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View Full Version : Chavez taking over TV station claiming they incited hit on him.


warrior1972
05-30-2007, 10:20 AM
He has been taking over many things like oil companies and business and now TV stations. He claims that they promoted through its programming ideologies against him. Some people are protesting but over half the population still loves this guy. The protestors are concerned with censorship of freespeech.



http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/americas/05/29/venezuela.media/index.html

Story Highlights• Demonstrators march again despite police use of water cannon
• U.S. calls Venezuelan action an attack on freedom of expression
• Venezuela investigating Globovision, another opposition channel
• Venezuelan minister says, "CNN lies to Venezuela"; CNN denies allegations

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CARACAS, Venezuela (CNN) -- As thousands of students marched in the streets in support, a Venezuelan television channel denied accusations that it was inciting violence against the government.

President Hugo Chavez's administration shut down one station that was critical of him, and has opened an investigation into the remaining opposition station, Globovision.

Globovision's director, Alberto Ravell, was unimpressed. "We are not going to change our editorial line that we are not afraid of the threats from this government," he told CNN.

In a news conference and a posting Monday on the government's Web site, Minister of Communication Willian Lara described two incidents he said were provocative.

First, Globovision's "Citizen" program on Sunday followed an interview with the outgoing director general of the opposition station, Radio Caracas Television, with video showing images of the attempted 1981 assassination in the Vatican of Pope John Paul II.

As the video played, Ruben Blades could be heard singing, "This doesn't end here."

"The television company, in that specific fragment of its programming, committed the crime of inciting to assassinate -- in the person of the chief of state of Venezuela," Lara said, referring to Chavez. "That was the objective."

The program aired on Globovision. RCTV had the nation's widest audience, counting 10 million of Venezuela's 26 million people as viewers of its programming, which included soap operas as well as news.

In a written statement directed to Globovision, Chavez said, "They have accused me of fascism. Well, it is they that I accuse of fascism. They are trying to make this seem as if the world has ended. They don't know, the poor things, that they are the ones being manipulated."

Chavez announced in January that the government would not renew RCTV's license. He accused the station of supporting the failed 2002 coup against him and violating broadcast laws.

RCTV, which had been broadcasting for 53 years, was replaced by a state-run station -- TVes -- on Monday.

Thousands of students from four colleges took to the streets of Caracas on Monday and Tuesday to make their complaints public. (Watch police turn water cannons on protesters after RCTV was shut down )

The U.S. State Department objected to the actions against news outlets.

"Freedom of expression is a fundamental human right," said State Department spokesman Tom Casey in a written statement. "It is an essential element of democracy anywhere in the world. And we certainly call on the government of Venezuela to abide by its commitments under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Inter-American Democratic Charter and to reverse these policies that they're pursuing to limit freedom of expression."

CNN networks also criticized
Lara also criticized the U.S.-based CNN family of networks for broadcasting video showing anti-government demonstrations followed by images from Acapulco, Mexico, that showed protests against the death of a Mexican journalist and for juxtaposing Chavez to video showing the body of an alleged al Qaeda leader and protests in China.

"CNN lies to Venezuela," he said, adding that he worries that journalism is being used "to present political propaganda under the guise of news, in a systematic manner."

In a joint written statement, CNN en Español and CNN International said they "categorically deny" the accusations.

"The reality is that upon being made aware of the video mix-up, CNN en Espanol aired a detailed correction and expressed regret for the involuntary error," the statement said.

About the complaint that CNNI tried to link Chavez to al Qaeda and China protests, CNN International Executive Vice President Tony Maddox denied, in a letter to the Venezuelan government, "any intention of associating President Chavez with al Qaeda or the China story," the network said.

"Unrelated news stories can be juxtaposed in a given program segment just as a newspaper page or a news Web site may have unconnected stories adjacent to each other."

Sunday night, police used water cannon and tear gas to disperse crowds protesting the government's decision. (Full story)

Eleven policemen were wounded, eight of them seriously, Attorney General Isaias Rodriguez said.

"To refuse to grant a new license for the most popular and oldest television channel in the country because the government disagrees with the editorial or political views of this channel, which are obviously critical to Chavez, is a case of censorship," said Jose Miguel Vivanco, executive director of Human Rights Watch.

"We have arrived at totalitarianism," said Marcel Granier, president of Empresas 1BC, which owns RCTV.

Granier accused Chavez of being "afraid of free thought, of opinion, of criticism."

Travh20
05-30-2007, 10:23 AM
I still cant believe the left thinks this guy is just an elected guy not bent on dominating his country for the rest of his life. They sure can overlook a lot of obvious signs. Teh sad thing is they actually think Bush is a bigger dictator then Chavez.

warrior1972
05-30-2007, 10:37 AM
Yeah I do not trust Chavez but I do respect him for giving millions of dollas of heating help to the poor in this country and that he stands up to the United States but yeah taking over media companies is a clear sign of oppressing free speech. At least he could do what our Government and oppress or press with bribes and corperate payouts. Make it at least look legit.

F. de Marzipan
05-30-2007, 10:43 AM
I do respect him for giving millions of dollas of heating help to the poor in this country ... Make it at least look legit.

Why do you suppose he did that? I can tell you this, it wasn't out of the goodness of his heart. It was to win the hearts and minds of folks like you...

mikezila
05-30-2007, 10:46 AM
Why do you suppose he did that? I can tell you this, it wasn't out of the goodness of his heart. It was to win the hearts and minds of folks like you...
..and he used the profits from him making the oil markets panic to pay for it.

warrior1972
05-30-2007, 10:49 AM
oH yes like Hezballah does with the people of southern lebenon. Some muslim defends Hezballah because they give to the poor and needy but they are doing it out of the pure goodness of thier hearts. HA!
I do not care what Chavez motives are if it keeps me and my kids from freezing in the Winter while my rich government and all the capitalist pigs who are not disabled don't die from the elements I am going to take it. He made the our government look bad and good for him. Thank god someone pointed out that our government doesn't take care of it's citizens. He hasn't gained my loyality but I sure and hell respect him more than my own government.

OH also another group that plays this game is christian churches. Hmmm yes help the people in poverty then preach the bible to convert them ... BLECH...what garbage.

F. de Marzipan
05-30-2007, 10:55 AM
He made the our government look bad and good for him. Thank god someone pointed out that our government doesn't take care of it's citizens.

The world doesn't need Chavez to point out the poor job our government is doing these days.

if it keeps me and my kids from freezing in the Winter while my rich government and all the capitalist pigs who are not disabled don't die from the elements I am going to take it.

This makes you (eagerly, happily) beholden to him - exactly what he wants.

I sure and hell respect him more than my own government.

If you're so convinced that Mr. Chavez's goal is to help the typical citizen, perhaps you should move to Venezuela. Hugo will make sure you and yours are well provided for.

Foolsworth
05-30-2007, 10:56 AM
I still cant believe the left thinks this guy is just an elected guy not bent on dominating his country for the rest of his life. They sure can overlook a lot of obvious signs. Teh sad thing is they actually think Bush is a bigger dictator then Chavez.

Yay,a nutter direct and irrefutable example of how wrong-sided
the Dimocrats are.They will Literally have to eat the own words
concerning the murderous thug Chavez.
Not just Harry Bellefonte and Danny Glover.
But all those who embraced that tinhorn Dictator whose used
The Peoples of Venezula's Money to Launch his Fascist Career and
keep it in bloom.
Thank God for Maria Conchita Alonso.

warrior1972
05-30-2007, 11:26 AM
The world doesn't need Chavez to point out the poor job our government is doing these days.



This makes you (eagerly, happily) beholden to him - exactly what he wants.



If you're so convinced that Mr. Chavez's goal is to help the typical citizen, perhaps you should move to Venezuela. Hugo will make sure you and yours are well provided for.

I do not care if I am emboding him if me and the kids are warm in the winter I couldn't give a fuck who's ego's I boost.

No I will stay right here and laugh at a SOCIALIST! making a capitalist nations look like greedy, selfish pigs.

500lbguerilla
05-30-2007, 04:28 PM
Wow. I guess I shouldn't be surprised at how anti-chavez the American media is...but wow.

When I first read this story I thought , great chavez really is becomeng a dictator now...Then I actually did some followups on the story.

If CNN or FAUX or any US station did what RCTV did they would have been immediatly shut down and the directors would be sitting in Gitmo ATM.

http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=3107&printer_friendly=1

Now under the idea of free speech in America, Chavez commited no violation. We don't have true free speech in America and broadcasting on public airwaves means that you don't have free speech, you have a responsibility to the public. So I would condemn it on the grounds that it violates free speech just as I would condemn the fact that we don't have true free speech in the US.