| US
official says democracy in Venezuela in peril
Source: Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere - wwwc.house.gov
& AP
November 18, 2005
WASHINGTON - Democracy in Venezuela is in grave peril
because President Hugo Chavez is trying to concentrate
power in his own hands, a top State Department official
said Thursday.
Newly appointed Assistant Secretary of State Thomas
Shannon, in charge of Latin American affairs, told
a congressional committee that Chavez's government
was "subverting democratic institutions by using
them to restrict the rights of those who disagree
with it, slowly undermining economic freedoms and
rejecting the opportunities of globalization."
Shannon's remarks were the latest in a verbal battle
between the Bush administration and Chavez. At this
month's Summit of the Americas, Chavez led a protest
against U.S. policies and opposed President Bush's
efforts to win support for a hemisphere-wide free
trade zone.
In a speech Thursday night in Venezuela, Chavez called
President Bush "an assassin" and accused
the United States of meddling in his country's affairs.
"The people of the United States are governed
by an assassin ... a crazy man!" said Chavez,
a self-style revolutionary.
Chavez, first elected in 1998 and up for re-election
next year, insists he supports democracy and accuses
the U.S. government of falsely branding him authoritarian
because it disagrees with his socialist policies.
He has close ties with Cuban leader Fidel Castro.
Shannon said Chavez was centralizing power in the
executive and politicizing the judiciary.
"The impact on the civic, political and economic
life of the country is evident in increased self censorship
by the media, lack of public confidence in the electoral
system, reluctance to express disagreement with government
policies for fear of retribution and capital flight,"
Shannon said.
Shannon said the Bush administration was working with
the 34-nation Organization of American States, the
European Union and others, "sensitizing them
to the threat to regional stability posed by the Venezuelan
government's arms shopping spree and its support for
radical political movements."
In May, the Chavez government signed an agreement
with Russia to purchase 100,000 Kalashnikov assault
rifles. Bush has expressed concern the weapons could
fall into the hands of groups such as leftist rebels
in Colombia.
November 17, 2005:
10:30 a.m., 2172 Rayburn House Office Building
Hearing: Democracy in Venezuela
The
Honorable Dan Burton (PDF)
The
Honorable Thomas A. Shannon (PDF)
Mr.
Joseph McSpedon (PDF)
Mr.
John Walsh (PDF)
Ms.
Ana Julia Jatar (PDF)
Source: wwwc.house.gov
Si deseas publicar un art�culo, env�alo a articulos@11abril.com
|