Adamant: Hardest metal
Sunday, February 9, 2003

On the streets and in Congress, Chavez supporters intensify crackdown on Venezuelan news media

boston.com By James Anderson, Associated Press, 2/7/2003 07:44

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) The band of government supporters surrounded the Televen TV news crew on a highway, punched the driver, stole equipment and shattered the car's rear window.

The same day, emissaries of President Hugo Chavez, accompanied by 1,000 supporters, informed the Venevision TV network it may be fined for its coverage of a two-month strike aimed at forcing Chavez to step down.

The incidents on Wednesday came as Chavez intensifies a longtime offensive against Venezuela's news media, many of which promoted the strike. The protest petered out this week.

His government is investigating all four national private TV networks, whom he likes to call the four horsemen of the apocalypse. Independent lawmaker Alberto Jordan counted more than 60 assaults and threats against reporters in January, up from 60 in all of 2002.

Regional television outlets and a growing number of radio stations are also under investigation, and on Thursday, the Chavez-dominated Congress began debating legislation that would regulate TV and radio programming more closely.

The project would divide the broadcast day into ''children's,'' ''supervised'' and ''adult'' hours, and require journalists to divulge documentary sources. It would even monitor the music and language used in commercials.

''They'd tell us what is good sex and what is bad sex, what is good violence and what is bad violence, what health information can be broadcast and what health programs can't,'' Asdrubal Aguiar, professor of international law at Andres Bello Catholic University, told Venevision.

In a recent prime-time speech, Chavez said the new media law, which needs a simple majority to pass, will protect ''our adolescents from the abuses of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse ... who trample the truth, who sow terror and fear and create ghosts for our children.''

Most Venezuelan media gave shrill and supportive coverage to the strike and its leaders. Newspapers sometimes refused to publish in solidarity with strikers, and thousands of opposition television commercials were aired.

Ruling party lawmaker Juan Barreto said Thursday the government wants to find out who paid for the ads and collect any unpaid taxes on them. He said that private TV broadcast an average of 700 pro-strike or anti-Chavez ads daily during the protest.

Media owners insist they were forced to play a partisan role with the evaporation of Venezuela's traditional, and corrupt, political parties in the late 1990s.

Chavez, first elected in 1998, proudly notes that his government, unlike its predecessors, hasn't sent agents to abduct reporters or seize newspaper editions right off the presses.

The government insists that balanced media coverage must be guaranteed if early elections, as demanded by the opposition, are to be held.

The issue has come up during talks mediated by the Organization of American States. The Group of Friends, six nations backing the negotiations, urged private channels to limit anti-Chavez and pro-strike commercials.

Not that Chavez has much trouble getting air time.

He has his own weekly talk show. Government television trumpets the revolution's successes. And he gives speeches known as ''cadenas'' television stations have been forced to interrupt their programming to air them at least 29 times since Jan. 1.

Past presidents rarely used the cadena law, designed for matters of national importance.

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