Hugo Chazez esposed as a dictator by left wing press
Realist | 19.08.2004 10:19
The Independent newspaper has denounced Zenezulan president Hugo Chavez as a despot who rigged the elections in his country and who terrorises the press and opposition in his country.
It will inevitably include a crackdown on the opposition, particularly government employees and others dependent on the public sector, and greater limitations on press freedom, particularly for private television stations. Mr Chávez will use the remaining two years of his presidency to neutralise remnants of the opposition and guarantee an easy re-election in 2006. That election will probably take place in a climate of fear marked by intimidation to discourage voter participation and prevent the opposition from organising effectively.
http://www.independent.co.uk
http://www.independent.co.uk
Realist
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The Independent also carried this ...........
19.08.2004 10:30
http://www.counterpunch.org/tariq08162004.html
"A few weeks ago in Caracas I had a lengthy discussion with Chavez ranging from Iraq to the most detailed minutiae of Venezuelan history and politics and the Bolivarian programme. It became clear to me that what Chavez is attempting is nothing more or less than the creation of a radical, social-democracy in Venezuela that seeks to empower the lowest strata of society. In these times of deregulation, privatisation and the Anglo-Saxon model of wealth subsuming politics, Chavez' aims are regarded as revolutionary, even though the measures proposed are no different to those of the post-war Attlee government in Britain. Some of the oil-wealth is being spent to educate and heal the poor.
Just under a million children from the shanty-towns and the poorest villages now obtain a free education; 1.2 million illiterate adults have been taught to read and write; secondary education has been made available to 250,000 children whose social status excluded them from this privilege during the ancien regime; three new university campuses were functioning by 2003 and six more are due to be completed by 2006.
As far as healthcare is concerned, the 10,000 Cuban doctors, who were sent to help the country, have transformed the situation in the poor districts, where 11,000 neighbourhood clinics have been established and the health budget has tripled. Add to this the financial support provided to small businesses, the new homes being built for the poor, an Agrarian Reform Law that was enacted and pushed through despite the resistance, legal and violent, by the landlords. By the end of last year 2,262,467 hectares has been distributed to 116,899 families. The reasons for Chavez' popularity become obvious. No previous regime had even noticed the plight of the poor."
I can see why "Some foreign correspondents in Caracas have convinced themselves that Chavez is an oppressive caudillo and they are desperate to translate their own fantasies into reality.. "
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