Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Mr Chavez says private stations such as RCTV were involved in a coup that nearly toppled him five years ago and that they have since tried to bring down his government.





http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/6699383.stm

Second Venezuela TV is under fire

Protesters kneel as riot police spray them with water in Caracas

Thousands of protesters clashed with police across the country

Protests in Caracas

Venezuela's government has accused a TV station of inciting a murder attempt on President Hugo Chavez, hours after taking another network off the air.

It said footage shown on Globovision implicitly called for Mr Chavez to be killed. The station denies the claim.

Police fired tear gas and plastic bullets as thousands protested across the country against the earlier closure of Venezuela's oldest TV network.

Mr Chavez said Radio Caracas TV (RCTV) had tried to undermine his government.

Chavez eyes CNN

Communications Minister William Lara said Globovision had called for the death of Mr Chavez by airing footage of the 1981 assassination attempt against Pope John Paul II with the song "This Does Not Stop Here" sung by Ruben Blades, now Panama's tourism minister.

"The conclusion of the specialists ... is that (in this segment) they are inciting the assassination of the president of Venezuela," Mr Lara said, as he filed a lawsuit against the news network at the state prosecutor's office.

[The closure is] a major setback to democracy and pluralism

Robert Menard

Reporters Without Borders

The government was also suing the US station CNN for allegedly linking Mr Chavez to al-Qaeda, Mr Lara said.

"CNN broadcast a lie which linked President Chavez to violence and murder," he said.

In a statement, CNN said they "strongly deny" being "engaged in a campaign to discredit or attack Venezuela".

Globovision director Alberto Federico Ravell rejected the accusations against his station as "ridiculous".

Globovision was the only TV station to air footage of a large demonstration against the government's growing control over the media.

Protest violence

Meanwhile, protests are continuing across Venezuela after Mr Chavez refused to renew the licence of RCTV.

In one of the largest demonstrations in the capital, Caracas, police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at up to 5,000 protesters, some of whom tossed rocks and bottles at police.

Within seconds of RCTV's closure, the insignia of a new state-sponsored broadcaster, TVES, appeared. Fireworks exploded across Caracas, as Chavez supporters celebrated the end of RCTV.

The president says the new channel will better reflect his socialist revolution but RCTV and rights groups say Mr Chavez is limiting freedom of expression.

Employees of Venezuela's most watched channel embraced and chanted "freedom", before bowing their heads in tearful prayer during their final minutes on air.

'Threat to the country'

Germany, which holds the European Union presidency, expressed concern over Mr Chavez's decision.

Robert Menard, from International media rights group Reporters Without Borders, said the closure was a "major setback to democracy and pluralism".

In a broadcast all of the country's TV stations were obliged to run, Mr Chavez said it had been his decision to shut down the station because it had become "a threat to the country".

Chavez supporters

Many Venezuelans back Mr Chavez's decision

RCTV's general manager Marcel Granier said Mr Chavez was acting illegally and described the move as "abusive" and "arbitrary".

RCTV will still be available on cable, but losing its public broadcast frequency will deprive it of most of its audience.

The new state-sponsored channel TVES launched with programmes that Mr Chavez said would better reflect society, including a film about independence hero Simon Bolivar.

The government provided $4m (£2m) of funding for the new station's launch.

Mr Chavez says private stations such as RCTV were involved in a coup that nearly toppled him five years ago and that they have since tried to bring down his government.

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OK. Parece que seguimos extraviados. Lo que funciona en los analistas hoy en día, es la memoria de corto plazo, la inmediatez, tal como lo establecí en la primera entrega de este BLOG. Gentlemen, ¿no había anunciado el gobierno de la república BOLIVARIANA de Venezuela que, según reportes de inteligencia, A LA SORDA se “organizaba” un golpe de Estado preparado y financiado por ya saben quién?

Liguen, liguen noticias, please. ¿No es cierto que en 2002 uno de los principales protagonistas del intento de derrocamiento fue ese canal de Televisión que ahora todos defienden? Sobre todo los DOBLE MORAL de siempre. ¿’Tonz? ¿Les suena ahora derrocamiento PLUS cadena de Televisión? La coyuntura no le dejaba márgen de maniobra (ojo, no lo estoy apoyando, creo en la libertad de expresión, pero no bajo TODA circunstancia), era el Estado de Venezuela como hasta hoy se conoce o una cadena de Televisión pro-golpista. Ese era precisamente el dilema. No iba a pasar demasiado tiempo en que infiltrados trataran de sembrar el descontento primero, luego las protestas generalizadas, la violencia y el derrocamiento, todo ello apoyado por la maquinaria bien aceitadita de la Televisión PRIVADA. ¡Ah! Y los vende-patrias de siempre, como esos que en México actúan a la sombra sin dar la cara a plena luz del día como hacemos todos los RENEGADOS.

Todo está dicho (Espero que Benson & Hedges no me lleve a corte por plagio, voy a tratar de buscar la contraparte en Latín, que me gusta tanto como el Castellano).



M@anchor;


Norwich, U(n) K(anal);


29/5/07




P.D.CONDOR. "In my obssesion against THEM, I even went to FOREIGN cities to persecute them". Acts 26:11 (NIV).



... golpe de ariete.




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