By Robert Corzine and Andy Webb-Vidal
Published: September 29 2000 19:27GMT | Last Updated: September 29
2000 21:44GMT



If music does indeed draw out the inner man, then the closing session
of this week's summit meeting of the Organisation of Petroleum
Exporting Countries in Caracas offered a rare insight into the leaders
of perhaps the world's most disparate collection of countries.

As a Venezuelan folk band belted out compulsive Latin rhythms, the
summit's genial host, President Hugo Chavez, the paratrooper turned
imprisoned failed coup leader turned populist politician and by far
the most charismatic Opec leader, could hardly contain his enthusiasm.

His street-wise political instinct to break into song - something he
does regularly as part of his popular weekly radio programme - was
only just held in check by an equally strong gut instinct to retain a
semblance of statesman-like decorum.

Elsewhere around the table the reactions ranged from the dreamy
swaying of Abdurrahman Wahid, Indonesia's president, to the serious
but nonetheless out-of-sync finger tapping exercise indulged in by
Saud Nasser Al-Sabah, the senior Kuwaiti representative.

That Opec leaders should react so differently to something as simple
as a catchy tune is perhaps not so surprising, given the sheer
diversity of the group.

It is often said that it is God's little joke that he put the vast
bulk of the world's oil reserves in the most desolate, out-of
the-way - not to say strange and frustratingly complex - countries.

So perhaps it is not so surprising that oil politics should also bring
together strange and complex bedfellows, bound only by their financial
dependence on the black stuff.

And it is also often said that Opec's greatest achievement is its very
existence. The fact that this week's summit was only the second in its
40-year history and the first for 25 years is a reflection on the
cartel's inherent volatility.

That volatility is reflected in Opec protocol, a nightmare for
organisers. Iran, Iraq, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia may occasionally see
eye to eye on oil policy, but looking each other in the eye over
dinner is another matter. On Wednesday the Saudis complained that the
Iraqis were seated just a little too close for comfort.

The same dinner disclosed other potential faultlines. The Venezuelan
hosts decided to ban alcohol at the dinner in deference to the
religious sensitivities of some of their Middle Eastern guests. But
that did little to endear the organisation in the eyes of Angola, a
newly emerging oil giant that Opec is courting. Their delegates were
said to have been less than amused at the absence of a cold beer, and
were heard to utter words to the effect that if they wanted passion
fruit and papaya juice, they could just as easily have stayed at home.

This week Mr Chavez took full advantage of the summit's bully pulpit
to warn about the growing divide between the industrialised world and
debt-saddled developing countries.

If the G8 leaders wanted to talk to their Opec counterparts about oil
prices, he said, then they would also have to engage in a wider debate
on issues such as globalisation and indebtedness.

But Opec has its own yawning gap when it comes to economic justice.
Take the story making the rounds in Caracas about the Gulf Arab
delegation which went in search of a single hotel to house their
entourage. When told that no such facility existed, they simply bought
one.

Stories also circulated this week of $400 tips for bell-hops and the
liberal distribution to some hotel staff of Rolex watches, again by
some Gulf Arab delegations.

But one need look no further than other hotel workers in Caracas to
see the other side of the Opec coin. "I'm Venezuelan and I've never
seen any oil," said one desk clerk, "and I've sure never seen any
money from the oil."

But such jarring notes of reality did little to disrupt the theatrical
atmosphere of Opec's second summit. Even the sole serious security
disruption had an appropriate theatrical flourish to it. Yesterday,
two foreign women who threw eggs at an Iranian minister were ordered
to be deported by Mr Chavez's secret police chief, a former male
stripper.

Politics does make strange bedfellows, but oil politics are stranger
still.




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