[NYTr] Media Pot Continues to Boil: Venezuela, RCTV, Internet Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2007 22:41:01 -0500 (CDT) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit excerpted from VIO Venezuela News Roundup - Jun 12, 2007 Summary: Vice President Jorge Rodriguez has invited students opposed to the non-renewal of RCTV's broadcasting license to hold talks with the government, the Associated Press reports today. Student leaders accepted the invitation without setting a date for the talks. Venezuela will host the Americas Cup Soccer Tournament beginning June 26th, and students have stated their desire to use the event to draw attention to their anti-Chavez cause. Jose Miguel Insulza, Secretary General of the OAS, told a Spanish newspaper he expects Venezuela "to continue to be a democratic country." El Universal reports that while Insulza personally "did not like the move on RCTV," the non-renewal was "an administrative decision," and insufficient reason for creating divisions within the OAS. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice stormed out of last week's OAS summit after arguing with Venezuela's top foreign minister. The debate on RCTV continues elsewhere: a Washington Times op-ed charges that the non-renewal is proof that dissent is being silenced in Venezuela. The opposition-affiliated Globovision is referred to as a "small cable news channel," when in fact the station reaches the roughly 5 million residents of the Caracas metropolitan area (some 20% of the national population) for free on the open-access airwaves. For its part, RCTV has taken its programming to the internet, where web-based broadcasts of regular programming are frequent. Canada's CBC News reports on a study that finds a higher prevalence of internet hacking in Venezuela than any other country. The CBC writes that, since RCTV's non-renewal on May 27th, "both anti-government protesters and government supporters have taken their fight to the internet," with both sides experiencing website shutdowns. -VIO *** AP via CNN - Jun 12, 2007 http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/americas/06/12/students.chavez.ap/index.html?section=cnn_latest Miffed students agree to talks with Chavez administration The Associated Press CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -- Students who led recent protests against a decision by President Hugo Chavez that forced an opposition TV station off the air said Monday they are willing to meet with the government for talks. Student leader Yon Goicochea said university groups that condemned Chavez's decision not to renew the broadcast license of Radio Caracas Television would accept Vice President Jorge Rodriguez's invitation for talks -- but that the government would have to wait. "When the universities are ready to have a meeting with the executive branch, we will have it," Goicochea said. Critics argue Chavez is trying to muzzle his opponents by not renewing RCTV's license, which expired May 27. The president defends the move as a means of democratizing the airwaves by turning over the signal to a state-funded public broadcasting station. Some political analysts argue the government is eager to appease students before Venezuela hosts the Copa America on June 26. Students say they are planning more demonstrations during the international soccer tournament. "We are going to take advantage of this Copa America to send a message, and the message is freedom," student leader Stalin Gonzalez said. Chavez, who has derided students protesters as U.S. "pawns," has warned against protests that could be aimed at disrupting the tournament. Unlike past protests by opposition parties, the recent student marches and street demonstrations have been dominated by a new generation that has taken to the streets by the thousands in a coordinated challenge to Chavez. *** El Universal - June 11, 2007 http://english.eluniversal.com/2007/06/11/en_pol_art_insulza-hopes-venezu_11A883121.shtml OAS's Insulza hopes Venezuela "to continue to be democratic" JosC) Miguel Insulza, Secretary-General of the Organization of American States (OAS), hoped Venezuela "to continue to be a democratic country," and clarified he does not intend to widen the gap at OAS regarding the case of Caracas-based TV station RCTV, "because what this continent needs is unity." "I am among the people who did not like the move on RCTV (which stopped broadcasts last May 27, after Venezuelan President Hugo ChC!vez refused to renew the broadcast license for the TV channel), but nobody believes this is a reason to provoke a division in the institution (OAS)," Insulza told Spanish newspaper El PaC-s during an interview conducted in Washington and published on June 10. While he endorses the idea that the discontinuation of RCTV was "an administrative decision," Insulza also believes that such a move "became a political punishment from the very moment the Venezuelan government made it based on political allegations." Insulza reminded that non-renewal of RCTV broadcast license came after ChC!vez accused the TV network of supporting a failed coup d'etat in 2002. He added that he is keeping close communication with OAS member countries to assess any likely decisions on Venezuela. He would not rule out the possibility to visit Venezuela any time in order to study the situation, but warned he would not travel to Venezuela in the short term. "I hope Venezuela to continue to be a democratic country. My mission will not be that of exacerbating the process of rupture, because what this continent needs is unity," Insulza told El PaC-s. *** CBC - June 11, 2007 http://www.cbc.ca/technology/technology-blog/2007/06/venezuelas_war_on_the_web.html Internet becomes battleground in Venezuela By Paul Jay CBC News When you think of web-based attacks from hackers, what country first coes to mind? The United States? China? Try Venezuela. Last week Akamai Technologies Inc. launched a new free web service that allowed viewers to see a sort of internet weather report on global traffic tie-ups and attacks. Surprisingly, Venezuela had the highest attacks of any region. And it wasn't really close. On June 6, Akamai reported there had been 844 attacks in Venezuela in the past 24 hours, over 500 more attacks than the next closest nation. Over the weekend things had calmed down a bit, with the number of attacks as of 1 p.m. on June 11 down to 351 over the previous 24 hours. China was the next-closest nation outside of the United States on Monday with 226 attacks. U.S. results were broken down by state, with California leading all states with 27 attacks in the past 24 hours. The results are a bit surprising, but not when you consider the political unrest in the nation. According to a story from the Agence France-Presse, both anti-government protestors and government supporters have taken their fight to the internet since Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez announced he would not be renewing the license of a television station that was a frequent critic of his policies. The AFP said both sides have had their sites shut down because of concentrated attacks from hackers. The raging web war in Venezuela comes a month after Estonia's government sites were effectively shut down by a series of attacks in May. *** The Washington Times - June 12, 2007 http://washingtontimes.com/op-ed/20070611-085928-2953r.htm Chavez vs. free speech By Blanquita Cullum For weeks ahead of taking Venezuela's oldest and most widely watched television station off the air, President Hugo Chavez and his regime maintained the fiction that the move was nothing more than a regulatory matter. A broadcasting license was up for renewal, and in this particular case, the broadcaster had all too often violated regulations protecting Venezuelan viewers from indecency and violent programming. Or as Venezuela's envoy to Spain said of Radio Caracas Television, the "licensee did not behave, and therefore the agreement was not renewed." But once RCTV was off the air, it didn't take long for the Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez to lift the veil, threatening to shut down any media outlet that displeases him. "I am going to go after those resisting the revolution," Mr. Chavez announced, "and eliminate them one by one." What counts as resistance? Anything other than fawning coverage of his "revolution" is deemed to be a threat against Venezuela and against Mr. Chavez personally. For the chavistas, the president is the government of Venezuela, and any opposition to him is an attack on the nation. Mr. Chavez aggressively promotes the notion that he and the state are inseparable, as when he sneered this weekend that "Separation of powers and alternation of powers is a device of bourgeois democracy." Globovision, a small cable TV network, has been one of the only Venezuelan media outlets willing to cover the student protests sparked by the closure of RCTV. Mr. Chavez denounced the network as "enemies of the motherland," and taunted: "Greetings, Globovision, you will see where you will go." Mr. Chavez isn't known for the subtlety of his threats. "I am warning you in front of the country," el Presidente declared at a rally. "I recommend they take a tranquilizer and cool down, because if not, I will take care of Globovision myself." Undeterred, the network has kept up its coverage, showing abundant footage of students, their hands painted white and held high to clearly show that they are unarmed, tear-gassed, clubbed by the government's riot thugs and blasted with water cannons. CNN kept up its coverage too. Mr. Chavez' regime responded by accusing Globovision and CNN both of trying to incite the assassination of the president. In Venezuela, even the most basic sort of media coverage gets labeled terrorism, and is treated as such. "I can take away the concession of any media outlet that practices media terrorism," Mr. Chavez proclaimed. No wonder nearly every other broadcaster in the country has gone into a defensive crouch of self-censorship. Venezuela's regime could not be more clear about its ambition to silence dissent. And finally the United States is speaking bluntly too. At a meeting of the Organization of American States in Panama City, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice spoke out against the closing of RCTV, calling freedom of speech "the beginning of justice in every society." Miss Rice said: "Everyone recognizes that when you start closing down television stations because they express opposition to the leadership, that that is, in fact, a strong move against democracy." That threat to democracy extends well beyond Venezuela's borders. Emboldened -- and financed -- by Venezuela, rulers in Ecuador and Bolivia are moving to crush media that make room for dissenting voices. "The main adversaries of my presidency, of my government," said Bolivia's Evo Morales, "are certain communications media." When Mr. Morales made this statement, Venezuela had just put the padlock on RCTV, so it is clear what he had in mind when he said he would "draw on the experience of our friends in Venezuela and Cuba." Ecuador's president Rafael Correa announced a Chavez-like initiative to review media "concessions." Venezuela's college students are bravely risking their futures, even their lives, by publicly protesting Hugo Chavez and the authoritarian juggernaut his regime has become. We can and should do more to support their cause. We broadcasters can make a simple gesture of solidarity with them by tying black ribbons on our microphones, or wearing black ribbons on our lapels, especially on June 27, which is Journalists' Day in Venezuela. But it's not enough to dress ourselves in crepe, mourning the death of free speech under the Chavez regime. There are more important gestures of solidarity to be made. First among them is to keep the issue of freedom in Venezuela alive by not allowing Mr. Chavez' fait accompli to be accepted as old news. In other words, we need to exercise our free speech in defense of free speech in Venezuela, and anywhere it is under assault. [Blanquita Cullum is a member of the Broadcasting Board of Governors and is chairman of the Talkers First Amendment Committee. ] *** The Providence Journal - Jun 11, 2007 http://www.projo.com/opinion/letters/content/LT_clifford_RDY_06-11-07_435STHO.21e7ff6.html Letters to the Editor U.S. worse than Venezuela's Chavez By Joseph Clifford The U.S. government, mainstream media and big oil (who all sleep in the same bed) have done their best to demonize Hugo Chavez, the outspoken leader of Venezuela. ChC!vez threw big oil companies out of Venezuela and nationalized the nation's oil because foreign oil companies were raping the oil resources. He argued that oil proceeds should be used to help the poor and has attempted to redistribute wealth by providing the poor with free food, medicine, and education, paying for his social programs with oil money. Additionally this past winter he offered oil to the poor in the U.S. at discount prices. Meanwhile, Exxon-Mobil earns mind-boggling profits. What has Exxon-Mobil done for you? Who would you like to see end up with your gas money; the poor or Exxon-Mobil? President Bush is indignant because ChC!vez would not renew the broadcast license of a TV station that participated in an attempt to overthrow him, and some U.S. politicians are highly critical, calling it an infringement of the right of free press and referring to ChC!vez as a dictator ? forgetting he has faced the people five times in elections. We can only speculate as to what Bush would do if CBS participated in an attempt to overthrow his administration. We know what he has done to news outlets that do not give the slant he wants. In November 2001, the U.S. dropped a 500-pound bomb on the al-Jazeera news station in Kabul, bombed their office in Baghdad in 2003, and imprisoned numerous reporters, with one still being held at GuantC!namo, because we did not like what it was broadcasting. We also know through leaked British memos that Bush wanted to bomb al-Jazeera's headquarters in Qatar, but Tony Blair talked him out of it. None of this bothered the ardent free-speech advocates who are so critical of ChC!vez. JOSEPH CLIFFORD Jamestown * ================================================================ .NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems . Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us . .339 Lafayette St., New York, NY 10012 http://www.blythe.org .List Archives: https://olm.blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ .Subscribe: https://olm.blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr ================================================================