal, while Mr Micheletti’s interim government has said Mr Zelaya will be arrested if he tries to return to the country.

Both men left the talks on Thursday, leaving delegations behind to continue the discussions.

Mr Zelaya flew to the Dominican Republic, where he is hoping to gather more support, and Mr Micheletti has returned to Honduras.

On arriving back in the Honduran capital, Tegucigalpa, Mr Micheletti said: "We are in agreement with his [Mr Zelaya's] return here – but to be sent directly to the courts."

Shortly after his return, Mr Micheletti announced he had accepted the resignation of his de facto Foreign Minister, Enrique Ortez, for using racially offensive language about US President Barack Obama.

Mr Ortez was reported to have described Mr Obama as "negrito" – meaning "little black man" – which Mr Micheletti said was "a scandalous epithet".

‘Timid measures’

On Friday, Hugo Chavez, the President of Venezuela and one of Mr Zelaya’s key supporters, said the talks in Costa Rica were dead and that it was "horrible" to see the "usurper" Mr Micheletti being treated with deference by Mr Arias.

CRISIS TIMELINE

  • 28 June: Troops expel Zelaya; Micheletti becomes interim leader
  • 29 June: US President Obama condemns the overthrow as illegal
  • 4 July: Organization of American States suspends Honduras
  • 5 July: Zelaya’s jet is turned back from Honduras, amid clashes
  • 9 July: Micheletti leaves mediated talks in Costa Rica

A pro-Zelaya rally in Tegulcigalpa, 3 July

Mr Chavez also criticised what he said were "timid measures" by the US in response to the crisis and demanded to know why they had not recalled their ambassador imposed sanctions.

The BBC’s Charles Scanlon in the region says much will now depend on what Washington decides to do next.

The US has already cut some aid to Honduras but has not exerted its full economic and diplomatic muscle, says our correspondent.

The political crisis erupted after Mr Zelaya attempted to hold a non-binding public consultation to ask people whether they supported moves to change the constitution.

Opponents said that could have led to the removal of the current one-term limit on serving as president and so paved the way for Mr Zelaya’s possible re-election.

He was forced out of Honduras at gunpoint on 28 June. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Bob Dinneen: The Days of Energy Malaise Are Over

So when are we going to wake up to the fact that our dependence on imported oil is worse than in the days of Carter’s “malaise”? And what are we going to do about it?

Venezuela cracks down on ‘media terrorism’

Government revokes over 200 radio licences and forces television channels to broadcast many of Chávez’s speeches

Venezuela’s government has revoked the licences of more than 200 radio stations and forced satellite and cable television to broadcast many of President Hugo Chávez’s speeches live.

The government said the new regulations would deepen the country’s socialist revolution and combat “media terrorism” by privately owned networks. Critics said they were an attack on free speech.

Terrestrial TV channels have long been obliged to interrupt regular programming to transmit Chávez’s speeches – they can last more than four hours – when he declares what is known as a “cadena”.

Even many of his supporters would switch to satellite and cable to continue watching baseball or soap operas but under the new regulations, which came into effect today, those channels must also switch to Chávez if more than 70% of their content is produced within Venezuela.

The measure will affect RCTV, a vocal critic of the president which relaunched as a subscription network after its public licence was not renewed in 2007. It supported a brief coup against the president in 2002.

The government also said it was shifting 154 FM and 86 AM radio stations into public hands to “democratise” the airwaves. “The use of the radio-electric spectrum is one of the few areas where the revolution has not been felt,” said Diosdado Cabello, head of the telecommunications agency. The stations, almost 40% of the country’s total, had not updated their registrations, said Cabello.

The government also banned networks owning more than stations to break up what it said were “media latifundios”, a reference to large, privately-owned estates. Venezuela’s radio chamber said the regulations attacked freedom of expression and violated the constitution.

Since coming to power a decade ago Chávez, a fiery leftist and gifted communicator, has greatly expanded the state’s media empire to challenge strident anti-government coverage in privately-owned media.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds