Latin American integration moves forward
Transcription
Latin American integration moves forward
Pg. g 7 | Analysis y Pg. 8 | Opinion Are US-Venezuela relations Oscar-winning actor Sean Penn frozen indefinitely or can they be fixed? on rejecting US sanctions against Venezuela FRIDAY | June 10th, 2011 | No. 67 | Bs 1 | C ARACAS ENGLISH EDITION The artillery of ideas Latin American integration moves forward Venezuelan art in London On a mini Latin America tour this week, Venezuela’s Chavez strengthened cooperation with neighboring nations Implementing reforms to fight crime Stopping first in Brazil to meet with the South American giant’s new head of state, Dilma Rousseff, and then on to Ecuador and Cuba, President Hugo Chavez furthered the growing integration and cooperation model his country has been building in the region during the past decade. Dozens of new agreements were signed to promote regional commercial activity and social programs, as well as progress in hemispheric independence and sovereignty. Preparations for next month’s launching of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) were also advanced. | pages 2-3 Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez announced major initiatives to battle internal police and security corruption, as well as improve prison conditions and promote disarmament in communities nationwide. He called for a more in depth focus on human rights training for security forces. A new national disarmament program was also implemented this week to reduce the number of guns in the streets and fight crime. | page 4 Politics Housing solutions advance A new public housing program gains ground in Venezuela. | page 5 Politics Hunting banned, conservation promoted The Venezuelan state is taking steps to preserve the environment and endangered species. | page 5 Social Justice Millions benefit from free healthcare in Venezuela Free, universal, advanced medical attention is saving lives throughout Latin America. | page 6 D Crime drops in Caracas ue to the work of the newlyformed National Bolivarian Police (PNB), crime is down by nearly 53% in Caracas, according to the Chief of Police. Last Saturday, head of the PNB, Luis Fernandez, said that thanks to operations of the force, which was officially launched last year, the violent crime rate has decreased by 52.78%. So far, the PNB is only active in Caracas as part of a pilot program to reduce crime, but the new force is in the process of expanding nationwide. As part of efforts to reduce crime and police abuse, in March the in- famously corrupt Metropolitan Police of Caracas was formally disbanded. The now defunct Metropolitan Police was notoriously known for internal corruption, facilitation of crime and drug-trafficking, and was even involved in the 2002 coup d’etat against President Chavez. The force was trained from 2000-2002 by ex-NYPD police chief William Bratton. Chief Fernandez said homicides in Caracas were down by 48.61% so far this year, and police have arrested 2,569 people, and dismantled 249 gangs, 221 of which were drug related. In the Caracas Metro system, known for small-scale robberies, Fernandez said the crime rate was down 71.7% compared to last year. The PNB was formally created in 2009, and became active in the streets in early 2010. Its police are trained in the new National Experimental Police University, and the force is one of the government’s main policy initiatives aimed at combating the high crime rate and police corruption. T/ Tamara Pearson A selection l i off art bby some of Venezuela’s most acclaimed modern artists is currently on show at the contemporary Latin American art exhibition, Pinta, at London’s Earl’s Court. Maria Fernanda Lairet, an artist from the Caracas-based Estudio 8 gallery exhibits a number of impressive works from her Global Narratives series, which takes on themes of social and economic diversity by fusing the imagery of bank notes from different countries, mixing colors, symbols and geometrical lines. The result is a powerful mix of national icons such as the Queen, George Washington and Simon Bolivar. One of her most emblematic works was the fusion of the dollar and the euro, representing the phenomenon of globalization and the domination that certain cultures exercise in the world. Other artists from Latin America included Mexican Emilio Chapela, who created a visual, color block representation of what people search for in Google. More left wing political themes were searched for in Spanish whereas searches in English tended to be more right wing. The artist noted that Venezuela was the country with the most Google hits for the word “democracy”. | 2 | Impact NoÊÈÇÊUÊFriday, June 10th, 2011 The artillery of ideas Chavez and Dilma fortify Venezuela-Brazil ties Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez met with his Brazilian counterpart, Dilma Rousseff in the capital city of Brasilia last Monday on the first stop of a 3-nation Latin American tour intended to promote regional integration and strengthen bilateral cooperation T he meeting between the two heads of state marks their first encounter since Rousseff was sworn in as Brazil’s new president on January 1st, and saw the signing of ten new accords in areas of agricultural, housing, and energy. “We can say that a new strategic moment is beginning in this relationship”, President Chavez said of Brazil-Venezuela ties upon his arrival in Brasilia Sunday night. “Without a doubt, in past years we have been creating ventures, clearing paths, and opening horizons. Now there is a great coming together of projects, programs and possibilities between our nations”. HOUSING, TECHNOLOGY AID Topping the list of deals signed on Monday was an agreement between the Venezuelan government and the Brazilian company Odebrecht which will see the Chavez administration receive $4 billion in financing for social projects. Most notably, the financing will be used to further Venezuela’s ambitious new public housing program, known as Mission Housing Venezuela, which seeks to construct 2 million new homes in the Caribbean country by 2017. Odebrecht, one of Latin America’s largest infrastructure contracting firms, has been operating in Venezuela since 1992 and is currently involved in a number of development projects including metro, bridge and damn construction. Chavez’s visit on Monday also yielded a memorandum of un- derstanding between Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA and the Brazilian development bank BNDES for the creation of shipyard in Venezuela to benefit the Bolivarian Alliance of the Americas (ALBA). ALBA, the 9 state regional block which seeks to counterbalance US hegemony in Latin America, was founded in 2005 and includes Venezuela as a leading member. BNDES will loan $637 million to PDVSA for the shipyard that will construct oil tankers in the eastern Venezuelan state of Sucre with the assistance of Brazilian firms. Other pacts signed between the two governments include the development of joint agricultural research projects as well as scientific cooperation in areas of biotechnology. According to the Venezuelan President, the new agreements highlight the mutually beneficial ties the two nations have fostered in recent years. “We’re creating and articulating a new relationship with Brazil that is not limited to neoliberal concepts but rather is based on a model of cooperation which needs to be strengthened. The accords signed on Monday are an example of this”, Chavez declared. GROWING RELATIONS Relations between Venezuela and Brazil have grown strong over the last 8 years. Rousseff’s predecessor, Lula Da Silva, maintained trimestral meetings with Chavez and signed over 200 agreements with the Venezuela President, a trend that both governments plan to continue. Commercial activity between the neighboring South American countries reached over $4.5 billion last year as increased collaboration between the Venezuelan government and private Brazilian firms moves forward in areas of agriculture, energy, transportation and now more than ever, housing. For President Rousseff, the economic cooperation that has flowered between the two nations has been accompanied by a shared sense of trust, allowing for the creation of new social development projects. “The dimensions and the reach of these projects demonstrates the confidence that the private sector has in the Venezuelan economy”, she said on Monday. Part of this growing commercial and social relationship also involves, President Chavez commented during his visit, the full admittance of Venezuela to the regional trade block, the Common Market of the South, or Mercosur. Awaiting only the approval of the Paraguayan parliament, Venezuela’s entrance to Mercosur will, according to Chavez, represent a further step towards solidifying South American economic and social independence. On Monday, Rousseff expressed her support for Venezuela’s participation in the regional alliance and reiterated her government’s commitment to Latin American unity. “Venezuela can be sure that Brazil is at its side in the fight of all Latin American countries for integration, the creation of harmonious cooperation and a democratic world, respectful of human rights”, she said. T/ COI P/ Presidential Press Chavez: OPEC has no reason to increase oil production O n Tuesday, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez argued that since the international oil market is sufficiently supplied and oil prices are fair, there is no need for the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to increase oil production. “The international crude oil market is sufficiently supplied. There is no crisis. The cause of fair prices is not the lack of oil supply, but rather several structural factors”, said Chavez during a press conference with his Ecuadorian counterpart, Rafael Correa. The Venezuelan leader met with Correa earlier this week in the coastal Ecuadorian city of Salinas as part of their IX Tri-Monthly Presidential Meeting. President Chavez mentioned situations such as “the madness of bombing Libya, or the aggressions against Iran, another OPEC country”, as causes for high oil prices. He commented that oil prices have been moving towards a fair level, which is, according to him, what is currently happening. “Today’s prices, about $100 per barrel, are fair, according to our point of view. In the coming years they will keep increasing, as well as the costs of gold, food and medicine”. “OPEC has no reason to increase oil production in this moment. As the demand grows, it will have to be increased”, he stressed. The Venezuelan President also added, “There is oil for 150 years in Venezuela with the current rate of exploitation; it’s scientifically certified”. Venezuela’s national oil reserves exceed 300 billion barrels, the world’s largest. On Wednesday, OPEC energy ministers met in Vienna for the organization’s 159th ministerial meeting. The Minister of Energy and Oil, Rafael Ramirez, attended the meeting in representation of Venezuela. The OPEC meeting resulted in a deadlock on increasing oil supply, which some countries, such as US-ally Saudi Arabia, tried to justify. But others, such as Venezuela and Iran, refused to budge on raising production output. Venezuela is a founding member of OPEC, along with Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. T/ AVN NoÊÈÇÊUÊFriday, June 10th, 2011 The artillery of ideas Integration | 3| Ecuador and Venezuela strengthen bilateral relations T he Presidents of Venezuela and Ecuador, Hugo Chavez and Rafael Correa, together with their cabinet members, signed 12 new accords of cooperation this week to continue strengthening bilateral relations. In matters of science, technology and intermediate industries, on Tuesday the Presidents signed a deed of commitment to build a joint venture of technology and engineering to construct houses in Venezuela as part of the “Grand Mission Housing Venezuela”, a social program geared towards building 2 million new homes over the next 6 years. “It’s important to create a joint venture for housing construction materials in Venezuela”, Chavez said during a press conference with Correa. A deed of commitment to supply glass bottles from Venezuela’s Venvidrio to Ecuadorian companies was also signed Tuesday. Glass would be sold at fair prices to private Ecuadorian companies, Chavez explained. Similarly, another deed of commitment in matters of innovation, training and technical assistance for the textile sector was entered into and additional accord signed by the two nations foresees the creation of a joint venture of plastic containers in Venezuela. The two Presidents also signed an agreement to extend the relationship in matters of academic exchange and human resources training, aimed at granting five scholarships for Ecuadorian students to undergo doctoral studies in Venezuela. In matters of agriculture and land, an agreement was entered into for produce and trade plants. The Venezuelan President explained the two nations will work to develop 2,000 hectares of plantain and banana farms in the southern Maracaibo Lake region in western Venezuela, taking advantage of Ecuador’s experience in the industry. Another deed of commitment signed by both states will create an accord to produce and export flowers, in order to complement the potentiality of the two nations in matters of productive, commercial components, as well as logistical export processes. An agreement was also signed to create a joint venture to produce and process cocoa beans. SHRIMP FARM As part of the 12 new cooperation agreements, one is aimed at developing activities in matters of fishing and aquaculture. “Taking advantage of the Ecuadorian experience, we will establish a shrimp farm in Venezuela and a factory to process tuna. We will also create a factory of balanced food items for fish and shrimps, and for aquaculture supplies. In Ecuador, we expect to build a fish-processing plant on a smaller scale”, announced President Chavez. In terms of energy, a memorandum of understanding between Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) and Petroleos del Ecuador (Petroecuador) was established to exploit mature oil fields. “We have agreed to continue bringing more drills and invest more resources in these mature fields in Ecuador. PDVSA has already invested about $100 million in those fields. Petroecuador will also participate in oil production in Venezuela in fields that are producing about 10 thousand oil barrels per day. We expect to have 40 thousand barrels per day in about 5 years”, added the Venezuelan President. This project also envisions the joint exploitation of oil belts and the construction of refineries which will enable the export of by-products in the long term. In matters of tourism, the two Presidents signed a memorandum of understanding to develop a binational tourism program, in order to promote tourism in both nations. BINATIONAL FUND During this 9th encounter between Ecuador and Venezuela, the Presidents signed two documents to ratify the creation of the Binational Ecuador-Venezuela Fund. Chavez and Correa signed an addendum to the regulations of the binational technical commission of the Ecuador-Venezuela Fund (Fedves), which is managed by Venezuela’s economic and social development bank Bandes and Ecuador’s Finance Ministry. SOCIAL PROJECTS Venezuela and Ecuador also created a joint fund of $66 million to finance social projects for the benefit of both nations. President Rafael Correa detailed that Venezuela will contribute with $50 million, while Ecuador will provide $16 million. “Each meeting, especially with Venezuela, but with all the countries of Latin America, is useful to strengthen the dream of our Liberator: the Patria Grande (the great homeland). Today, we continue with the fight to build that dream”, affirmed President Correa. T/ AVN P/ Presidential Press Venezuela and Cuba advance integration model T he energy cooperation between Cuba and Venezuela, which has expanded in the last few years, is promoting a new integration model for Latin America and the Caribbean, on the basis of mutual cooperation, solidarity and sustainable socio-economic development of the region. This week in Havana, General Manager of PDVSA Cuba, Hector Pernia, outlined the progress of diverse economic and social projects during Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez’s visit to the island to sustain meetings with Raul Castro and strengthen ties. Pernia noted the importance of the construction of the Camilo Cienfuegos Refinery, inaugurated in Cuba in December 2007. Currently, the plant has the capacity to refine 65,000 barrels of oil per day. “There is project to expand this refinery and increase its capacity to 150,000 barrels”, he announced. Pernia also mentioned the construction of a re-gasification plant, including a gas pipeline and port facilities. Likewise, there are projects to build a plant of urea and ammoniac, and a new refinery in the province of Matanzas (northeastern Cuba) with the capacity to process 150,000 barrels of oil per day. “We also have a project in Santiago de Cuba to upgrade the refinery Hermanos Diaz from 22,000 to 50,000 barrels per day”, Pernia said. All these projects of investments are aimed at fostering the production and commercialization of lubricants, fuels and other oil derivatives for Central America and the Caribbean in the framework of the PetroCaribe agreement, run by Venezuela. In addition, each area where PDVSA Cuba operates, social projects are also promoted, which is one of the principles guiding this new integration model. “We have an endogenous development center in Pinar del Rio that attends to the populations in Bolivar, Sandino and Marti. There, we have developed a full agriculture and livestock production program and we have improved the entire social infrastructure, transportation, housing, roads and sewage system in the region”, he explained. There are two projects under development in Cienfuegos, including the construction of a 26mile road and improvement of the public transport system. PDVSA Cuba started operations in Havana on April 28, 2005, aimed at fostering PetroCaribe in the framework of the agreement to launch the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our Americas (ALBA). During President Chavez’s visit to Cuba this week, all these accords were strengthened. Chavez also sustained private meetings with Cuba’s President Raul Castro and ex-leader Fidel Castro. T/ AVN P/ Presidential Press | 4 | Security NoÊÈÇÊUÊFriday, June 10th, 2011 The artillery of ideas Getting crime under control in Venezuela, humanizing police and healthy living over a culture of violence”. Emphasizing respect for human rights and the rule of law, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez called for an end to corruption and abuse within the nation’s security forces last Sunday during his weekly television show, Alo Presidente T he announcement came in the wake of a scandal that broke on May 27th revealing the death of three inmates allegedly killed by police officers in a detention center in the capital of Caracas. The prisoners, found dead at the headquarters of the nation’s investigative police, CICPC, showed signs of suffocation and internal bleeding consistent with homicide. Four officers have been arrested for the crimes. Broadcasting from the presidential palace of Miraflores, President Chavez condemned the acts of violence and reaffirmed his government’s commitment to prisoners’ rights as stipulated by the Venezuelan constitution. “The beating and torture of prisoners must definitively be eliminated”, Chavez exclaimed during his program. “Investigate this to the roots and clean up [the police forces]”, he demanded from the cabinet members gathered for the television program. REFORMING PRISONS Venezuelan prisons, as is the case in many Latin American societies, are known for their overcrowding and poor conditions. While much of the blame for the problems associated with the penitentiary system lies with its neglect on the part of previous governments, the Chavez administration has embarked on a reform program that has sought to humanize conditions for those convicted of crimes. Although May’s prisoner scandal demonstrates the need to continue with the reforms, the government has made positive strides including providing incarcerated populations with educational and recreational programs never before seen in Venezuelan prisons. Earlier this year the country’s legislative body, the National Assembly, passed a new Penitentiary Code that seeks to overhaul the prison system, bringing it in line with the progressive and humanistic values of the nation’s constitution. HUMANIZING POLICE The Chavez government has also made advancements in cleaning up the country’s police forces, many of which have been known for their corruption and ineffectiveness. In March, the notorious Metropolitan Police Force of Caracas was disbanded in efforts to standardize security measures and install a new ethic in public safety operations grounded in human rights. The disbandment follows the inauguration in 2010 of the National Bolivarian Police (PNB), a new security force defined by rigorous training and educational programs as well as methods based in community engagement. In its first year of existence, three thousand new officers belonging to the PNB were put on the streets on Caracas with those numbers set to expand to 12,500 around the nation by the end of 2011. On Sunday, Chavez applauded the efforts being made to improve the nation’s security apparatus, but expressed his intolerance for any acts that run contrary to the values of the constitution. “I’m making a call to police officers. I congratulate the great majority who do their job, but a bad apple spoils the bunch”, he said, noting that the fight against crime in the country in no way justifies abuse. “We continue to fight against insecurity, but we must respect human rights. You can’t, regardless of the cause, mistreat or beat prisoners”, he said. HEEDING THE CALL Following Chavez’s condemnation of prisoner abuse during his broadcast, the Minister for Justice and Interior, Tareck El Aissami, held a press conference on Monday where he announced the creation of new reform initiatives intended to promote a culture of nonviolence in the country. Part of the announced reforms includes the implementation of a technical assessment of the investigative police (CICPC) focused on the treatment and processing of people under custody, El Aissami said. The assessment will be used to recommend changes to police procedures and policies in order to ensure greater compliance with the norms and laws established by the Venezuelan constitution. Parallel to the investigation, the Minister also announced the implementation of four working groups to formulate public disarmament policies with the goal of “encouraging a culture of peace GUN CONTROL The working groups, El Aissami explained, are the result of a Presidential Disarmament Commission created last May to research approaches to gun control and encourage dialogue as a method of conflict resolution. The National Assembly is set to discuss and approve the Commission’s work plan next Thursday at which time the nation’s short term disarmament measures will be announced along with a timeline for long term action. According to Luis Fernandez, Director of the PNB, the need to for gun control in Venezuela is essential in cutting down on violent crime and promoting personal security. “The disarmament process in the country is a complex process and we need to take it on with great responsibility”, he said. “Arms were made to destroy life, that’s why we need to promote a culture of resistance to the use of weapons in our citizens”, he added. Apart from the disarmament measures, the government also announced last Monday the creation of a new sports program to take root in the nation’s prisons, intended to provide greater opportunities for inmates to participate in organized athletics. The program will benefit five thousand prisoners across the country with equipment and training in sports such as basketball, volleyball, table tennis, and softball. A national tournament for incarcerated populations is also being planned to begin in different prisons across the country on July 2nd. “This opening tournament will be carried out for three months and will be based on the participation of the inmates with the purpose of recognizing them as serious and not just casual athletes”, said Johan Garcia, Coordinator of the government’s prison sports division. T/ COI P/ Presidential Press NoÊÈÇÊUÊFriday, June 10th, 2011 The artillery of ideas Politics | 5| Housing solutions advance in Venezuela A fter being sidelined for nearly a month with a knee injury, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez resumed his public work agenda last week, focusing on housing during his weekly television broadcast on Sunday. Before departing for a threenation Latin American tour that began with Brazil, the Venezuelan head of state informed the country on the progress of the government’s new public housing initiative that has set as its goal the construction of 2 million homes in the country by 2017. The social program, known as Mission Housing Venezuela, began its inscription process in May and according to the Venezuelan President, has already registered more than one million families in four states and the capital district. The next step for these regions, the President reported, will be to use the data gathered through the enrollment process to organize small brigades to make house calls and evaluate the needs of those registered with the mission. DOOR-TO-DOOR Starting on June 20th, groups of four guided by GPS units will be deployed in the states of Vargas, Miranda, Zulia, Falcon and the city of Caracas to canvass neighborhoods in efforts to interview enrollees. “I want to invite you to not see this as something individual”, Chavez said during the program. “The problem is collective and the solution must be collective with, of course, results for families and individuals”, he declared. Receiving updates from various cabinet members on housing projects taking place across the country, the Venezuelan head of state praised the steps being taken by the new mission to ensure that the Caribbean country “will not suffer more” for lack of affordable homes. One of these projects includes the erection of City Cariba in the state of Vargas where 1,450 new apartments are in construction in Venezuela’s first planned socialist and ecological city. on the progress of existing housing pojects, Chavez also defended on Sunday his government’s decision to expropriate unused parking lots in the capital which will be dedicated to home construction, a move that has been attacked by the nation’s rightwing opposition. “We can’t allow for some parking lots in ruins to be occupying land. What’s more important, a car or a house? What’s more important, cars or people?” he asked. Sunday’s 375th broadcast of Alo Presidente, a show that normally lasts for the majority of the day, ended after two hours due to Chavez’s trip to Brazil, Ecuador and Cuba, where he signed further agreements strengthening the country’s housing initiatives. CARS VS. PEOPLE Apart from updating the nation T/ COI P/ Presidential Press Venezuelan Government bans wildlife hunting & trading T he tricolored-plumage ara macaws, best known as guacamayas, are one of the endangered species in Venezuela because they are frequently extracted from their habitat in the Amazonas, where they mate for life. This is the reason why they die when they are hunted and taken out of their environment. These birds, and other animals such as parrots, monkeys and snakes, are exhibited by their captors in cages for days on the main road of Amazonas state, in southern Venezuela. Their buyers move them in wrapped boxes to bypass the National Guard checkpoints. When they reach their “new home”, these animals usually die as a result of stress and sudden habitat change. Now, the Venezuelan government is taking measures in Caracas and the states of Anzoategui, Bolivar, Falcon, Guarico, Lara, Monagas, Miranda, Sucre, Zulia and Yaracuy in order to prevent this situation. The measures ban the illicit trade and possession of birds and other wildlife species, as well as products derived from wildlife, on public roads (highways, paths, streets and avenues) and in unauthorized shops. In addition to these measures, the Vene- zuelan state is promoting a number of environmental preservation programs. ARRAU TURTLES The arrau turtle, also known in Venezuela as the Orinoco turtle, is the biggest of the Podocnemis genus and was widely abundant 200 years ago. Nevertheless, since 1995 it has been an endangered species, although it has been legally protected since 1946. In the first quarter of 2011, the Venezuelan government, through the environmental ministry, freed 10,000 Arrau turtles (Podocnemis expansa) in the Amazon as part of the conservation program to protect this endangered species. The program, which is being developed to prevent illegal hunting, aims to transport endangered nests to zoo-farms over a one-year period, in order to subsequently return the species to their natural habitat. Over 51,000 turtles bred in captivity are expected to be freed this year. Jose Zambrano, director of the environmental office in Amazonas, said that this activity “shows the interest of the Venezuelan government in preserving wild fauna, especially endangered species”. So far, 12,806 Arrau turtles have been freed in the Refuge of Wild Fauna and Protecting Areas, located in the village of Santa Maria del Orinoco, in the southwestern state of Apure, and 6,000 in the state of Bolivar. By June, 22,000 turtles are expected to be freed in Anzoategui, in northeastern Venezuela, and 949 in Barinas. PROTECTING NATIONAL PARKS For a long time, Venezuela was the victim of an activity that caused irreparable harm to the environment. The “Fun Race” private organization staged offroad car races in different national parks of the country where participants raced through hundreds of miles on unpaved terrain in the shortest possible time. Many of the circuits did not have the authorization required by the Venezuelan authorities to hold these races, through which the company earn millions. Venezuela’s Attorney General, Luisa Ortega Diaz, imposed a ban on this type of activity last month. “These races cause irreparable harm because the vegetation cover wears out and its recovery can take up to 200 years”. The Venezuelan government took legal actions and ordered the Fun Race company to promote, design and develop awareness-raising campaigns to show the ecological harm caused by this activity in the country’s national parks and protected areas. MISSION TREE Venezuela has a 123.5 millionacre forest area that represents 56% of its territory. In South America, this is equivalent to 5.6% of forests and 1.3% of the world’s forest area. Communities nationwide have organized jointly with the Ministry of the Environment (Minamb) to working on the consolidation of Mission Tree, which aims to contribute to the restoration and maintenance of forests and local green areas. Currently, nearly 5,200 conservation committees, comprised of 50,000 people, have been created. Over 19 million plants have been planted throughout the country, thus allowing for the recovery of over 56 acres. Venezuela’s minister for the environment, Alejandro Hitcher, explained that “the government’s social program strengthens the spirit of conservation of the population, thus contributing to economic development and environmental sustainability”. T/ AVN P/ Agencies | 6 | Social Justice NoÊÈÇÊUÊFriday, June 10th, 2011 The artillery of ideas Children’s Cardiology Hospital: synonym of life W hen Jonathan Vasquez came from the Dominican Republic with a ventricular septal defect (VSD) and a severe pulmonary hypertension, it was very difficult for him to breathe. This was an immense obstacle for his daily activities, such as playing or practicing any sports. Eighteen days after his surgery, Jennifer Vasquez, his mother, affirmed that her son is getting better due to the attention of the Children’s Cardiology Hospital “Dr. Rodriguez Ochoa”. “All the procedures, including the passport, round-trip tickets and the hotel stay have been exonerated. Technology, service and personnel are excellent. This is a great project because of which my son is alive”, she exclaimed. This type of testimony is only possible in a country with a political model that aims at guaranteeing health services for everybody without any political, economic or social distinction. Furthermore, Venezuela is giving a helping hand to sister nations. For years, Venezuelan public healthcare was totally abandoned. Medical attention was primarily only available at private clinics which required substantial payments and insurance. Mental and physical well-being became a way to make profits. But now, the Bolivarian Revolution has implemented a healthcare system with a socialist and human vision. four hospital center. This category, granted to specialized medical centers, is based on the highest technological and scientific capacity. FREE AND QUALITY ATTENTION In 1998, only 141 children experiencing these pathologies were operated on, while in 2010, 1,113 patients were operated on for free. 85% of them came from the countryside. Isabel Iturria, director of the Children’s Cardiology Hospital “Dr. Rodriguez Ochoa”, affirmed that all patients receive treatment for free, including their transportation from anywhere, even those coming from other countries. Up to today, this specialized center has attended to 66 international patients coming from 12 countries, including Gambia, Bolivia and Nicaragua. Today, testimonies like Jonathan’s are repeated all throughout Venezuela and the region. The Children’s Cardiology Hospital “Dr. Rodriguez Ochoa”, located in Caracas, is considered a world pioneer in pediatric cardiopathies attention. VENEZUELAN HEARTS BEAT LOUDER Around the world, 8 newborn babies out of 1,000 have a congenital cardiopathy. In Venezuela, it is estimated that around 4,500 children are born with these heart conditions each year. 70% of them need either surgery or cardiologic intervention, and until August 20, 2006 only 600 patients were operated on annually in the 8 Regional Pediatric Cardiovascular Centers in Venezuela. After launching the Children’s Cardiology Hospital “Dr. Rodriguez Ochoa”, Venezuela now has the capacity to triple the amount of beneficiaries. The Venezuelan government has created a formidable medical structure and a level STATE-OF-THE-ART The hospital is a square-based building surrounded by a 9.6 acre yard, including a 4.44 acre surgical treatment area and a 2.47 acre consultation area. The hospitalization level covers 1.98 acres and the top level covers 2.55 additional acres. There are exterior areas and a parking lot covering 11.70 acres, plus the residential area with 142 hospital beds. The most important characteristic of this modern health center is that it incorporates state-of-the art technology. Amongst the different equipment at its disposal are hemodynamics, ultrasonography, monitoring, ventilation, surgery, anesthesia machines and instrumental equipment. NATIONAL NETWORK Iturria also explained that the hospital has 18 pediatric cardiovascular regional centers throughout the country. They are located in public hospitals in several states nationwide. The network relies on highly trained personnel and top quality equipment. Patients are examined, diagnosed, and some are operated on in these centers. Complicated cases requiring them to be transported to the Children’s Cardiology Hospital in Caracas are reported by regional centers. Even though it was once an illusion for many people, today free medical attention in Venezuela is a reality. Jonathan received excellent treatment and a helping and supportive hand. He went back to his homeland with a new heart that beats louder and full of hope. The Bolivarian Revolution is consolidating a Healthcare Network in Venezuela with the main objective of ensuring people’s wellbeing, without discriminating against anyone, and therefore guaranteeing life, especially for children. T/ Venezuela de Verdad Millions enjoy free healthcare in Venezuela O ver the last eight years, more than 11 million Venezuelans, almost 40 percent of the country’s population, have enjoyed free medical care in thousands of public health centers across the country through an innovative social program known as Mission Barrio Adentro (Inside the Neighborhood). The program, established in May 2003 with technical and human support from Cuba, has increased medical coverage through various types of centers dedicated to preventive and corrective care. After eight years, there have been over 438 million medical consultations – physical, eye and dental – throughout Venezuela. Data from the Ministry of Health shows that from May 2003 to April 2011, 6,712 primary care medical clinics were built, in which 302,171 lives were saved and 7,382 babies delivered. Additionally, a network of 49 popular clinics for people with eye problems was created throughout the country. Those clinics have handled more than 30 million cases and given almost eight million sets of corrective lenses free of charge. Another benefit through the program has been dental care. Over eight years, there have been 67 million visits and procedures at clinics throughout Venezuela. A second level of care has seen 42 new facilities – including Integral Diagnostic Centers (CDI), Comprehensive Rehabilitation Facilities (SRI) and Centers for Advanced Technology (CAT) – to benefit communities in areas where people depended on the services of a single hospital or ambulances for transportation to other locations in order to receive proper care. With the new facilities, there are now 525 Integral Diagnostic Centers, 30 High Technology Centers and 564 comprehensive rehabilitation rooms totaling 1,149 operating centers across the country, exceeding initial expectations. Health Ministry data shows that each diagnostic center performs a daily average of 30 MRIs, 23 ultrasounds, three endoscopies, and 233 laboratory tests, amongst other tests, all free of charge. The program, which has minimized crowding in emergency rooms, has also served a significant percentage of the population with disabilities. Since 2006, the establishment of Rehabilitation Rooms has allowed people to recover motor and other skills. T/ AVN NoÊÈÇUÊFriday, June 10th, 2011 The artillery of ideas Analysis | 7 | US-Venezuelan relations Just frozen or beyond repair? A ccording to the US Energy Administration, two months ago the United States total crude oil imports averaged 9,033 thousand barrels per day (tbpd), with the top five exporting countries being Canada (2,666 tbpd), Mexico (1,319 tbpd), Saudi Arabia (1,107 tbpd), Venezuela (930 tbpd) and Nigeria (918 tbpd.) Notice anything odd about this list? First, three of the top five oil exporters to the US are in the Western hemisphere, and two of them are neighbors. Secondly, only two of the five states can comfortably be described as stable. Mexico is slowly unraveling due to the drug war, Nigeria’s militant groups regularly attack foreign oil concessions in the Niger delta and Saudi Arabia’s geriatric monarchy is nervously watching events unfold in the Middle East, wondering if the “Arab spring” may impact their autocratic hold on power, a view no doubt made more nervous by the sudden arrival on June 6 of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment. Of the remaining two, Canada is a stable, prosperous state, and its relations with Washington are excellent. Which leaves Venezuela – while a stable state, policies under President Hugo Chavez have rattled Washington to the point that since 2010 neither state has had accredited ambassadors. On June 28, 2010 Obama nominated Larry Palmer as US Ambassador to Venezuela but three months later Chavez announced on his weekly TV program that he would not allow Larry Palmer to take up his post after Palmer made offensive statements regarding Venezuela’s armed forces, internal politics and said the Chavez government supported FARC terrorists. On December 28, Chavez gave the final refusal to accept Palmer because of his derogatory remarks and the following day the US revoked the visa of Venezuelan ambassador, Bernardo Alvarez. This past Sunday Venezuelan Minister of Foreign Affairs Nicolas Maduro said during a TV interview, “The relation (with the US) is frozen... It does not move and there is no indication that there could be positive elements of communication and respect in the near future”. What led to the impasse? Chavez’s final sin in Washington’s eyes was Venezuela’s stateowned oil company Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) supplying gasoline products to Iran, which led the Obama administration on May 24 to impose unilateral sanctions against PDVSA. In response, Venezuela’s Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez, who is also the head of PDVSA, said the following day that as a sovereign nation Venezuela would continue to maintain relations with Iran and any other country it wanted, adding, “This is a right we are not going to renounce”. Washington’s myopia leads it to treat Central and Latin America as if the Monroe Doctrine were still valid. In fact, the most underreported political story in the American press over the last decade is how Latin America has gradually moved out from under Washington’s smothering “big brother” embrace as first the Bush administration and now President Obama’s fixated on both on the war on terror and Iraqi oil reserves. Most notable among the Latin American states rejecting Washington’s dominance, along with its attendant financial institutions of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund has been Brazil, which now, along with Russia, China and India, is lumped under the sobriquet BRIC as a collective economic powerhouse of the 21st century. Can Washington really afford to antagonize a nation that exports nearly a million barrels per day to the US? Should Venezuela turn off the taps, the recent gasoline prices of nearly $4 a gallon will begin to look like a bargain. And speaking of China, its economic interest in trade devoid of Washington’s hectoring political lectures has found a warm reception in Caracas. China has agreed to provide more than $32 billion in assistance to Chavez’s government, with the loans to be repaid in oil, in increasing amounts of it during the next decade. China is now Venezuela’s biggest foreign lender, enabling Chavez to boost social spending ahead of the country’s 2012 presidential election, leading Chavez to exclaim “Viva China!” on national television. Venezuela is now exporting to China about 460,000 barrels a day, about 20 percent of its oil exports, according to official figures, which Caracas hopes to double soon. Chen Ping, political counselor at the Chinese Embassy in Caracas noted simply, “Venezuela has what we need”. Pity that Washington, blinkered by outdated ideology, does not see its own interests as clearly as counselor Chen. T/ John Daly Portlanders: US sanctions on Chavez send the wrong message A sea of government supporters dressed in red roared their approval as Portlanders Crystal Geyer and Shamus Cooke shared their opposition to the recently announced sanctions on Venezuela. The Portlanders were speaking at a mass rally in Caracas last Sunday, May 29th, in opposition to the sanctions recently imposed by the US against Venezuela’s stateowned oil company, PDVSA. Geyer and Cooke joined 8 other delegates from the US invited to share a stage with Cabinet Ministers from the government of controversial leftist President Hugo Chavez. “Our committee here in Portland promotes human rights for people in Latin America”, said Geyer, a social worker in her mid20s. “Some of those rights include basic access to food, healthcare and housing. We think the sanctions will hurt those rights”. The US State Department announced the sanctions on May 24th, claiming the move was a response to Venezuelan support for nuclear ambitions on the part of Iran, an ally and fellow founding member of OPEC. For Geyer, that explanation doesn’t hold water. “This move is designed to undermine a gov- ernment the US doesn’t like, the government of Hugo Chavez”, she said. “The countries of Latin America are starting to become more independent, and the US doesn’t necessarily like that”. “The media like to portray Chavez as a dictator”, Geyer added, “but the President of Venezuela was democratically elected, and more than once”. For Shamus Cooke, the current administration in Venezuela has marked an investment in social programs that not only have helped reduce poverty in Venezuela, but are sorely needed here at home, he believes. “People in the US want healthcare, jobs, and affordable education—some of the things that the Chavez government has been able to provide for the first time”. Most analysts agree the US sanctions will not have a significant impact on the economies of either country. However, given the history of US sanctions in the region, there is concern the could mark the beginning of more aggressive economic campaign against Venezuela. According to Cooke, the sanctions could hurt low-income residents in the US benefiting from a heating oil subsidy from Venezu- ela’s US subsidiary, Citgo. Time magazine reported Citgo was the only major US oil company to respond to a 2005 letter from over a dozen US Senators who sought heating fuel aid for lowincome constituents in the northern states. According to Citgo’s records, this year alone the company donated an estimated 25 million gallons of heating oil in 25 states, benefiting 132,000 families/ households, 234 homeless shelters and approximately 250 Native American communities. T/ PCASC FRIDAY | June 10th, 2011 | No. 67 Bs 1 | C ARACAS ENGLISH EDITION The artillery of ideas A publication of the Fundacion Correo del Orinoco • Editor-in-Chief | Eva Golinger • Graphic Design | Alexander Uzcátegui, Jameson Jiménez • Press | Fundación Imprenta de la Cultura OPINION Sean Penn speaks out rejecting US sanctions against Venezuela A State Department that can W ith due respect to the United States Department of State and Secretary Clinton, in regards to economic sanctions leveled under CISADA on Venezuela and six other foreign entities. Among the affected countries, only Venezuela is a nation in abject poverty. Oil is its primary export and the exceptionally devastating impact upon its people should be of specific consideration. There has been a systemic barrage of misreporting and context-shifting within the US media and espoused by many US Representatives relative to Venezuela and its democratically elected President Hugo Chavez. The people of the United States have grown accustomed to hearing the Venezuelan President referred to as a dictator, not only by media representatives but by members of the leadership in both parties. This is a defamation, not only to President Chavez, but also to the majority of Venezuelan people, poor people who have elected him president time and time again. This is not a dictator supported by the wealthy classes, but rather, a President elected by the impoverished and at the service of the Venezuelan constitution, a document not unlike our own. He is a flamboyant, passionate leader. And while our own cultural and constitutional conditioning would lead us to serious concerns in the powers of his office, there must be an informed adjustment to give our analyses a context that may extend beyond our borders. The current environment of passive US citizen response provided by this lack of understanding and misleading information is one where the essential oversights of public opinion are effectively defaulted upon, and in exchange, a predisposition to accept US intervention in Venezuela exists. Furthermore, lobbyists of the fringe right exploit a void of direct diplomatic communication between the United States and Venezuela, and inflame a division affecting both countries with enormously shared interests. It is upon the USG and the American people to carefully and publicly consider any economic intervention upon a foreign nation, in particular those plagued by poverty. The United States, and indeed, all capitalist nations, engage in largely unrestricted trade with numerous nations, both secular and theocratic, traditionally associated with social and political oppression, and indeed contributors (suspected or acknowledged) to nuclear proliferation. While it is noted that Iran is such a nation, and that it is due to Venezuela’s oil trade with Iran (actual or alleged) that they have been listed, it should also be noted that an entity in the state of Israel has also been named among the seven sanctioned. The potential for overreach of CISADA’s “energy” classification may be reminiscent of restrictions and prohibitions on exports prohibited in pre-war Iraq, specifically when non-weaponized materials such as x-ray machines, entirely inadaptable to weaponization were characterized as “dual use” materials, the only significant result of that policy was to deprive sick Iraqi civilians of basic care. That it is assumed in the State Department’s announcement, that by Venezuela supplying its single lifeline export to a country suspected of developing instruments of proliferation, therefore it is an action-worthy compromise of CISADA, risks precedent and abuse that must be scrutinized and balanced in full context and in full view. While the State Department has reported its investigations into overall impacts on oil markets, no such comprehensive study has been offered in balance with the human impact on countries sanctioned. On this basis, the people of the United States should call for a moratorium on the CISADA sanctions of Venezuela until such time as a congressional hearing may be convened and strategic benefits evidenced in balance with the historic effects of similar sanctions in other developing and impoverished nations. With the recent actions of mediation taken by Venezuela in collaboration with Colombia for the reintegration of Honduras into the Organization of American States (OAS), President Chavez and Venezuela have demonstrated a will toward diplomatic harmony, and the sanctions themselves should serve to initiate high level interaction that has for too long suffered the prejudice of profile and anti-Venezuelan political lobbying. Sean Penn Sean Penn is an Oscar-winning actor