Adamant: Hardest metal
Wednesday, December 25, 2002

93% wants him to, but Chavez won't talk

Won't talk, won't listen: Chavez As the crippling general strike entered its fourth week Monday, Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez continued to ignore the majority will of his people.

In a nationwide poll released Monday by the country's largest newspaper, 'El Universal', a massive 93% of those interviewed said that Chavez ought to negotiate with the opposition. Only 6% wanted him to stay firm.

The former coup-leader does not want to call free and democratic elections to solve the country's crisis, and has shown no will to seriously address the issue with the opposition. Although he nominally assigned six of his supporters to mediation brokered by OAS secretary general Cesar Gaviria, the talks have not shown results after nearly two months and Gaviria has complained of "stalling tactics" by the Chavez representatives.

Friday, the representatives of the Chavez government left their opposition counterparts and Gaviria waiting in a no-show lack of respect, thumbing their nose at the OAS Secretary General.

The international community does not understand this confrontational attitude: " - We are disappointed that the Government of Venezuela, Friday, did not attend a scheduled session of dialogue, which ultimately led to the session being canceled," said U.S. State Department spokesman Philip Reeker. " - What we've talked about is electoral solutions, but that needs to start with dialogue."

After three days of no such dialogue, a short meeting was scheduled for Monday, but Cesar Gaviria reported that no advances had been made. The next meeting has now been scheduled for Thursday. That marks a full week of basically not moving forward, while the situation in the streets is deteriorating: Long lines of cars have waited days in front of empty gas stations, and some food stocks are getting scarce.

With his popularity plummeting, Hugo Chavez has had to resort to arbitrary arrests and human rights violations to maintain his grip on power. This, too, has caused reaction in world opinion, who is following the acts in Venezuela closely. The Martin Luther King Foundation condemned the treatment of a tanker-crew as a flagrant human rights violation, and Nobel Peace laureate Jimmy Carter, former U.S. President, also had strong words for the Chavez government:

" - The current situation of scarcity of supplies and political confrontation increases the likelihood of imminent violence," Carter warned. Carter urged the Chavez-government to take part in talks to find a peaceful solution to the crisis.

Celebrating a sad Christmas as their country is increasingly becoming a dictatorship, Venezuelans - and the world - are asking themselves: Why won't Chavez talk?

More information: www.MilitaresDemocraticos.com December 23, 2002

White House Declines Using Oil Reserve

By H. JOSEF HEBERT

The Bush administration faces renewed requests to free oil from an emergency government reserve and counter tight supplies, especially at Gulf Coast refineries, because of political unrest in Venezuela. The administration plans no such move, however, according to senior officials, although they said the Venezuelan situation was being watched closely.

Rep. Billy Tauzin, R-La., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, urged the administration this week to give strong consideration to tapping the government's Strategic Petroleum Reserve. He said several refineries along the Gulf Coast are close to running out of oil. "As the economic crisis in Venezuela continues, its impact on the economy of the United States is becoming more pronounced," Tauzin wrote Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham in a letter sent Monday. Oil prices jumped to more than $32 a barrel this week, the highest they've been in two years. Analysts cited the freeze of oil exports from Venezuela and continuing worries about possible war in Iraq. Venezuela normally accounts for about 1.3 million barrels of oil a day entering the U.S. system, about 14 percent of oil imports. "Currently lending or exchanging oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve is not an active consideration," the Energy Department said in a statement last week when rumors circulated within the industry that tapping the reserve was being discussed. White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said the emergency oil stockpile, now about 592 million barrels, is designed to deal with severe disruptions, and so far that has not occurred. "Obviously, we're going to continue to monitor the situation very closely," Fleischer said last week. "But at this time we do not think the release is necessary." Tauzin said the cutoff of Venezuelan shipments could cause at least two refineries to run out of crude oil by the end of the month unless Venezuela's supplies were resumed. Government stocks are kept in salt domes along the Gulf coast in Louisiana and Texas. On several occasions, the government has provided small amounts from the reserve to specific refineries to meet temporary shortfalls, with the understanding the oil would be paid back. Generally the reserve, which can provide as much as 4.1 million barrels a day, is to be used only in case of severe supply interruptions. The reserve was tapped for 21 million barrels in 1990-91, in response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait and the Gulf War; 28 million barrels in 1996-97, to pay for government operations; and 30 million in 2000, to stem soaring prices, in a swap arrangement in which companies are obligated to return the oil, plus a premium, by 2003. President Bush strongly criticized the swap arranged by the Clinton administration in 2000, arguing during the presidential campaign that the reserve should be used only to combat severe supply shortages and not to influence prices. On Tuesday, oil prices for February delivery eclipsed $32 a barrel before declining slightly. Spot prices on the New York Mercantile Exchange also nudged close to $32 a barrel in trading Tuesday. A 23-day general strike in Venezuela against President Hugo Chavez essentially has halted Venezuela's oil exports. The country normally produces about 3 million barrels a day, more than a third of which is shipped to the United States. Production now is 300,000 to 400,000 barrels a day. On the Net: Strategic Petroleum Reserve: www.spr.doe.gov

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