Friday, January 24, 2003
Explosion Near Venezuela March Kills 1, Injures 12
abcnews.go.com
Jan. 23
— CARACAS, Venezuela (Reuters) - One person was killed and 12 were injured in Caracas on Thursday when a suspected bomb exploded near a huge pro-government demonstration attended by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, firefighters and hospital officials said.
"This appeared to be an explosive device. ... Unfortunately there is one person dead up to now," Caracas Fire Chief Rodolfo Briceno told local radio.
Twelve people were injured, most of them by shrapnel, Manuel Rojas, director of Caracas' Vargas Hospital, told reporters.
The explosion, which took place several blocks away from the spot where the left-wing Venezuelan president was greeting supporters at the rally, caused confusion.
Police sealed off the zone and were looking for other possible explosive devices.
Hundreds of thousands of supporters of Chavez took part in the rally. They were protesting against a seven-week-old opposition strike that has slashed oil output by the world's No. 5 petroleum exporter.
The populist president and the crowds around him were not immediately aware that the explosion had taken place and the rally continued.
Chanting "Hey, hey, Chavez is here to stay," the pro-government demonstrators had earlier marched from the east and west of the city.
The blast at Thursday's rally rekindled fears of violence. At least six people have been killed in clashes between rival protesters since the strike began Dec. 2.
Both sides blame each other for the violence. To avoid confrontation, opposition supporters stayed at home on Thursday, following instructions from their leaders.
Most Venezuelan oil workers back on job, official says
boston.com
By Associated Press, 1/23/2003 16:54
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) Most workers at Venezuela's state owned oil monopoly and half of its administrators have abandoned a 53-day-old strike against President Hugo Chavez, the company's president said Thursday.
The claim was denied by Fedepetrol, Venezuela's largest oil workers union, which said that 17,000 of its 20,000 members remained on strike.
Ali Rodriguez, president of the Petroleos de Venezuela SA monopoly, also said Venezuelan crude oil production has surpassed 1 million barrels per day, the state news agency Venpres reported.
But striking executives said in a report Thursday that Venezuela has raised its daily oil production to 812,000 barrels Thursday from 714,000 barrels on Wednesday. The pre-strike figure was 3.2 million barrels a day, the executives said.
Chavez's government claims that it is breaking the strike, which has drastically affected production in the world's fifth largest exporter of oil and a top supplier to the United States.
Hopes for a resumption of Venezuelan oil output helped depress crude oil futures Thursday.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, contracts for March crude ended down 60 cents at $32.25 a barrel.
Earlier this week, tanker pilots said they were returning to their jobs in the oil-producing region of Lake Maracaibo. The move would ease concerns about safety conditions at Venezuelan ports and persuade foreign-flagged tankers to resume loading and shipments.
Rodriguez said 75 percent of oil workers and 50 percent of administrators have returned to work. PDVSA employs 40,000 people, about half of them blue collar workers.
About 35,000 PDVSA employees went on strike Dec. 2 to demand that Chavez call early elections or resign. Crude production reached a low of 200,000 barrels per day during the strike.
Gasoline shortages continued, the striking executives said. On Wednesday, 427 of 1,811 service stations in the country received gasoline, or 24 percent of the total. Only 16 stations received gasoline in Caracas, the capital city of 4 million people.
But Rodriguez said the government, which has imported gasoline during the strike, has enough gasoline in stock to supply the country for 15 days.
Huge marches support Chavez against 53-day-old strike
www.sfgate.com
JOSEPH B. FRAZIER, Associated Press Writer Thursday, January 23, 2003
(01-23) 13:58 PST CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) --
Hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans marched through Caracas on Thursday to pledge their loyalty to President Hugo Chavez and protest a 53-day-old strike intended to unseat him.
An explosion near a subway station a block from the march killed one person and injured 14, Fire Chief Rodolfo Briceno said. The cause of the blast wasn't immediately known.
Buses from across the country, swathed with red banners and red, yellow and blue Venezuelan flags, poured into the capital for the show of support for Chavez. Briceno estimated the number of demonstrators at more than 300,000.
"Ooh! Ah! Chavez isn't leaving!" demonstrators chanted as they snaked onto a highway, headed for a downtown rally. Marches formed in other parks and demonstrators exploded powerful noisemakers -- known as "Bin Ladens" -- that have become a hallmark of the pro-Chavez movement.
The outpouring of support marked the 45th anniversary of the fall of the country's last dictator, Gen. Marcos Perez Jimenez. It also came a day before the first meeting of the "Group of Friends," six nations that have offered to help Venezuela find a way out of its crisis.
The meeting will consider two plans presented this week by former President Jimmy Carter to end the strike and hold early elections.
Chavez said late Wednesday he welcomed international help but warned against outside intervention in Venezuela's internal affairs. He urged the group -- Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Portugal, Spain and the United States -- to recognize that his is an elected government and to not give equal weight to what he calls a coup-plotting opposition.
Diplomats from the six nations were to meet Friday at the Washington headquarters of the Organization of American States with OAS Secretary General Cesar Gaviria, who is mediating talks between the government and opposition.
Chavez said Wednesday he still wants to expand the group to include such nations as China, Russia, Algeria, Saudi Arabia and France. But Gaviria said the group of six was picked for balance and to be of a size that is manageable.
Venezuela played a similar role with other countries in trying to end the Central American crisis in the 1980s.
Opposition leaders asked their supporters in Caracas to stay home Thursday to lessen the chance of clashes with pro-Chavez marchers.
They contend Chavez's leftist policies have damaged business and scared away foreign investment. They called the strike on Dec. 2 to force him out. The strike has damaged Venezuela's key oil industry, the world's fifth-largest exporter and a top supplier to the United States.
In a victory for Chavez, the Supreme Court, citing a technicality, on Wednesday postponed a Feb. 2 nonbinding referendum that would have asked Venezuelans whether Chavez should quit.
Opposition marchers delivered 2 million signatures in November demanding the referendum.
Venezuela's constitution permits a binding referendum halfway through a president's term, which in Chavez's case would be August.
Demonstrators tore down a huge billboard that opponents had erected to count down the days to the now-postponed referendum.
The strike has affected world oil prices, and the government admits losing $4 billion in since the strike began. But there were signs that the oil strike may be easing.
The state news agency Venpres quoted Ali Rodriguez, president of the state owned oil monopoly Petroleos de Venezuela S.A., as saying most blue-collar workers and half of administrators had returned to work. Rodriguez also said crude production has surpassed 1 million barrels per day.
PDVSA employs 40,000 people, about half of them blue collar workers.
Striking executives challenged Rodriguez's figures, but acknowledged that Venezuela had raised its daily oil production to 714,000 barrels. Pre-strike production was about 3.2 million barrels per day.
A severe gasoline shortage and increasing scarcity of other consumer goods has put nerves in this country of 24 million on edge. Facing an economic crisis, the government Wednesday suspended for five business days all foreign currency trading. Venezuelans worried about the future of their currency, the bolivar, have been rushing to buy U.S. dollars to protect themselves.
Traffic in downtown's usually bustling streets slowed to a trickle Thursday. Steel doors, often covered with pro-Chavez graffiti, closed over most businesses.
"Chavez until 2021," read one. Chavez's term ends in 2007, but he has said he hopes to rule well beyond that.
The mood was boisterous in Parque del Este where one march formed.
"Nobody can get rid of Chavez," said Candida Gutierrez, a homemaker who came from El Tigre, 500 miles to the east, to take part. "We have Chavez for awhile."
Marchers waved flags bearing the image of Ernesto "Che" Guevara, a hero of the Cuban revolution. Chavez is an avid admirer of Cuban leader Fidel Castro.
Market watch: Energy futures prices mixed as traders assess signals
Posted by click at 3:27 AM
in
oil
ogj.pennnet.com
Sam Fletcher
OGJ Senior Writer
HOUSTON, Jan. 23 -- Energy futures prices were mixed Wednesday amid signs that the general strike in Venezuela may be weakening and assurances by Saudi Arabia that it will take measures to ensure that oil prices remain within the $22-28/bbl target range of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
The fact that Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez has remained in office through 53 days of a nationwide general strike aimed at ousting him "suggests that (his) hold on power is not as tenuous as the opposition had hoped," said analysts Wednesday at Fitch Ratings Ltd., New York. "Whereas at the beginning of the strike every day that passed appeared to weaken Mr. Chávez's position, now every day that he retains power seems to strengthen his hand," they reported.
"At the same time, the (Venezuelan) government is contending with an unprecedented opponent," added Fitch analysts. "The opposition's ability to maintain an adherence rate of more than 75% among (both blue- and white-collar) oil strikers, coupled with its emphasis on nonviolence and an electoral solution to the crisis, has infused (strike) supporters with a sense of civic-mindedness not seen in Venezuelan politics in 50 years."
Fitch analysts said they expect the strike to continue "at least through mid-February."
In one major turn of events, Venezuela's Finance Ministry and the Central Bank of Venezuela jointly announced Wednesday that foreign exchange trading in that country is being suspended for 5 business days to halt the flight of capital out of that country and to defend its dwindling international monetary reserves. Chávez said his government is preparing to establish new exchange controls.
Meanwhile, the US Department of Energy reported US oil inventories increased by 1.5 million bbl to 273.8 million bbl last week, with gasoline stocks up 700,000 bbl to 216.3 million bbl and distillate inventories falling 3.1 million bbl to 129.2 million bbl. However, total US commercial petroleum inventories were 44.1 million bbl below the 5-year average for the week.
"In other words, relative to a normal pattern, the US market tightened at a rate of 1 million b/d (last week)," said Paul Horsnell, head of energy research for JP Morgan Chase & Co., London.
"The impact of the Venezuelan crisis does then seem to be entering a new phase," Horsnell reported Thursday. "(US) crude oil inventories can't fall much further; refinery runs are being cut more aggressively than the normal seasonal cuts; and the first flush of easy-to-find oil product imports has passed."
As a result, he said, "We are left in a situation where refinery utilization is little changed from last year, even though demand is running 354,000 b/d higher, and where US Gulf Coast crude imports are running (on a 4-week average) 720,000 b/d lower than last year." He added, "Most important of all, that impact is not over yet."
The new near-month March contract for benchmark US sweet, light crudes lost 34¢ to $32.85/bbl Wednesday on the New York Mercantile Exchange, while the April position retreated 22¢ to $31.79/bbl. Heating oil for February delivery gained 1.72¢ to 91.19¢/gal. Unleaded gasoline for the same month dipped by 0.17¢ to 89.93¢/gal.
The February natural gas contract jumped by 24¢ to $5.67/Mcf Wednesday on NYMEX.
"The market breached 22-month highs on the way to a peak of $5.74(/Mcf during Wednesday's trading session), driven higher by continued cold weather forecasts and deliverability problems in the Northeast (US)," analysts at Enerfax Daily reported Thursday.
"Prices as high as $22.50(/Mcf ) on major Northeast pipelines boosted cash prices elsewhere. Power prices also soared, and key utilities were reported forcing penalties on pipelines that under-delivered their natural gas," they said.
"Backwardation—the pricing structure in which deliveries in the near term have a higher price than those for more distant delivery and typical for this time of year—sent the Henry Hub cash price to a 70¢(/Mcf) premium over NYMEX. Locals sold down early in the (Wednesday) session after the higher opening, then turned around and covered short positions. With little liquidity in the market, commercial traders and fund buyers joined the buying as the market rose above $5.55(/Mcf)."
Meanwhile, in London, the March North Sea Brent oil contract lost 40¢ to $30.34/bbl on the International Petroleum Exchange. The February natural gas contract plunged 25.7¢ to the equivalent of $3.01/Mcf on IPE.
The average price for OPEC's basket of seven benchmark crudes slipped by 1¢ to $30.89/bbl Wednesday.
Contact Sam Fletcher at samf@ogjonline.com
VENEZUELA - Supreme Court suspends call for consultative referendum
www.granma.cu
• Giant march today in Caracas • Supposed ‘friends’ of Venezuela among those meeting at OAS headquarters this Friday
THE opposition was dealt a hard blow yesterday when the Venezuelan Supreme Court of Justice suspended the call for a referendum made by the National Electoral Council (CNE), currently controlled by anti-Chávez forces attempting to oust the legitimate president.
The court likewise banned the council executive from convening or organizing any other type of election, which effectively totally inhibits it.
The court also upheld the National Assembly’s right to designate a new CNE executive in accordance with the recently passed Electoral Law, which the government and other political forces have been insisting on.
For its part, the so-called Group of Friends of Venezuela is to meet this Friday at the headquarters of the Organization of American States (OAS) in Washington, considered a "neutral" location.
Neither the United States or Spain, seconded by Mexico, can be neutral in relation to the current situation in Venezuela, nor will they even defend the principle of respect for the legitimately elected constitutional government, as their objective is to do away with the Bolivarian process.