Friday, February 21, 2014

Venezuela expats are tweeting the way for embattled protesters | GlobalPost

Venezuela expats are tweeting the way for embattled protesters | GlobalPost

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Venezuela expats are tweeting the way for embattled protesters

The government is squeezing critical TV, blocking websites and even cutting off the internet. Here's how Venezuelans abroad are helping protesters cope.

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A Venezuelan protester lights a fire during clashes with riot police in Caracas on Feb. 20. (Raul Arboleda/AFP/Getty Images)
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BOGOTA, Colombia — As anti-government protesters descended on Caracas’ main plaza this week, marcher Eiker Ramirez called a Venezuelan living in neighboring Colombia and asked her what was happening.
His friend here, 24-year-old university student Yoselie Gonzalez, checked her Twitter feed.
“They’ve got the whole avenue militarized,” Gonzalez told him via cellphone.
She warned Ramirez to avoid possible clashes between opposition demonstrators and government forces or the armed militia supporters of President Nicolas Maduro, after a wave of violence over the past week has left eight confirmed dead.
“You’ve got to go through the other way. There isn’t any other route,” she said.
Since the Maduro government blocked access to a range of visual media covering the protests, young Venezuelans abroad have resorted to online social networks to keep family and friends inside the country informed.
This is part of a global trend where young people from Kyiv to Tehran, Cairo to Rio de Janeiro have swarmed to social media for organizing, spreading the story, and voicing anger at their leadership.
Venezuela’s government, also an avid tweeter, is well aware of this. The authorities are now blockingwebsites and cutting off the internet in parts of the country after bloody scenes from the clashes went viral.
With very few remaining independent and critical local media, President Maduro is also cracking down on international broadcasters he deems dangerous to the stability of his regime. The country's telecommunications regulator took a Colombian network off the air last week. Now, Maduro isthreatening to do the same to CNN.
“We’re living through the worst media blackout in our history right now,” said Lorena Di Cecilia, chief of operations at Digital Monitoring, a Caracas-based media watchdog.
“The government has launched an investigation into CNN. And they’re the very last channel on the air with a voice. If we lose CNN, the country goes blind — it’ll be an absolute blackout.”
Telecom regulator CONATEL, Di Cecilia explained, has threatened news anchors and broadcasters with heavy fines against their companies or getting taken off the air if they communicate information that the government considers to be “destabilizing.”
This has scared the national media into "a form of self-censorship," she added. “Basically everything expressed in opposition to this government implies ‘fascism’ or ‘destabilization’ … so they refrain from publishing it.”
In an attempt to muffle the noise of protests, Maduro’s government blocked images on Twitter last week, a spokesman for the social site told Bloomberg. After three days, Twitter’s image-publishing service was back online there, but other outlets have suffered.
Not long after that, the government removed NTN24, a Colombian 24-hour TV news station, from Venezuelan televisions after the network showed footage of violent clashes between police and protesters.
As the protests crescendo, the Committee to Protect Journalists condemned Maduro’s actions toward the press, saying, “Media blackouts, arrests, and a campaign of harassment against dissenting voices has become a hallmark of this administration.”
Gonzalez insists that citizen journalism through social media has become the only way for Venezuelans to publish and verify information as the government tightens its control over traditional forms.
On top of that, many protesters are relying on people like Gonzalez who are safely outside the country to monitor social networks since many protesters can’t get internet access on the streets to find out where violent flare-ups are happening.
“We’re trying to publish the human rights violations that are happening,” Gonzalez said. “That’s what is not getting published on [Venezuelan] national television right now and these images need to be seen.”
The tone of Venezuela’s protests is eerily similar to other violent clashes around the world, including Ukraine and Brazil. Deadly and lasting clashes in all three countries started with smaller rallies of young people — many of them college students — protesting the government plus a host of social and economic woes.
Venezuelan protesters are speaking out against a deepening economic crisis, high crime levels and corruption. Many feel strongly that President Maduro is incapable of solving the problems that lie ahead, while his staunchest critics say he's making those problems worse.
Indeed, Venezuela’s economy is in shambles. Consumer prices are up a whopping 56 percent. Many basics — like food and medicine — are widely unavailable across the country.
Yet, as to the causes and solutions to these problems, Venezuela is very polarized. That's clear just by watching the demos. Ardent government supporters have also swarmed the streets in counter-protest. Many Venezuelans still support the left-wing movement launched by the late Hugo Chavez in 1999. And they fear that Chavez’s disciple, President Maduro, is right: that his opponents are “ultra-right-wing fascists” backed by US interests who are trying to incite a coup — lines that are repeated by most national media outlets as fact.
Not 25-year-old Giovanna Delgada. She's a Venezuelan teacher who fled her native Caracas a month ago after finding that the economic situation had become intolerable for her profession. She now lives in Dublin, Ireland.
Commenting on Venezuela’s rampant inflation, Delgado says, “If I were working as a teacher in Caracas right now, I’d be dying of hunger.”
In addition to inflation problems, Venezuela’s debts are piling up and its foreign currency reserves are dwindling. It owes $3 billion to foreign airlines, and roughly $9 billion in private-sector imports. And even though Venezuela sits on top of what many agree to be the world’s largest oil reserves, it isn’t reaping all the rewards it could from its oil sales.
Right now, Venezuela is sending hundreds of thousands of barrels to pay off $40 billion worth of debt to China, one of its main trading partners.
Instead of claiming responsibility and confronting deep-seated economic problems, Maduro seems to be putting more energy into measures that quell the dissent. Over the weekend the government ousted three US diplomats and, on Tuesday, arrested opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez for inciting the marches.
Lopez, a 42-year-old Harvard-educated local mayor, is among those Maduro labels a “fascist.”
How Lopez’s trial in the courts, and Venezuela’s trial on the streets, shape up over the next week should tell the world a great deal about President Nicolas Maduro’s leadership. That is, if he doesn’t shut down the story on social media before Venezuela’s citizen journalists tell it.
Back in Bogota, as she scrolls through her Twitter feed showing images and videos of violence from the day in Caracas, Yoselie Gonzalez asked out loud to herself, “How did we come to all of this? This isn’t my Venezuela.”
Follow this journalist on Twitter: @wesleytomaselli
<a href="http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/americas/colombia/140221/venezuela-blackout-expats-social-media" rel="nofollow">http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/americas/colombia/140221/venezuela-blackout-expats-social-media</a>
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Venezuela expats are tweeting the way for embattled protesters

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Will Ukraine peace deal hold? 

Students and opposition leaders say that National Guard troops have fired rubber bullets and clubbed some protesters. State security agents, along with motorcycle gangs of militant supporters of the ruling Socialist party, have also fired live ammunition on crowds, witnesses have said.

LATIN AMERICA NEWS

Venezuela Youth Drive Protests Against 'Chavismo'

Students, Recent Graduates Form Backbone of Challenge to Maduro

Updated Feb. 21, 2014 5:13 p.m. ET

CARACAS, Venezuela—Day after day since early this month, on streets clouded with tear gas, William Colmenares and other young Venezuelans raise their voices against President Nicolás Maduro's government. They accuse him of acting like a dictator and wrecking the country's economy.
Mr. Maduro calls the protesters fascists, part of a plot by the U.S. government to derail Socialism in this oil-rich country, and his government has arrested dozens.
Students and opposition leaders say that National Guard troops have fired rubber bullets and clubbed some protesters. State security agents, along with motorcycle gangs of militant supporters of the ruling Socialist party, have also fired live ammunition on crowds, witnesses have said.
Six people have been shot dead since Feb. 12, including a local beauty queen, from the ranks of a surging opposition movement.
Yet that hasn't deterred Mr. Colmenares and other young people—from high-school and university students to recent graduates looking for work in a moribund economy. They form the backbone of an increasingly raucous movement that has become the most formidable challenge the president has faced since taking office in April 2013.
"I had to come out after all that violence," said Mr. Colmenares, who is 23 years old and works in a department store, referring to the first outburst of deadly gunfire.
"As long as there is repression, we will keep coming out," he said. "And something horrible is bound to happen again."
Attorney General Luisa Ortega on Friday said eight people had died as a result of the protests, including a woman who died of a heart attack in an ambulance stuck in traffic.
An additional 137 people have been injured, she said. Some 24 people are in jail and dozens more free on bail pending legal action. Opposition sympathizers estimate the numbers of arrests and injured are much higher.
Many of the demonstrators are so young that they have known only Chavismo, the ruling system named after the late President Hugo Chávez who came to power in February 1999 and transformed Venezuela into a Socialist state closely aligned to Communist Cuba. They have spent their formative years listening to lofty Chavismo rhetoric—only to see their prospects dim as the country sinks further into economic crisis.
Many of Mr. Maduro's top aides have said the protests are led and organized by rich children of the country's elite and middle class, funded out of Miami and Bogotá. "The tough guys of fascism are out in the streets looking down on the people, kicking people in the streets, destroying public property, firing at apartments," Mr. Maduro said on television Thursday.
Those claims sound hollow to people like José Materano, 21, whose parents work for the government. He attends a state university but says he is tired of living in a country with inflation of about 60%, the highest in Latin America, and widespread food shortages.
Mr. Materano lives with his parents in a hillside slum—the kind of place where Mr. Chávez built his following. His parents were Chavistas, and he was taught as a boy to revere the presidential palace, which can be seen from the slum. That drove him to study law enforcement, which he hopes he can use to protect the country one day, he said.
But, he added, he also has seen how his parents' combined salaries haven't been enough to move them out of their crumbling home, which mirrors the crumbling of their support for the government.
"They don't dare speak out against the government because they would lose their jobs," Mr. Materano said. "They are even pushed to attend government rallies."
Mr. Materano said he wasn't particularly political until late last year, with consumer prices rising at breakneck speed and supermarket shelves increasingly bare of basics. "There is no cooking oil, no sugar, no rice, no toilet paper. Venezuela isn't making anything except [petroleum]. Where is all that money going?"
In 1958, Marcos Pérez Jiménez, the longtime dictator, was toppled in a popular uprising that began with student strikes. A wave of massive protests in 2002 resulted in Mr. Chávez being briefly ousted from office.
More recently, in 2007, students—many of them from the Central University of Venezuela—led a series of street protests and rallies against a referendum that would have rewritten the constitution to give Mr. Chávez more powers. The referendum was voted down.
The current protests, which range day by day from several hundred to tens of thousands, are far smaller. They began after the alleged attempted sexual assault of a university student on Feb. 2, and then spread. The government reacted by arresting protesters, triggering more outrage.
But they come at a time when Venezuela's economy is seriously dysfunctional, said Demetrio Boersner, a former diplomat in the Chávez government and a historian who has written frequently about politics here.
He said the protests could energize the opposition, which had become resigned to having little voice and few options.
"The fact that the students have come out into the streets has brought a sort of psychological release, and people are starting to have hopes that things might change," Mr. Boersner said.
Javier Corrales, an Amherst University professor who has written a book about the political system here, said that the young people present a particularly prickly challenge to the government because they cannot be easily typecast as oligarchs, fascists and "parasitic bourgeoisie," as Mr. Maduro frequently labels critics.
"The government is at a loss of words for dealing with them," said Mr. Corrales. "They government cannot easily justify its belligerent attitude since these challengers emerge in ways that defy the government's traditional enemy categories."
At the same time, Mr. Corrales said that the uprising benefits the government in one important way: the divisions apparent in Chavismo can unite because of the threat. "Now, Chavistas can focus on one common goal, surviving this attack, and this inevitably produces a centripetal force within the ruling party toward Maduro."
Between Feb. 7 and Feb. 14, Mr. Maduro's approval rate tumbled more than 10 percentage points, to 41.5% from 52%, according to Luis Vidal, director of Caracas-based research firm More consulting.
"You are seeing this loss of support among people who identify themselves as independent or swing voters because of the government's response to the marches," Mr. Vidal said. But he agreed that the president was consolidating support among hard-core supporters of the ruling party.
"He has framed the protests as protest against him and the legacy of Hugo Chávez and not against the problems of the country," he said.
María Mendez, a 19-year-old marketing student who comes from a family of government supporters, said she joined the protests because she was tired of scouring multiple grocery stores each day looking for milk to feed her infant daughter.
"I go to school and I work, so I don't have time to stand in a line at a supermarket for hours," she said during a recent rally. "I'm so sick of it. People are tired of the crime and food shortages. We are tired of this government."
Many students say that a common topic of conversation is whether they will stay in Venezuela, a country that once was a destination for immigrants, or try to leave for another country, where job prospects are better and public safety more secure. Lines of visa-seekers at local embassies have grown.
"The situation is really bad, brother, in all aspects," said Edwin González, a law student who has been among the hundreds of hard-line demonstrators who have made Altamira Plaza in eastern Caracas the rally point for daily protests. "The economy is a mess, you can't leave your house because you might get murdered or robbed, the devaluations have made our money worthless. With Chávez things were bad but things have nose-dived with Maduro."
José Francisco Rodríguez, a 21-year-old law student, said he would like to get married but all the uncertainty has kept him from popping the question to his girlfriend. If the protests don't bring about a change, he would reluctantly consider leaving the country, said Mr. Rodriguez, a fluent English speaker.
"But I still have that flame of hope inside me that we can bring a change here," he said. "I'm going to try at least."

Venezuela Youth Drive Protests Against 'Chavismo' - WSJ

Venezuela Youth Drive Protests Against 'Chavismo'

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Students and recent graduates form the backbone of an increasingly raucous movement that has become the most formidable challenge President Nicolás Maduro has faced since taking office last April.

Updated Feb. 21, 2014 5:13 p.m. ET



CARACAS, Venezuela—Day after day since early this month, on streets clouded with tear gas, William Colmenares and other young Venezuelans raise their voices against President Nicolás Maduro's government. They accuse him of acting like a dictator and wrecking the country's economy.
Mr. Maduro calls the protesters fascists, part of a plot by the U.S. government to derail Socialism in this oil-rich country, and his government has arrested dozens.
Students and opposition leaders say that National Guard troops have fired rubber bullets and clubbed some protesters. State security agents, along with motorcycle...

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Protests Against Venezuela's Government Escalate - WSJ

Protests Against Venezuela's Government Escalate

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Updated Feb. 20, 2014 11:38 p.m. ET
Amateur video from Caracas appears to show a shooting on Avenida Panteon Wednesday night, as Venezuela's National Guard and quasiofficial motorcycle shock troops confront protesters. Via The Foreign Bureau, WSJ's global news update. Photo: AP
CARACAS, Venezuela—Protests against President Nicolás Maduro's government escalated Thursday, with thousands of demonstrators burning tires and cars and security forces fighting back to gain control of the streets in the capital and in other cities.
At least five people, four protesting the government, have died since protests by university students over high crime and a crumbling economy turned violent last week. Dozens of others have been injured or jailed, including opposition leader Leopoldo López, a former mayor whom the government has accused of instigating the violence.
Objects placed by opposition protesters block a road in the Altamira neighborhood of Caracas, Venezuela, Thursday. Associated Press
Leonardo Velasco, 25 years old, said dozens of national guardsmen and other armed supporters of the government swept down on demonstrators in a protest in which he participated on Thursday. "I heard a bunch of shots and hit the ground." Mr. Velasco said he and other demonstrators fought back with Molotov cocktails, as tear gas spread and people ran in different directions. "I was half blind, stumbling and running," he said.
One protester in Caracas was shot by what appeared to be members of the National Guard, according to a video posted on several Venezuelan media sites. The incident couldn't be independently verified. The protester remained in critical condition on Friday, according to El Nacional newspaper.
Other videos online showed dozens of armed men on motorcycles entering areas held by protesters during the night, amid sounds of gunfire and fireworks.
"The government came out to kill people, to try to shut up people with lead," Henrique Capriles, a leading opposition figure, said in a news conference on Thursday. Calls seeking comment over the past week to government officials haven't been returned.
The chaotic scenes across the country represent the biggest challenge faced so far by President Maduro since he took over from the late Hugo Chávez last year.
Members of a pro-government "colectivo," or "collective," march in downtown Caracas, Venezuela on Thursday. Associated Press
Mr. Maduro accused what he called "fascist leaders" financed by the U.S. of using highly trained teams to topple his socialist government from power. In a lengthy speech televised Wednesday night, he charged that the demonstrators were trying "to fill the country with violence and to create a spiral of hatred among our people."
He said his foes were hoping to generate chaos to justify a foreign military intervention. "In Venezuela, they're applying the format of a coup d'état," he said.
In a speech Thursday, Mr. Maduro also accused U.S. cable channel CNN of producing skewed coverage of the protests and said he had begun an administrative process to kick the channel off the air in Venezuela unless it moved to "rectify" its coverage.
"They want to show the world that in Venezuela there is a civil war," Mr. Maduro said. "In Venezuela the people are working, studying, building the Fatherland."
A CNN spokeswoman declined to comment.
While Mr. Maduro remains firmly in power, the level of violence has taken Venezuela on a new, uncertain path of instability that has no easy solution, said Cynthia Arnson, the director of the Woodrow Wilson Center's Latin America program in Washington.
"Precisely when people are killed is when movements get radicalized and there is then a level of emotion that makes these movements especially volatile and difficult to predict," Ms. Arnson said.
Protests have spread beyond the capital to far-flung states over the past couple of days, in the Andean city of Mérida and in the state of Táchira bordering Colombia to the west, where power and Internet went out, local media reported.
In Táchira, the government's Russian-built Sukhoi fighters screamed overhead, local reports said. In Valencia, west of Caracas, another protest was mounted but was quelled by soldiers using water cannon.
Interior and Justice Minister Miguel Rodríguez Torres said in a televised address on Thursday that a battalion of paratroopers has been deployed around San Cristóbal, the capital of Táchira. He said they would secure highways and prevent Colombians, who are often blamed of fomenting trouble here, from bringing in weapons for the student demonstrators. Possession of guns was banned in the state.
"They can't say the government is shooting people," said Mr. Rodríguez, who blamed antigovernment officials in San Cristóbal of triggering the violence.
In Caracas, meanwhile, the president also leveled responsibility on Mr. López, an opposition leader who surrendered to authorities on Tuesday after being accused of instigating violence on Feb. 12, when three people died in two demonstrations. He warned that other opposition leaders could follow him into prison.
"One of them is in jail," Mr. Maduro said of Mr. López, adding: "The others will, one by one, end up in the same jail cell."
Shortly after midnight, Mr. López was arraigned in the military jail outside of Caracas where he is being held on charges of setting fire to a building, instigating crimes and conspiracy to commit a crime, according to the newspaper El Universal. If convicted, Mr. López could still face 10 years in jail.
Lawyers for Mr. López couldn't be reached for comment on Thursday.
More serious accusations of homicide and terrorism leveled at him by government officials weren't filed, one of Mr. López's lawyers, Juan Carlos Gutierrez, told Union Radio.
Opposition leaders and witnesses, have said uniformed state security agents, as well as pro-government motorcycle gangs known as colectivos have cracked down violently on unarmed demonstrators.
The protesters say that the government is failing to control soaring inflation and rampant crime or resolve a serious shortage of basic goods. The economy, hamstrung by a 56% inflation rate and weighed down by foreign debt, may slip into recession this year, economists say.
The arrests of demonstrators, some of whom opposition leaders say have sat in jail for days without being charged, has only led more people into the streets.
One demonstrator, Jose Roche, 20, a university student, said that the trouble in the east side plaza of Altamira in Caracas this started Wednesday afternoon after traffic was blocked by protesters. That prompted the arrival of the National Guard and police, who confronted a crowd he estimated to number 1,000 people.
"They wanted to surround us, to beat us down," said Mr. Roche. "They don't stop until they catch you or until you drop." He said he ran as shots were fired.
Across much of Caracas on Thursday, residents banged pots and pans from windows and yelled obscenities at policemen and men on motorcycles as they rode through the streets, firing off tear gas and weapons.
In the video that captured an injured protester in Caracas, the person shooting the images or others near him can be heard shouting "dirty assassin" to uniformed agents several floors below. The agents are pictured walking alongside the wounded man as he lies writhing on a sidewalk.
Mr. Capriles, who narrowly lost to Mr. Maduro in an election last April to determine who would succeed the late Chávez, scoffed at the president's claim that a coup was taking place.
"Civilians don't launch coups," he said, "the military does." He suggested instead that a weakening administration would benefit the National Assembly president, Diosdado Cabello, a former military officer with close ties in the army who is seen as a rival of Mr. Maduro. A coup, opposition leaders say, would most likely come from inside the army.
"That would be the worst thing that could happen to the country," said Mr. Capriles.
There is no sign, though, that the military's support of Mr. Maduro is softening. The armed forces were purged of dissident officers in recent years, with many of them fleeing the country and others placed under arrest.

Thursday, February 20, 2014

"Today more than ever, our cause has to be the exit of this government" - Leopoldo Lopez: Beauty queen the latest victim in Venezuela unrest - from Reuters: International

» Beauty queen the latest victim in Venezuela unrest
19/02/14 22:57 from Reuters: International
CARACAS (Reuters) - A local beauty queen died of a gunshot wound on Wednesday, the fifth fatality from Venezuela's political unrest, as imprisoned protest leader Leopoldo Lopez urged supporters to keep fighting for the departure of the s...

"Today more than ever, our cause has to be the exit of this government" - Leopoldo Lopez

» Jailed leader channels Venezuelans’ ire
19/02/14 20:19 from World: World News, International News, Foreign Reporting - The Washington Post
CARACAS, Venezuela — Leopoldo López, the defiant Venezuelan opposition leader taken into custody Tuesday in front of thousands of anti-government protesters, spent last night in a prison on a military base. Read full article >> &...

» Once-defiant Venezuelan TV goes quiet amid opposition protests
19/02/14 20:33 from Reuters: International
CARACAS (Reuters) - Twelve years after they played a key role in a coup, Venezuelan television networks have so heavily scaled back their coverage of anti-government protests that critics are decrying a "media blackout" that helps the go...

» Protests Grip Venezuela
19/02/14 19:36 from Voice of America
Nearly one year after the death of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, violent protests have erupted against his hand-picked successor, President Nicolas Maduro. The unrest is fed by deteriorating economic conditions and rampant lawlessnes...

» Venezuela unrest kills fifth person, Lopez faces court
19/02/14 19:17 from Reuters: International
CARACAS (Reuters) - A local beauty queen died of a bullet wound on Wednesday in the fifth fatality from Venezuela's political unrest, as imprisoned protest leader Leopoldo Lopez urged supporters to keep fighting for the departure of the ...