Venezuela’s Price Control Enforcer Eduardo Saman Survives Armed Assault,
Three Dead

Oct 4th 2013, by Ewan Robertson
[image: Indepabis president Eduardo Saman (archive)]

Indepabis president Eduardo Saman (archive)

Mérida, 4th October 2013 (Venezuelanalysis.com) – The head of the state
organisation which regulates government price controls, Eduardo Saman,
survived an armed assault late Wednesday.  All three attackers were killed.

Different motives are being considered for the incident. Police authorities
have suggested that the attack was an attempted robbery of the state
official’s vehicle.

However several public figures and Saman himself are convinced the attack
was an assassination attempt against the official in order to weaken the
government of Nicolas Maduro and its regulatory policies toward the private
sector.

Eduardo Saman is the president of the Institute for the Defence of People
in Access to Goods and Services (Indepabis), a state agency which enforces
price controls and other regulatory economic measures.

Regarded as a radical figure in Chavismo, since appointed to the job in
June he has promised to improve the effectiveness of Indepabis and warned
speculators in the private economy that “the fun is over”.

The attack occurred around midnight on Wednesday as Saman was driving out
of Indepabis’ central office in Caracas. According to police reports and
Saman’s personal account, three individuals armed with handguns and
grenades appeared from a vehicle and began firing at Saman’s armoured SUV.

Saman managed to drive away from the attackers and escape while his escort
guard confronted the attackers, killing one outright. Both of the other
individuals later died; one who apparently detonated a grenade on
him/herself while fleeing capture, and the other from wounds in hospital.

*Reactions*

The incident provoked solidarity and concern from government officials and
supporters. Ernesto Villegas, the former information minister and current
candidate for metropolitan Caracas, wrote on twitter, “Solidarity with
Eduardo Saman, the target of a strange “assault” with grenades”.

Meanwhile socialist lawmaker Adel El Zabayar, who recently returned from a
visit to his ancestral Syria, argued that, “The characteristics of the
attempt against Saman demonstrate that we are now in the presence of
mercenaries and terrorist groups in Venezuela”.

Some figures speculated as to whether the incident was an attempt to repeat
the tragic fate of Daniel Anderson, a state prosecutor who was in charge of
investigating the cases of those accused of participating in the April 2002
against the government of Hugo Chavez.

Anderson was assassinated on 18 November 2004 when two car bombs were
detonated while he was driving his vehicle.

Jesus Silva, a constitutional lawyer and university professor, called on
authorities to act to avoid the same happening to Eduardo Saman.

“I know Eduardo Saman personally…I respect him a lot and I know he has
enemies in the capitalist and speculative sectors who could try to
eliminate him,” he wrote on website Aporrea.

“It would be unpardonable for such a valuable comrade who works for the
food security of Venezuela to become a victim of assassination due to the
lack of action of those who are called upon to strengthen his system of
protection,” continued Silva.

*Investigation*

Venezuela’s scientific criminal investigation police (CICPC) are
investigating the incident, and have stated that while it is too early to
confirm a definite motive, they are working on the assumption that the
attack was an attempted robbery.

“We are undertaking the investigation, we have elements which suggest to us
that this is about common criminals who tried to commit theft,” said CICPC
national director Jose Gregorio Sierralta yesterday.

The CICPC official added that one of those involved in the attacked had
been identified as Kenny Johan Nieto Viloria, 28, who had a previous
history of drug-related crime. Further, the vehicle used in the attack was
a stolen car.

*Personal account*

Today Eduardo Saman gave his personal account of the incident. The official
disputed the motive of robbery for the attack, and asked authorities to
investigate more deeply.

“My impression of the incident is that those people were trying to kill me.
They weren’t trying to take the van,” he said in an interview with ALBA
Ciudad radio.

“When I was leaving [the Indepabis office] in an armoured van, a vehicle
cut across the entrance of the institution and three people got out and
began to fire. They didn’t say it was an assault or anything. One of them
fired at me twice, at the driver’s window, right at my face. Luckily the
bullet proofing resisted…each one [also] carried a grenade.”

Saman emphasised his impression that, “The attitude of the aggressors was
not that of someone who wanted a van. They didn’t ask us to get out. They
went straight to the window and fired”.

The Indepabis president explained that he used his SUV to push aside the
aggressors’ car and was able to escape while his bodyguard escort
confronted the armed individuals.

According to Saman, the individual who died by self-detonating the grenade
did so on purpose to avoid capture, after police intercepted the attacker’s
escape effort.

“This isn’t a vulgar car thief, a car thief doesn’t head off running with a
grenade,” he argued.

The official also stated his conviction that the attack was related to his
work for the government and the “economic war” over food shortages and
currency speculation, which the government blames a deliberate sabotage
attempt by the conservative opposition.

“We’ve assumed this as an economic war with different components, the
aggressors [the opposition] will go from subtle sabotage to one that is
sharper and more drastic, and they’re going to begin aggressions against
those who participate [in the defence of government policy and the
Bolivarian revolution],” said Saman.

As a response to the attack, the security of all regional Indepabis
officials will be strengthened. Saman confirmed that he would continue in
his post, declaring, “Actions like these won’t stop us”.
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*Source URL (retrieved on 04/10/2013 - 10:19pm):*
http://venezuelanalysis.com/news/10070

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