Friday, January 10, 2003
Chavez opponents rally in 12 cities, dealing blow to businesses
www.tribnet.com
By CHRISTOPHER TOOTHAKER, Associated Press
CARACAS, Venezuela (January 10, 11:40 a.m. PST) - Opponents of President Hugo Chavez took to the streets Friday as a bank strike prompted authorities to suspend dollar auctions for a second day in a row after Venezuela's currency fell.
Bank workers and other opposition sympathizers were rallying in Caracas and 11 other cities on Friday, a day after violence broke out at similar protests amid a nationwide strike that has shut down thousands of businesses and brought Venezuela's vital oil industry - a top U.S. supplier and once the world's fifth-largest exporter - to a virtual halt.
The Bush administration was talking with other nations in the Americas on ways to end the strike, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said Friday.
"We remain deeply concerned about the deteriorating situation in Venezuela," Fleischer said. Asked about a possible U.S. role in a breakthrough, Fleischer said, "An electoral solution is the direction the United States sees."
Hundreds gathered in Caracas to march on the Melia hotel, where Organization of American States Secretary-General Cesar Gaviria, who is mediating between the two sides, is staying.
Fleischer said Gaviria has been quietly discussing options with other OAS states, including formation of a "Friends of Venezuela" group "to help the Venezuelans find a solution."
The Central Bank suspended dollar auctions for a second day Friday after the currency, the bolivar, dropped to a record low of 1,593 to the dollar Thursday - 5 percent weaker than Wednesday and down 12 percent since the start of the year.
Analysts speculated Chavez's government may have to devalue the bolivar to balance its budget. Most government income is in dollars and a weaker bolivar would increase its domestic spending power.
Meanwhile, unknown assailants tossed a grenade at the residence of Algerian Ambassador Mohamed Khelladi on Thursday night, the embassy said Friday. Nobody was injured and no arrests were made.
Vice President Jose Vicente Rangel denounced the attack in an appearance on state television and called it an act of terrorism.
The motive for the attack wasn't known. Algeria has offered to send technicians to help jump-start Venezuela's oil industry.
Rangel said the government reinforced security at embassies and diplomatic residences after the attack and a series of telephoned bomb threats at the Australian, Canadian, German, Libyan and Uruguayan embassies.
On Thursday, government supporters attacked anti-Chavez marches in Caracas and outside oil facilities around the country as political violence increased in this crisis-stricken South American country of 24 million.
"Chavistas," as the president's backers are called, attacked a rally outside a refinery in Cardon, 270 miles east of Caracas, wounding a 40-year-old worker and a 28-year-old demonstrator, said Luis Arends, a civil defense worker.
In Caracas, gunfire erupted at an opposition rally. No one was hurt, and the rally resumed. Nobody was arrested.
Chavez supporters armed with machetes and sticks also prevented a demonstration at an oil facility in central Carabobo state, Globovision television reported. A minor clash occurred at a plant in Barinas state.
Chavez opponents claim the president's fiery rhetoric incites violent reactions from his most radical backers.
Chavez, a leftist former paratroop commander who was elected in 1998 and re-elected two years later, blames the opposition-aligned news media, which he accuses of campaigning for his overthrow.
Bloodshed last year spurred a coup and Chavez's brief ouster. Loyalists in the military returned him to power on April 14.
Spokesmen at three of Venezuela's largest banks - Banco de Venezuela, Banco Provincial and Banesco - said 80 percent of the country's nearly 60,000 bank employees stayed home Thursday.
The bank strike forced many supermarkets to close because shoppers were unable to pay with credit cards or debit cards, said Nelson Da Gama, president of the National Association of Supermarkets.
A nonbinding referendum on Chavez's rule is scheduled for Feb. 2. Chavez insists the constitution only requires him to respect a possible recall referendum in August, the midpoint of his six-year term.
Reich's selection as special envoy avoids confirmation battle
www.fortwayne.com
Posted on Fri, Jan. 10, 2003
BY TIM JOHNSON
Miami Herald
WASHINGTON - The Bush administration, which came to office scoffing at the need to deploy special diplomatic envoys for world trouble spots, named Otto J. Reich on Thursday to become ``special envoy for Western Hemisphere initiatives.''
The selection of the controversial Cuban-born diplomat averted a new confirmation struggle over Reich in the Senate, and at the same time satisfies the key Cuban-American constituency in South Florida.
In another move that pleased conservative Republicans, President Bush said he would nominate Roger F. Noriega, 43, as the State Department's top diplomat in Latin America.
Two years ago, the Bush administration appeared allergic to the numerous ''special envoys'' that proliferated under President Bill Clinton.
''There are a very large number of envoys running around, and I have to make sure we really need them,'' Secretary of State Colin Powell said at his confirmation hearing.
The Bush administration recalled a number of envoys appointed by Clinton but later named special emissaries to the Middle East and Sudan before giving Reich his posting.
Reich, a former lobbyist, will begin work Monday in the Executive Office Building adjacent to the White House.
White House press secretary Ari Fleischer said Reich would coordinate U.S.-Mexico relations, the counter-drug Andean Regional Initiative, aspects of Cuba policy and homeland-security issues in the Caribbean. He will report to national security advisor Condoleezza Rice.
Reich served last year as assistant secretary of State until Nov. 22 but was unable to win Senate confirmation to the post, in part because of his peripheral role in the 1980s Iran-contra scandal, and also because of concerns that he welcomed a short-lived coup in Venezuela last April.
Noriega, the ambassador to the Organization of American States, is the grandson of Mexican immigrants to Kansas.
U.S. Eyes Ways to End Venezuela Strike
www.austin360.com
WASHINGTON (AP)--The Bush administration on Friday called on the international community for help resolving the five-week strike in Venezuela which is crippling oil exports, promoting violence and threatening the stability of the government of President Hugo Chavez.
``The severe damage being caused to Venezuela's economy, as well as the increasing likelihood of violence and civil conflict, requires a solution,'' said White House press secretary Ari Fleischer.
``U.S. policy continues to support Secretary General Gaviria's efforts in Caracas to facilitate a dialogue between both sides that leads to a peaceful, democratic, constitutional and electoral solution to Venezuela's crisis,'' he said.
The administration is working with the Organization of American States and member nations to explore ways to peacefully end the standoff between the Chavez government and its opponents, he said, noting that OAS Secretary General Cesar Gaviria has been quietly discussing options with other OAS states, including formation of a Friends of Venezuela'' group to help the Venezuelans find a solution.''
The Washington Post reported in Friday editions that the United States was putting aside its reluctance to get involved in Venezuela's internal affairs and readying an initiative to form a group of nations to try to end the deadlock.
The initiative may be rolled out next week, the newspaper said. It said the proposal's immediate goal would be to end the opposition-organized strike. The group would seek to develop a compromise calling for early Venezuelan elections and building on OAS mediation efforts already under way, the newspaper said.
``Secretary General Gaviria has been quietly consulting with OAS members on other possible initiatives, including the idea of Friends of Venezuela group, which might serve to strengthen his central efforts to help Venezuela to find a solution to this problem,'' Fleischer said.
``We have been and are working closely with Secretary General Gaviria and hemispheric partners to engage diplomatically under the OAS umbrella in support of Gaviria,'' he said. .
Earlier he stressed that the diplomatic effort is in the early stages'' and that an electoral solution is the direction the United States sees.''
The strike has paralyzed the Venezuelan economy and brought its vital oil industry--a top U.S. supplier and once the world's fifth-largest exporter--to a virtual halt.
Crisis Stirs Diplomatic Waves
Jan. 10
abcnews.go.com
— By Pascal Fletcher
CARACAS, Venezuela (Reuters) - A grenade attack and bomb threats against foreign embassies in Caracas pulled the international community deeper into Venezuela's crisis on Friday as a 40-day-old opposition strike dragged down the country's oil-reliant economy.
A grenade exploded late Thursday at the residence of the ambassador from Algeria, which has offered to assist President Hugo Chavez in his fight to beat the strike.
The shutdown, now in its sixth week, has crippled oil output and exports in the world's No 5 petroleum exporter, jolting world markets and pushing up oil prices.
Venezuelan banks and supermarkets closed their doors for the second consecutive day on Friday in support of the grueling strike, called by opposition leaders to press the leftist Chavez to resign and call early elections.
Chavez refuses and has vowed to beat the strike, which has cut off millions of dollars of oil income.
Fitch Ratings lowered Venezuela's credit standing by two notches on Friday, downgrading its sovereign debt rating deeper into "junk bond" territory, to 'CCC-plus' from 'B'.
The blast at the Algerian ambassador's residence, which caused damage but no injuries, followed bomb threats Thursday against the German, Canadian and Australian embassies in Caracas.
No one claimed responsibility for the attack. But Algeria and other members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) have offered to help Venezuela counter the effects of the strike.
Chavez's government blamed the blast on hard-line "terrorist" political opponents supporting the strike. "This is the coup-mongering face of the Venezuelan opposition," Foreign Minister Roy Chaderton told Reuters.
EMBASSY SECURITY TIGHTENED
Government officials said security at foreign embassies would be increased. The grenade attack and threats may galvanize international efforts to resolve the crisis, which has disrupted Venezuelan oil shipments to clients as different as the United States and communist-ruled Cuba.
The United States and other members of the Organization of American States are studying the idea of creating a "Friends of Venezuela" group of nations to support current OAS efforts to broker a negotiated, electoral solution to Venezuela's conflict. Brazil has also been working on such an initiative.
"We remain deeply concerned about the deteriorating situation in Venezuela," White House spokesman Ari Fleischer told reporters in Washington.
The United States normally receives more than 13 percent of its crude oil imports from Venezuela.
Chaderton welcomed the idea of foreign support. "All this contributes to strengthening our democracy and the recognition of Venezuela's legitimate institutions," he said.
Chavez was elected in 1998 and survived a brief coup by military officers in April. He says his opponents are trying to topple him through the strike. His foes accuse him of ruling like a dictator and trying to implant Cuban-style communism.
In recent months, there have been grenade attacks against the offices of anti-Chavez union and business groups and media organizations critical of the president, which the opposition has blamed on the government.
Two people were killed in clashes a week ago involving anti- and pro-government demonstrators and troops and police.
Some foreign embassies, including those of the United States and Britain, have evacuated nonessential personnel and warned their nationals not to travel to Venezuela unless absolutely necessary.
Rangel said oil output and refining was recovering. But oil industry sources said government efforts to raise oil production have met with little success so far. They put production this week at about 450,000 barrels per day (bpd), compared with 3.1 bpd in November before the strike.
Venezuelan Workers Rally in 12 Cities
Opponents of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez Rally in 12 Cities; Dollar Auctions Suspended
abcnews.go.com
The Associated Press
CARACAS, Venezuela Jan. 10 —
Opponents of President Hugo Chavez took to the streets Friday as a bank strike prompted authorities to suspend dollar auctions for a second day in a row after Venezuela's currency fell.
Bank workers and other opposition sympathizers were rallying in Caracas and 11 other cities on Friday, a day after violence broke out at similar protests amid a nationwide strike that has shut thousands of businesses and brought Venezuela's vital oil industry a top U.S. supplier and once the world's fifth-largest exporter to a virtual halt.
The Bush administration was talking with other nations in the Americas on ways to end the strike, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said Friday.
"We remain deeply concerned about the deteriorating situation in Venezuela," Fleischer said. Asked about a possible U.S. role in a breakthrough, Fleischer said, "An electoral solution is the direction the United States sees."
Hundreds gathered in Caracas to march on the Melia hotel, where Organization of American States Secretary-General Cesar Gaviria, who is mediating between the two sides, is staying.
Fleischer said Gaviria has been quietly discussing options with other OAS states, including formation of a "Friends of Venezuela" group "to help the Venezuelans find a solution."
The Central Bank suspended dollar auctions for a second day Friday after the currency, the bolivar, dropped to a record low of 1,593 to the dollar Thursday 5 percent weaker than Wednesday and down 12 percent since the start of the year.
Analysts speculated Chavez's government may have to devalue the bolivar to balance its budget. Most government income is in dollars and a weaker bolivar would increase its domestic spending power.
Meanwhile, unknown assailants tossed a grenade at the residence of Algerian Ambassador Mohamed Khelladi on Thursday night, the embassy said Friday. Nobody was injured and no arrests were made.
Vice President Jose Vicente Rangel denounced the attack in an appearance on state television and called it an act of terrorism.
The motive for the attack wasn't known. Algeria has offered to send technicians to help jump-start Venezuela's oil industry.
Rangel said the government reinforced security at embassies and diplomatic residences after the attack and a series of telephoned bomb threats at the Australian, Canadian, German, Libyan and Uruguayan embassies.
On Thursday, government supporters attacked anti-Chavez marches in Caracas and outside oil facilities around the country as political violence increased in this crisis-stricken South American country of 24 million.
"Chavistas," as the president's backers are called, attacked a rally outside a refinery in Cardon, 270 miles east of Caracas, wounding a 40-year-old worker and a 28-year-old demonstrator, said Luis Arends, a civil defense worker.
In Caracas, gunfire erupted at an opposition rally. No one was hurt, and the rally resumed. Nobody was arrested.
Chavez supporters armed with machetes and sticks also prevented a demonstration at an oil facility in central Carabobo state, Globovision television reported. A minor clash occurred at a plant in Barinas state.
Chavez opponents claim the president's fiery rhetoric incites violent reactions from his most radical backers.
Chavez, a leftist former paratroop commander who was elected in 1998 and re-elected two years later, blames the opposition-aligned news media, which he accuses of campaigning for his overthrow.
Bloodshed last year spurred a coup and Chavez's brief ouster. Loyalists in the military returned him to power on April 14.
Spokesmen at three of Venezuela's largest banks Banco de Venezuela, Banco Provincial and Banesco said 80 percent of the country's nearly 60,000 bank employees stayed home Thursday.
The bank strike forced many supermarkets to close because shoppers were unable to pay with credit cards or debit cards, said Nelson Da Gama, president of the National Association of Supermarkets.
A nonbinding referendum on Chavez's rule is scheduled for Feb. 2. Chavez insists the constitution only requires him to respect a possible recall referendum in August, the midpoint of his six-year term.