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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Baltimore, MD
Posts: 11,368
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The Next Recall
Grey Davis is a great administrator and John Ashcroft a civil libertarian compared to President Hugo Chavez. The sad thing is that Chavez will probably never leave office peacefully, even if recalled or if he loses an election in 2006. Before anybody jumps on the Venezuelan recall law, realize that Chavez supported its passage.
From the SF Chronicle-
Caracas, Venezuela -- The political struggle to remove Venezuela's flamboyant leftist President Hugo Chavez makes California's recall election look like a simple civics lesson.
Unlike Gov. Gray Davis, Chavez, a former army officer who first won the presidency in 1998, has plenty of tricks up his sleeve to stall and even derail the process.
Vanessa Roca, a 31-year-old secretary from the eastern state of Monagas, says she lost her job at a state-owned transport company after signing a petition calling for a recall referendum to remove Chavez from office. She traveled seven hours by bus to ask officials at the National Electoral Commission (CNE) to remove her name from the petition.
"A friend who had the same thing happen to him told me this might help me get my job back," she said. "I understand it happened to a lot of us."
As the Chavez government tries to remain in office, state employees and students who signed the petition, or who are suspected of sympathizing with the political opposition, are being purged from jobs, internships and grants, according to dozens of interviews with trade unionists, students, state workers, lawyers and human rights activists.
And in an effort to discredit the recall movement, state workers whose names appear on the petition are being encouraged by the government to sign legal complaints alleging that their signatures were forged.
Former President Carlos Andres Perez predicts Chavez "will not have a peaceful exit" and will be forced out of office if he refuses to accept the recall vote. "Violence is bad, and we don't promote it," he recently told Colombia's daily newspaper, El Tiempo, "but no other option is possible."
The Chavez administration denies the allegations of firing state workers for signing the recall petition, saying the referendum petition was a violation of the constitution and the signatures were marred by fraud. Government supporters claim they have uncovered 6,000 forged signatures. Some 175 formal complaints are being investigated by a state prosecutor's office.
Chavez's supporters say he is the only president who has ever paid the nation's poor any attention and is the only hope for redistributing the nation's oil wealth. Thousands of slum dwellers took to the streets when the political opposition came close to removing the controversial president in a coup d'etat in April. Chavez has also accused Washington of supporting the recall campaign.
His foes -- dominated by the middle class -- accuse the president of seeking to impose a communist-style dictatorship, while igniting class hatred with his revolutionary rhetoric. They also accuse him of wrecking the economy and are desperate to remove him before his term ends in 2007. They collected 2. 7 million signatures calling for his removal.
But on Sept. 17, the five-member CNE ruled the signatures were invalid on technical grounds -- they were gathered before Chavez reached the half-way point of his presidency (Aug. 19) as required by law.
On Sept. 26, the CNE announced new rules, giving Chavez opponents four days to collect at least 2.4 million signatures -- Chavez wanted just one day -- to require a vote. If the signatures this time are declared valid, the council has 97 days to set an election date. At the earliest, observers expect a recall vote in February.
But the harassment of those in favor of a recall casts doubt on the willingness of Chavez, a self-proclaimed "revolutionary" who led a failed coup in 1992, to abide by the law even though he backed the inclusion of a recall mechanism in the 1999 constitution.
University student Alejandro Suarez (not his real name) earned a government grant to write his undergraduate thesis on geology while working as an intern at the state oil company known as PDVSA. But after months of waiting for final state approval, he was told that he had been rejected.
"The secretary said, 'Did you sign something?' " Suarez recalled. When he said he had, she responded, 'It must be that. You're not the only one. There are 18 more cases.' "
In all, university sources say, hundreds of students may have been affected.
Professor Monica Martiz, director of the geology school at the Central University of Venezuela, said students who signed the recall petition were listed on a pro-government congressman's Web site and "were immediately rejected" for grant monies and internships.
The Web site belongs to Congressman Luis Tascon, who says the names were delivered to his office anonymously in a sealed envelope. A police investigation -- requested by the CNE -- is now under way to discover who gave Tascon the database, which is supposed to remain in the safekeeping of election officials.
Carlos Martinez, a Caracas lawyer, says the list appears to have made its way to government offices. Martinez, who is representing several military officers who signed the petition, says his clients were either discharged, detained or denied promotions. "Only the docile ones are allowed to stay," he said.
Job discrimination on political grounds violates the Venezuelan constitution and it is the job of the government's chief civil rights ombudsman, German Mundarain, to assist victims of such abuses.
But several current and former employees said Mundarain himself has been firing workers who oppose Chavez.
"How can you ask a man to defend you who won't even protect his own employees?" asked a current employee who asked to remain anonymous.
Mundarain, however, denies the accusations, which he says are part of a campaign by anti-Chavez supporters. "Political opinions are being respected," he said.
But with little faith in the system, some Venezuelans appear to be losing heart at removing the populist Chavez.
Roca, the fired PDVSA secretary, says she no longer supports the recall effort.
"I don't believe in anything now," she said.
More from the AP-
From the AP--
Chavez, a former army paratrooper who led a botched coup in 1992, was first elected in 1998 promising a revolution for the poor. He pushed through a new constitution in 1999 and more than 3.7 million Venezuelans voted to re-elect him to a six-year term in 2000.
In Venezuela, citizens can demand a recall halfway into a president's term. Opponents plan to collect millions of signatures in coming weeks to force a vote, and many were inspired by Tuesday's recall.
California's vote "strengthened democracy," marveled Marco Zambrano, a 67-year-old Caracas retiree. "I hope we have a referendum here so there's no more violence. I'm afraid Chavez might install a dictatorship."
California Gov. Gray Davis was ousted for some of the same reasons Venezuela's opposition wants to terminate Chavez: A massive budget deficit, a painful recession that has cost hundreds of thousands of jobs, underfunded schools and social services.
Critics also accuse Chavez of running roughshod over democratic institutions, dragging Venezuela into Cuba-style communism and threatening press freedoms. Government agents just confiscated broadcasting equipment from Venezuela's most outspoken opposition television station.
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