Morning Star.png

 

 

News:

 

Latin America:

 

Regional Bloc Warns Against Meddling in Venezuela

 

 

James Tweedie, The Morning Star, London, 16 September 2015

 

Regional bloc Alba urged respect for Venezuelan sovereignty on Monday,
following the jailing of opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez.

 

The Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America (Alba) warned against
foreign powers interfering in Venezuela’s judicial processes in response to
Mr Lopez’s conviction for inciting anti-government violence last year that
left at least 43 people dead.

 

The Popular Will party leader was sentenced to almost 14 years in prison
last week after being convicted of public incitement to violence and
criminal association.

 

“The Alba member states cannot accept behaviour that seeks to interfere in
the domestic affairs of a state, on the part of another state,” the
organisation said in a communiqué.

 

Member states expressed their “concern over the assessment of judicial
decisions made in the frame of rights and its sovereign power, in order to
address terrorist actions and to effectively protect the victims’ human
rights.”

 

The body condemned “the double standard that undermines international law
and favours the political conditions to take down constitutional governments
in order to take over their strategic natural resources,” while concealing
“human rights violations on their own territories.”

 

Alba, which takes part of its name from 19th-century liberation struggle
leader and pan-Latin Americanist Simon Bolivar, was founded by Cuba and
Venezuela in 2004.

 

Other members include Bolivia, Ecuador and Nicaragua as well as six
English-speaking Caribbean island nations including Grenada.

 

Meanwhile, Colombia’s government made fresh claims of Venezuelan military
aircraft violating its airspace.

 

Colombian air force chief General Carlos Bueno said that a radar station
detected a Venezuelan plane about 10pm on Sunday.

 

The pilot explained to air traffic controllers that he was forced to deviate
from his planned flight path due to bad weather.

 

Tensions have been high between the two neighbours since a Colombian
paramilitary gang attacked a Venezuelan army patrol last month, prompting
the closure of key border crossings.

 

On Monday Venezuelan Defence Minister Vladimir Padrino warned the military
to be on high alert, saying Colombia was seeking to provoke an incident on
the border.

 

He added that some 6,000 troops had been sent to Venezuela’s western edge to
improve security.

 

 

From:
<http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-77f3-Latin-America-Regional-bloc-warns
-against-meddling-in-Venezuela#.VfkrDBGqqkp>
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-77f3-Latin-America-Regional-bloc-warns-
against-meddling-in-Venezuela#.VfkrDBGqqkp

 

 

 

 

Feature (“Op-ed”)

 

Crisis Shows Caracas Will Never Please Hostile Western Media

 

 

James Tweedie, The Morning Star, London, 16 September 2015

 

The recent border dispute between Venezuela and Colombia, accompanied by a
crackdown on Colombian criminal gangs by Caracas, has been used as a yet
another stick to beat the socialist government of President Nicolas Maduro.

 

On August 17 Maduro announced the closure of the border with Colombia in
south-western Tachira State for 72 hours, in response to an ambush by a
paramilitary criminal gang on a platoon of troops searching the area for
smugglers, wounding three of them.

 

The police and army launched a “people’s liberation operation” (OLP), a
combined mass sweep to root out gangs. Maduro extended the closure and
declared a state of emergency in Tachira as hundreds of suspects were
rounded up — mainly undocumented Colombian immigrants.

 

Former Colombian president Alvaro Uribe called Maduro a “dictator” a few
days later. As Uribe spoke at a demonstration outside the Venezuelan
consulate, a supporter held up a placard behind him declaring Maduro a
xenophobe, a fascist and a terrorist. Two days later Colombian President
Juan Manuel Santos accused Venezuela of “ethnic cleansing.” The Western
media lapped it up.

 

However, some hope remained for an amicable settlement. On August 26 the
foreign ministers of both countries — Venezuelan Delcy Rodriguez and
Colombian Maria Angela Holguin — met in Colombia. They agreed that the
nations’ respective ombudspersons would meet to establish a protocol for
deportations of criminal suspects.

 

But the next day Santos recalled Bogota’s ambassador to Venezuela, claiming
that his ombudspersons had been denied access to the city of San Antonio de
Tachira. Venezuela followed suit.

 

Apparently with no attempt at quiet negotiation, Santos had scuppered the
deal brokered by his foreign minister — that was, after all, meant to be in
the interest of Colombian citizens.

 

Maduro had up until then been careful to reserve his harshest criticism for
Uribe, but now he had had enough. He hit back at Santos’s claims that
Colombian immigrants were being victimised, revealing that three
paramilitary leaders had been captured in Venezuela.

 

Santos called for emergency meetings of the Union of South American Nations
(Unasur) and the Organisation of American States (OAS) to discuss the issue
— in effect to seek censure of Venezuela. But the OAS failed to reach the
necessary majority in favour of a meeting and told the two countries to
settle the dispute through diplomacy.

 

On September 7 the dispute escalated as Venezuela closed its border in
north-western Zulia state and launched another OLP against Colombian
paramilitary gangs there, killing seven of the notorious Los Urabenos gang
and arresting eight.

 

What is the true situation between the two countries? About 1,400 Colombians
have been deported from Venezuela since the OLPs were launched. The UN
reports that another 18,000 have fled in fear of the crackdown, although
many of those may have been lured by the promise of generous aid payments
from the Colombian government.

 

But even so, 20,000 is a drop out of the ocean of 5.6 million Colombians
living in Venezuela, making up a fifth of the country’s population of 30
million. Most of these have arrived in the last 16 years, a period which
includes Uribe’s two terms in office — when his hands dripped with the blood
of victims of the country’s civil war.

 

Hundreds of thousands of the Colombians in Venezuela have refugee status,
having fled the right-wing paramilitary death squads that Uribe vowed to but
did not disarm, but the vast majority have emigrated to escape the grinding
poverty resulting from decades of neoliberal government.

 

Whatever their plight, all of them enjoy access to the socialist
government’s “missions” — the series of social welfare projects in fields
such as education, healthcare and housing launched by Hugo Chavez, the late
president and architect of the Bolivarian revolution — named after
19th-century national liberation struggle leader Simon Bolivar. Foreign
Minister Holguin herself acknowledged that “Venezuela has generously
welcomed Colombians for decades.”

 

Indeed everyone in Colombia, up to and including Santos, benefits from
Bolivarian socialism, since 40 per cent of consumer goods sold there are
smuggled across the border from Venezuela, where staple foods and petrol —
oil being the nation’s primary national product — are heavily subsidised.
The border closure created a crisis in Colombia as the flow of contraband
food and fuel was restricted, but more on that in my next article.

 

Venezuela’s generosity to refugees is not limited to its immediate
neighbours, however. On September 7 of this year Maduro announced that the
nation would take in 20,000 refugees from Syria — as many as David Cameron’s
government says it will accept over the next five years.

 

The same death squads that have driven hundreds of thousands of Colombians
into exile have, in recent years, found themselves redundant and turned to
their natural sideline of organised crime. Many of these gangs followed
their victims to Venezuela, where they set up shop. Maduro has accused them
of hiring themselves out as muscle to unscrupulous opposition forces as a
sideline.

 

These gangs were among the targets of the OLPs, a major crime-fighting
offensive involving police and soldiers, in a country where violent crime is
rampant following decades of neglect of the poor prior to Chavez’s election
in 1998.

 

Of course Venezuela can never win in the narrow viewpoint of the West. Crime
is blamed on the government, but its attempts to fight crime are condemned
as assaults on civil and human rights.

 

But Caracas is perhaps long past caring: the decidedly dodgy Human Rights
Watch had its Venezuelan staff deported in 2008 for contributing to the
media campaign of misinformation against the government. More recently
Venezuela has been forging new economic partnerships with the BRICS nations,
reducing its dependence on the US oil market.

 

The media offensive against Venezuela is designed to harden public opinion
against the socialist government and justify sanctions — already applied by
the US — and support for violent Maidan-style regime change attempts by the
likes of recently jailed opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez. The left must be
vigilant against these manoeuvres and reaffirm its solidarity with the
popular government of Venezuela.

 

 

From:
<http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-aca4-Crisis-shows-Caracas-will-never-p
lease-hostile-Western-media#.VfkqvxGqqkp>
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-aca4-Crisis-shows-Caracas-will-never-pl
ease-hostile-Western-media#.VfkqvxGqqkp

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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