[NYTr] Chavez Reforms Move Forward, Bolivian Oppos'n Battles Alliance Date: Thu, 13 Sep 2007 06:00:00 -0500 (CDT) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit excerpted from VIO Venezuelan Daily News Roundup - Sep 12, 2007 [According to the BBC, Venezuela's national assembly will soon meet to discuss President Chavez' proposed reforms to the constitution. This will mark the second of three debates which must occur in the national assembly before the reforms can be approved and passed on to the general public for a national referendum vote, slated for December. This second round of debates comes shortly after opposition leaders expressed their opinions in front of the assembly Tuesday. Opposition political parties Democratic Action (AD), Movement towards Socialism (MAS) and Justice First, voiced their concerns including a suggestion to allow the electorate to vote on each suggested reform individually rather than all at once. Cilia Flores, President of the National Assembly stated that they would take their suggestions into consideration as well as proposals from other sectors of society such as lowering the voting age from 18 years to 16 years and removing any discrimination against homosexuality in the constitution, according to Venezuelanalysis.com. In an opposition stronghold of Bolivia, civic groups have rejected a recent agreement between Bolivia and Venezuela entered into for joint control of an iron ore mine, reported El Universal yesterday. President Morales signed a letter of intent during his visit to Venezuela last weekend which would allow exploration and exploitation of 50% of one of the largest iron mines in South America, located in Bolivia.-VIO] *** BBC News - Sep 11, 2007 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6989788.stm Chavez Reforms Up Before Assembly Venezuela's national assembly is due to meet for a second time to discuss changes to the constitution that aim to make the country more socialist. President Hugo Chavez has proposed a series of reforms that he says will give more power to the people. His critics say they are a thinly veiled attempt to concentrate power. Once the assembly, which is dominated by Mr Chavez's supporters, agrees on a final draft of the reforms, it will be put to a national referendum. The assembly, where all seats are held by pro-Chavez parties as a result of an opposition election boycott in 2005, is planning to hold one more sitting after this one to discuss the issues. Among the main changes to the constitution proposed by Mr Chavez last month were: Removing term limits for the presidency, and extending the term of office from six years to seven Bringing in a maximum six-hour working day Increasing presidential control over the central bank Strengthening state economic powers, allowing the government to control assets of private companies before a court grants an expropriation order. Mr Chavez is also giving a formal role to what he calls "people power", says the BBC's James Ingham in Caracas. Community councils will be able to apply to the president's commissions for funds and manage those funds themselves for projects that they believe are important. Collective property will also be recognised within community groups and cooperatives will play more of a role in the economy. Re-election Opponents have voiced concern at reforms which they say are forcing everyone into one way of doing things. Mr Chavez's critics are also against the change to a number of terms a president can serve. Current rules mean Mr Chavez is unable to seek re-election and will have to step down when his term ends in 2012. After being overwhelmingly re-elected last year, Mr Chavez has pushed for key changes to bring about what he calls a 21st Century socialist revolution. The opposition has questioned the president's intentions, arguing a new constitution is not needed as the current one was only drafted eight years ago. Nevertheless, recent opinion polls suggest Mr Chavez is likely to win a referendum on his proposed reforms. *** Venezuelanalysis - Sep 11, 2007 http://venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=2416 Venezuelan Opposition Invited to National Assembly to Debate Constitutional Reform By Kiraz Janicke Caracas, September 11, 2007 (venezuelanalysis.com) - Leaders from Venezuelan opposition parties Democratic Action (AD), Movement towards Socialism (MAS) and Justice First, were received in the Venezuelan National Assembly yesterday to present their views on President Hugo Chavez's proposed constitutional reforms. Secretary General of the opposition party AcciC3n DemocrC!tica (Democratic Action), Henry Ramos Allup, said that he did not have a counter proposal, but would give a critical opinion. Questioning the changes that would define Venezuela as a "socialist" country, he argued that this would "kill pluralism" and said he was also opposed to any changes to the structure of the military. Julio Borges from Justice First said he was concerned about changes that would recognize along with private property other forms of property such as, collective, communal, and social property and argued in particular that it should be clarified that private property is a "right." In reference to proposed changes to article 16, which Chavez has said will produce a "new geometry of power," aimed at transferring power to the people, Nicolas Sosa from MAS argued, "The deepest worry than we have is that the proposal disposes itself toward the creation of a parallel state." Borges agreed and said that the expenditure of public funds should be administered by the currently existing public institutions. The three opposition leaders were united in their rejection of the proposal that would allow Chavez to stand for reelection in 2012, when his current term ends. However, in a televised debate later that day between pro-Chavez deputy Carlos EscarrC! and Borges, on state owned channel VTV, EscarrC! argued that the opposition is opposed to this change simply because they don't have a candidate with as much popular support as Chavez. Although the opposition parties are united against the reforms, they are divided as to what strategy to adopt, with some arguing for a boycott and others arguing for a "no" vote. Due to an opposition boycott of the parliamentary elections in December 2005, candidates from various pro-Chavez parties won all of the seats in the National Assembly, meaning that it is likely that the constitutional reforms will easily win the approval of the minimum 75% of National Assembly deputies required before they can be put to a referendum. During the debate with EscarrC!, Borges said, "I believe that the boycott of those elections was an extraordinarily gigantic error, I was opposed to this, the country knows it, I went to vote, it seems absurd that after having made that gesture [the boycott], they go to speak there." He argued that unlike Justice First, the decision of opposition political parties AD and MAS to speak in the National Assembly was contradictory in view of their support for the boycott of the parliamentary elections in 2005. Borges added that Justice First would be participating in the referendum and arguing for the reforms to be voted on "article by article," so that people can choose those sections of the proposal they support and those they don't, for instance he argued, he supported the proposal to reduce the working day to six hours. However, Allup said to Union Radio that his decision to speak in the National Assembly did not mean he recognized the legitimacy of the government and defended the opposition boycott in 2005, arguing "there is a sector [of the opposition] that is being obsequious to the government." Allup said that AD would assume a critical position towards the proposed constitutional reforms, but would not call for abstention or participation in the constitutional referendum. Rather, he said people should decide for themselves whether to abstain or vote. Allup explained that if AD took a decision in favor or against abstention, there would be sectors of the opposition that would disagree, and "that would do a lot of damage to the necessary unity of the opposition." National Assembly president Cilia Flores assured, "We listened to the views they formulated" and said that they would be taken into account, "jointly with other proposals of the different sectors of the country, to serve us for the debate on the project of reform." However, she added that the opposition leaders "obey a vision of the country that we respect but do not share." Flores affirmed that the National Assembly would raise with Chavez the proposal to include two further changes to the project of constitutional reform, one which would lower the voting age from 18years to 16 years and the second which would remove any discrimination against homosexuality in the constitution. This proposal, she said, was "viable because it was oriented towards removing discrimination and was a fundamental right in Venezuela or any other part of the world." EscarrC! declared that the National Assembly had shown a "broad and deep, democratic essence" during the debate over the constitutional reform. "All sectors have been received, in the plenary sessions space for students, campesinos, have been opened," he said. "The deputies have been in open forums in the streets, reporting on the Constitutional Reform," he added. *** El Universal - Sep 11, 2007 http://english.eluniversal.com/2007/09/11/en_pol_art_bolivia-venezuela-ag_11A1009519.shtml Bolivia-Venezuela agreement under fire Civic groups in eastern Bolivian region of Santa Cruz, where MutC:n deposit is located, harshly rejected an agreement Bolivian and Venezuelan presidents Evo Morales and Hugo ChC!vez, respectively, entered into for joint exploitation of such iron ore mine. "Venezuelans cannot come to Bolivia and do whatever they want to," told Efe Luis NC:C1ez, the vice-president of the civic committee of Santa Cruz, a body with a great influence in eastern Bolivia, a region dominated by Morales' opponents. "There are laws and regulations that must be met," NC:C1ez claimed, adding that the correct thing to do was opening an international bidding process. During his visit to Venezuela last weekend, Morales initialed with ChC!vez a letter of intent to organize a joint venture to explore and exploit 50 percent of iron ore in MutC:n -one the largest iron mines in South America. "The government has a duty to ensure investments," Morales said Monday during a news conference in La Paz. NC:C1ez, however, said that Venezuela entered into this agreement for "doing business," while "meddling" into the Bolivian domestic affairs. "Morales' move is unilateral, and Bolivians deserve some respect," told Efe the chair of civic committee Puerto SuC!rez, 45 kilometers from MutC:n. Gericke claims that, before initialing the letter of intent with ChC!vez, Morales should have asked social sectors, rather than acting like a "puppet" of his Venezuelan ally. * ================================================================= .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://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ . Subscribe: https://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr =================================================================