Monday, June 16, 2003
¡AHORA SÍ!
Cuando era niño, el grueso del destierro cubano en Caracas vivía en la urbanización San Bernardino -- un sector que le hacía recordar a nuestros padres “el barrio” habanero de El Vedado -- donde apenas unos años atrás, entonces, vivieron algunos de los miembros más destacados del régimen perezjimenista.
Frente a la hoy desaparecida “Plaza La Estrella” (de San Bernardino) había un edificio donde vivía Jesús “Chucho” Vital, un cienfueguero – recientemente fallecido en Miami – a quien el exilio cubano caraqueño le llamaba cariñosamente con el mote de “Coramina”, o más familiarmente: “Cora”.
En el apartamento del “Cora” nos reuníamos todos los sábados a degustar un arroz-con-pollo “a la chorrera” que se cocinaba cortesía del aporte económico de paisanos como Manolo Gómez, José Pérez “Chacho” Santander, Ivo Suárez, Isidro Castiñeyra, “El Guaca”, mis padres y unos cuantos cubanos más que se fueron perdiendo en la historia de este triste, largo, injusto, inútil y tormentoso destierro.
Jesús Vital se ganó el remoquete de “Coramina” gracias a su entusiasmo y optimismo ante la desgracia que producía en nosotros el haber tenido que dejarlo todo atrás para rehacer nuestras vidas en una tierra ajena, que aunque generosa y noble, no era la nuestra. Había entonces una droga que lo curaba todo, hasta la depresión más aguda, llamada “Coramina”. El efecto que “Chucho” Vital producía en los cienfuegueros desterrados era como aquella medicina que servía para todo y en especial, para levantar el ánimo ante el ataque desmesurado de éste o aquel virus.
Era Don Jesús un hombre austero con alma de banquero. Solía asegurarnos a todos que “los americanos” no eran estúpidos y por ende, nunca dejarían que Castro se afianzara en el poder. Jamás olvidaré como a mis doce años llegaba al apartamento de la familia Vital con mi tocadiscos portátil de cajón y los discos de la Billo, Los Melódicos y uno muy popular entre nosotros donde se incluían canciones que cantaba Fernando Albuerne, como “Cuando Salí de Cuba”, “Virgencita del Valle de Venezuela” y “El Son se fue de Cuba”. También recuerdo un disco cargado de puntos guajiros cantados magistralmente por el hoy también fallecido Guillermo Portabales, como “El Carretero”, “Lamento Cubano”, “Al Vaivén de mi Carreta”, “Junto al Palmar del Bajío”, “El Amor de mi Bohío”, “La Sitiera”… y mi favorito: “Entrada al Silencio”, entre muchas otras canciones que nos transportaban al Cienfuegos que habíamos dejado atrás hacía apenas unos meses que parecían siglos.
“¡Ahora sí!”, solía gritar eufóricamente “Coramina” al tiempo que nos abría la puerta de su pequeño apartamento. Si Cuba sufría un huracán, eso era para “El Cora” un signo inconfundible que a Castro le quedaba horas de vida… tal vez días. A cada fracaso de la “contra-revolución” (que fueron muchos), “Coramina” le encontraba un “lado positivo”. Era en su casa donde oíamos “La Voz de las Américas”, que se transmitía en onda corta y en español desde Washington y fue en su casa donde nos instalamos todos en los últimos días del mes de octubre de 1962, seguros de que el “¡Ahora sí!” de “Chucho” Vital se haría realidad en medio de la peor crisis que la humanidad había conocido, la cual pasó a la historia con el nombre de “La Crisis de Octubre” o “La Crisis de los Misiles”, que colocó al mundo al borde de un inimaginable desastre nuclear gracias a los misiles atómicos que Castro instaló en Cuba con la ayuda de los soviéticos, con los cuales pudo haber desaparecido del mapa a todas y cada una de las ciudades norteamericanas con la excepción de Seattle, en el extremo noroeste de EE.UU., la cual se escapaba del alcance misilístico castro-soviético.
Terminaré esta historia que podría ser extremadamente larga resumiendo en espacio y en dolor.
En 1979 llegó al poder Luis Herrera Campins, un socialcristiano miembro del partido COPEI. Entre sus filas se encontraba un dirigente albino que llevaba el nombre de Abdón Vivas Terán quien hablaba de una “cosa” llamada la “Propiedad Comunitaria”. Al día siguiente del triunfo de Herrera Campins, nuestro amigo Jesús “Coramina” Vital -- junto a un grueso número de cubanos exiliados en Venezuela -- decidió abandonar abruptamente el país rumbo a los Estados Unidos de Norte América. Jamás regresó ni de visita. Le cogió miedo – al igual que muchos de nuestros compatriotas -- a la famosa “Propiedad Comunitaria” y al “socialcristianismo”. “¡Perro macho lo capan una vez!”, dijo finalmente “Chucho” antes de montarse en el avión que desde Maiquetía lo llevó para siempre a Miami. Había aguantado en Venezuela 18 años de estéril optimismo.
Hoy, 42 años después de haber salido de Cuba, mi familia y yo nos encontramos todavía en Venezuela. No nos queremos ir. Mi padre ya se compró el hueco donde quieren que lo entierren, con la única condición que parte de sus restos – no todo – sea trasladado a la Perla del Sur, su Cienfuegos querido, cuando Cuba sea libre. “Coramina” ya no existe más que en nuestros recuerdos, corazones… y en crónicas como ésta que hoy les regalo a mis lectores a modo de “alerta”.
Mientras en Venezuela los nuevos “coraminas” intentan impresionar a la “Comunidad Internacional” para que tumben – o nos ayuden a tumbar – al régimen CASTRO-COMUNISTA de Chávez y Castro en Venezuela, tal y como “los americanos” nos iban a ayudar a nosotros los cubanos a tumbar a Fidel en Cuba, el monstruo del Caribe defeca sobre la “Comunidad Europea” e insulta a Silvio Berlusconi y a José María Aznar con apelativos dignos de ser pronunciados por cualquier arrabalero de mierda. No debemos olvidar que se está dirigiendo a sus “socios del alma”, a aquellos individuos que representan el grueso de las inversiones que en Cuba mantiene viva -- junto al petróleo venezolano que le regala el Sr. Chávez -- la revolución que comenzó verde como nuestras palmas y terminó teñida de un rojo intenso como la sangre de las decenas de miles de cubanos dignos, valientes, mártires, cristianos y patriotas que murieron en los paredones del sátrapa más grande que ha parido la historia de nuestros infaustos pueblos.
Lo único que falta hoy es que aparezca por ahí un nuevo “Coramina” cubano y ante el inminente desastre que supone la pérdida del ignominioso y bochornoso apoyo que en detrimento de todo un pueblo que sufre le viene brindado a Castro la “Comunidad Europea” nos grite, con el cuerpo encorvado, una pierna en el aire y los dos puños fuertemente cerrados: “¡Ahora sí!”
Caracas, 16 de junio de 2003
ROBERT ALONSO
Envíen sus comentarios – UNICAMENTE – a robertalonso2003@cantv.net pues los otros buzones colapsan con la cantidad de correo que reciben. --
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OPEC to Press Non-OPEC Countries
Posted by click at 8:15 PM
in
OPEC
Sun June 8, 2003 08:31 AM ET
By Richard Mably
DOHA, Qatar (<a href=asia.reuters.com>Reuters) - OPEC producers at a meeting on Wednesday are set to pressure independent oil exporters to contribute to the cartel's next supply cut to allow for the return of Iraqi oil.
OPEC President Abdullah al-Attiyah made clear Sunday that major non-aligned producers would once again be called upon to help the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) defend its $25 a barrel target price.
"Yes. We require their support. I feel we have their support," Attiyah, also oil minister of Qatar, told reporters of OPEC's three leading rivals -- Mexico, Norway and Russia.
OPEC powers Saudi Arabia and Venezuela already began lobbying Friday when they met with non-OPEC Mexico in Madrid to discuss Baghdad's market re-emergence.
Iraq, recovering from the U.S.-led war, will resume oil exports in the middle of June, but shipments are expected to stay well below pre-war levels for several months.
Attiyah declined to comment on OPEC's likely decision on Wednesday, but with prices near the top end of OPEC's $22-$28 band some ministers have said there is no immediate need to reduce the 25.4 million barrels per day (bpd) output limit.
"We won't just cut for the sake of cutting," Attiyah said.
And with U.S. crude oil at over $30 a barrel, alarm bells are ringing in the world's biggest consumer nation as it heads into summer when gasoline demand rises and often pushes prices higher.
"I don't want to see my consumers angry, I believe the customer is always right," said the OPEC chief. "But we have to be careful about the balance between demand and supply."
OPEC has not needed to reduce production limits since late 2001, when it slashed supplies on condition that rival exporters Mexico, Norway and Russia contribute. The three resisted but joined the plan when prices started falling.
The three will be represented in Doha -- for the first time at an extraordinary meeting.
But the subject of oil market debate, Iraq, will not be present, an issue which has rankled Iraqi officials.
Attiyah acknowledged there has been no contact between OPEC headquarters and Baghdad since the U.S. occupation, but urged Iraq to get in touch.
"I did not receive any request from Iraq, but personally I'd be happy to talk to them," he said, adding he hoped Iraq would make OPEC's next scheduled meeting in September. "If they want to call, I would be very happy to receive them."
Electronic warfare reveals Venezuelan opposition's MBW capacity
<a href=www.vheadline.com>Venezuela's Electronic News
Posted: Sunday, June 08, 2003
By: Roy S. Carson
VHeadline.com editor & publisher Roy S. Carson writes: In the latest ploy by elements in Venezuela's rabid opposition, millions of computer-virus carrying emails have been sent scurrying across the face of the planet purporting to be from Venezuelan embassies and institutions in electronics guerrilla warfare labeled "background chatter" by foreign intelligence agencies.
In a curious parallel with an Iraqi pre-invasion scenario, the emails ... which mostly trace back to servers in Caracas and/or exile Cubans in Miami ... appear on the surface to come from Venezuelan embassies, consulates or other related institutions with partial messages where full context would be contained in attachment. But beware! If your firewall or virus protection software is not up-to-date, clicking on the attachment could introduce a computer-virus which will wipe out your system in minutes if not seconds.
During the month of May 2003, VHeadline.com Venezuela itself detected 14,405 attempted hacker intrusions of our website ... 10,216 of them were "high-rated" (meaning they were able to penetrate 20% through our firewall but not more than 40%) 33 were "priority" (meaning they penetrated further than 40% but not more than 55%). In just 24 hours last week we recorded more than 200 attempts to introduce computer viruses through email attachments (which we unequivocally do NOT open unless we know the sender)
In any case all "friendly" files are virus-checked before they're opened but we prefer NOT to receive attachments of any kind unless they are clearly labeled from identifiable sources and known to be free from infection.
The indications therefore are that there are certain elements which wish to cause irreparable damage not only to VHeadline.com Venezuela as a truly independent service of news & views from Venezuela, but to thousands upon thousands of pro-constitutional Venezuelan internauts as well.
Why all the effort? Why the attempt to muzzle what's truly happening in Venezuela ... why resort to Venezuela's particular brand of MBWs?
Of course, sabotage is nothing new to the Venezuelan political-economic scenario after (or even before!) last December-January's supreme failure by the opposition to bring the democratically-elected government to its knees. Electronic warfare reached its all-time peak in the days and weeks prior to the April 11, 2002 coup d'etat which saw the imposition of Dictator-for-a-day Pedro Carmona Estanga.
The latest surge in subversive electronic warfare is simply the latest round in attempts by rogue elements in Venezuela's opposition to seek out and destroy anything that can even remotely be misinterpreted as negative to their psychotic hatred of the duly-elected Head of State and their total rejection of Constitutional Law and democratic order.
"If only these people would use their intellectual capacities and command of technology to help make Venezuela a better place in which to live, everybody might benefit," a Venezuelan security source tells VHeadline.com. "We have to waste so much time and effort dealing with their sabotage that more useful resources and efforts must unfortunately deflected to this branch of crime prevention from routine maintenance of law and order."
How do security services know the electronic warfare originates with Venezuelan opposition elements?
IC sources say it's the logical conclusion from the level of IT know-how required to spread computer viruses while putting up a myriad of ruses to avoid detection. "It's not exactly the level you'd expect to come from under-educated poor people in the barrio-slums: firstly they do not have the computers; secondly, they do not have the telecommunications capacity or level of education and thirdly, they are forced to spend so much time trying to eke out a living that they simply would not have enough time or resources to even make a feeble attempt at it.
On the other hand, hot-beds of anti-government dissent at leading universities, combined with funding from anti-government sources in private industry, the corrupt trade union movement and traditional commercial and government black bag operations out of the United States are the most logical origins of subversive perpetrators who are already being fast-tracked for investigation by Venezuelan State Political & Security (DISIP) and Military Intelligence (DIM) experts.
"It used to be that Spanish-language internet mailing lists such as Atarraya were used to back-channel disinformation but this has been superceded over the last few years by offshore online chatrooms which mostly function as communication channels for the already anti-government converted to preach hatred to like-minded souls."
While Venezuelan IC keeps an eye on the chatrooms and has been successful in logging thousands of the most vitriolic abusers, there is no intent to take action against dissenters until they reach the point where they factually break the law ... "just like the CIA, FBI and other law enforcement agencies in the USA and elsewhere, we keep records of fringe elements and get to know exactly who we are dealing with against the possibility that they go 'loco' and take their obsessions into another sphere!"
"There's a tremendous MBW capacity on the Venezuelan internet!"
MBW? Male Bovine Waste, otherwise known as BS!
Meanwhile, using the latest technology and basic common sense in email and other communications procedures, we at VHeadline.com will continue to endeavor to defend freedom of speech and press freedoms as they are enshrined in the 1999 Venezuelan Constitution and international fora.
Roy S. Carson
VHeadline.com Venezuela
IVSS kingpin, Rafael Vargas number two in revolutionary new rich list
<a href=www.vheadline.com>Venezuela's Electronic News
Posted: Sunday, June 08, 2003
By: Patrick J. O'Donoghue
Former Presidential Secretariat Minister Rafael Vargas has been warding off attacks about his influence in the Social Security Institute (IVSS) highlighted by www.aporrea.org in a report on a Radio Nacional de Venezuela (RNV) decision to take "Actores Economicos" program off the air.
Program presenter, Rafael Febles says the decision was taken after he criticized Vargas (currently IVSS acting director) for his performance at the Institute. According to the journalist, Vargas was rude to him over the phone but in a letter to aporrea.org Vargas denies the phone conversation and says the campaign against him was inspired by the opposition.
Quinto Dia columnist, Miguel Salazar has been highlighting Vargas, calling him the "mentor of the gang that has taken the IVSS by assault" and lists him as second in the order of the new rich under the Chavez Frias Administration. Salazar accuses Vargas of precipitating the exit of respected IVSS director, Roberto Rodriguez.
Vargas calls himself a revolutionary and denies intervening to get rid of Rodriguez or other IVSS personnel ... "this information is typical of opposition-managed news and the only person arrested in connection with corruption was a middleman and not any director." In a veiled warning to aporrea.org, Vargas, using what old timers call "60s revolutionary surplus," demands the respect that his revolutionary work merits for his efforts in helping alternative media.
Salazar's list of Fifth Republic "nouveaux riches" is the following: Rafael Sarria, Rafael Vargas, Luis Alfonzo Davila, Ismael Garcia, Eliecer Hurtado, Jorge Kamkoff, Jorge Castillo, Antonio Rojas Suarez, Enrique Medina Rubio, Arturo Garcia, and Guaicaipuro Lameda. The journalist promises more revelations. Salazar reports that Vargas has placed another henchman as new general director of the passports & identification Office (Oni-Dex) ... the new man comes from IVSS where he headed the Control & Losses Department!
CD representatives to Chile to report on alleged agreement violations
Posted by click at 6:26 PM
<a href=www.vheadline.com>Venezuela's Electronic News
Posted: Sunday, June 08, 2003
By: Patrick J. O'Donoghue
Coordinadora Democratica (CD) has reacted to Venezuela's legislature crisis by appointing Timoteo Zambrano and Asdrubal Aguiar as its representatives on the negotiations agreement liaison committee and sending them to the Organization of American States (OAS) general assembly in Santiago (Chile) to lobby support against alleged Venezuelan government violations of the negotiations agreement.
CD spokesman, Leonardo Carvajal says President Chavez Frias has violated Agreement Clause 8 regarding violence. "What happened in Parliament last week violates Clause 4, which stipulates that both sides must cease any direct or indirect aggression, threat, harassment and violence that breaks or prevents free exercise of rights in Constitution."
Speaking for CD, Carvajal says he supports opposition deputies' appraisal of Movimiento Quinto Republica's (MVR) El Calvario plenary session last Friday as null and void. "The opposition will not fall into provocation and we will take the matter to the international scene ... Chavez Frias will uncover himself before the international community."
However, Accion Democratica (AD) has opposed the appointment of Zambrano and Aguiar. AD president Jesus Mendez Quijada calls the appointment a political error because he says the two men are dissident voices and as negotiators failed to come up with a favorable agreement.
It has been learned that AD wanted CD to accept one-time Transport & Communications (MTC) AD minister, Luis Carlos Serra Carmona to represent CD in the liaisons committee.